I feel like I cannot breathe and am gasping for air, yet here I am, sitting in a chair appearing calm and normal, breathing just fine.
Seems like your brain is maybe telling you that since something good has happened, then you
should be fine now.
But, based on what you’ve described you’re not fine. Not by a long shot. Had a moment of fine maybe (awesome, take that as a win), but it hasn’t persisted like you moght have hoped. Or like your brain is telling you it should’ve.
Which makes sense, since a lot of us? Don’t go from suicidal to fine in a week. Takes time to pull out of that hole.
So, if your brain is telling you “You
should be fine, so you must be exaggerating...” that’s a cognitive distortion. Should Statements send off an instant cognitive distortion alarm. ‘Should’ is an externalised standard you’re setting for yourself, it isn’t what is
actually occurring for you, or even what is necessarily even possible. Suicidal to fine in a week? Pretty rare.
When your brain is telling you that you
should be fine, it can often make it incredibly difficult to do any kind of realistic self-assessment about how we’re actually feeling, because the “should be fine” thing gets so overwhelming. That’s happened to me countless times.
If that resonates at all? Treat yourself like someone who was recently so depressed that they were suicidal.
That person? Needs lots of support, gently engaging activity when they can, and loads of self-care and self-soothing. For some weeks to come. Because regardless of whether you
should be fine, or whether you
feel like you’re exaggerating - you know that a week ago you were considering suicide. That’s real. That’s enough to guide the level of care you need right now.