Justmehere
Sponsor
I have a friend that use to be a lot of fun to talk with about 18 months ago. Then he became severely depressed. Now, every time we talk, he talks about his depression. Nothing else. He will go in and on, how bad it is, how deep his regret is that he did not get married, the depth of his pain, what a terrible person he thinks he is for never being married, and how good it is that he now realizes his deep error to not get married and how sad he is that he believes it's too late for him, and that we wakes up crying every day and wants to die and on and on... I have listened and encouraged, empathized that I know he is going through hell, etc etc. He is recently retired, considerably older than me, and has treatment but he ignored their advice to start getting busy with hobbies, schedule, volunteering, higher level care, etc. I also keep holding the space that it’s not my role to change him but manage my own limits.its his choice to change or not and right now he is resisting change, knows it, and stays the course. He has a trauma history and probably has PTSD in the mix.
The pandemic is making it especially worse. He's been suicidal, but does have a lot of support and a good plan for safety.
I've learned to set boundaries on time, talk for only 10-15 minutes at a time every now and then, turned off alerts on texts,, and that seems to help me out.
But sometimes, I want to say, COME ON, talk about something else for once. I try to encourage that we speak on other topics. It *always* loops back to his depression and obsession with his false guilt over not getting married. I think it’s great he is reaching out and I don’t want to discourage that but holy moly, I am at the point I feel like I am enabling this obsession. Also, I’m single and wtf about marriage equals all problems solved?!
Ok so you can tell my issue is that I’m angry at him.
I do not mind and even am glad to support friends when depressed - I will and have and am there for others when things get hard - but this is different. I can say nothing but “uh huh” for an hour and he will go on and on about his depression, and if I let him, he would do it every day.
I encouraged him to volunteer in a socially distanced totally safe matter today with me. He agreed and then bailed this morning 15 minutes before because he is in pain and depressed and should have gotten married and the matter just reminded him of that. Ok. That’s fine. I have had to do that too.
But I am not going to talk to him about his obsession about the pain that he didn’t get married again. Period. I need a time of him talking about something else before we talk of that again. And again.
It’s not the depression that bothers me but the obsession with marriage and the failing to ever talk of something else anymore.
Not sure how to tell him this boundary that I need before I let him know I’m pissed at him, without discouraging his reaching out.
Thoughts?
The pandemic is making it especially worse. He's been suicidal, but does have a lot of support and a good plan for safety.
I've learned to set boundaries on time, talk for only 10-15 minutes at a time every now and then, turned off alerts on texts,, and that seems to help me out.
But sometimes, I want to say, COME ON, talk about something else for once. I try to encourage that we speak on other topics. It *always* loops back to his depression and obsession with his false guilt over not getting married. I think it’s great he is reaching out and I don’t want to discourage that but holy moly, I am at the point I feel like I am enabling this obsession. Also, I’m single and wtf about marriage equals all problems solved?!
Ok so you can tell my issue is that I’m angry at him.
I do not mind and even am glad to support friends when depressed - I will and have and am there for others when things get hard - but this is different. I can say nothing but “uh huh” for an hour and he will go on and on about his depression, and if I let him, he would do it every day.
I encouraged him to volunteer in a socially distanced totally safe matter today with me. He agreed and then bailed this morning 15 minutes before because he is in pain and depressed and should have gotten married and the matter just reminded him of that. Ok. That’s fine. I have had to do that too.
But I am not going to talk to him about his obsession about the pain that he didn’t get married again. Period. I need a time of him talking about something else before we talk of that again. And again.
It’s not the depression that bothers me but the obsession with marriage and the failing to ever talk of something else anymore.
Not sure how to tell him this boundary that I need before I let him know I’m pissed at him, without discouraging his reaching out.
Thoughts?