My battle with depression started in late middle school/early high school. I had lost many of my friends to middle school drama and went into high school feeling alone. I was really starting to process the death of my dad and was sad a lot of the time. Traumatic events in life can really mess with you and I developed PTSD from my loss.
I saw these dads standing on the fence before games, so badly wishing my dad was standing there with them. I became obsessive about working out. I would run miles after practice and then still go to a CrossFit class. It was the only thing that made me feel good. It was the only place where I didn’t have to think about anything, I just had to listen to music and put hard work in.
On top of working out obsessively, in 10th grade I developed an eating disorder. Yes, I was an athlete who developed an eating disorder. My life felt like it was out of my control. I felt like nothing was going my way, and I couldn’t control a single thing. I could however control what I ate and when I ate, so I did. I dropped to under 100 pounds. I lost muscle and speed that helped me on the field. My mom and I argued daily about food. I turned into a different person.
My friends had to report back to my mom with all the things I ate that day so she could force me to make up the calories when I got home. It was a very vicious cycle that I was putting myself and my family through. I slowly started to change when my performance was at its lowest.
On top of all that, even sports became difficult for me to play. I had coaches who really disliked me because they saw my drive to be perfect and make my dad proud as rude and selfish. They saw me as hard to coach because I didn’t settle for average. I wasn’t easy going like the rest of my teammates, I was very hard on myself. They thought I only cared about myself and not the team.
I felt like they didn’t appreciate my drive enough and I felt disrespected by most of them. All I wanted was to know that if my dad was here, he would tell me how proud he was of me and the team. My depression made me internalize everything. What I was feeling on the inside and what people saw on the outside were two completely different things.
Finally, by senior year I was on a high, playing my best and doing my best in school, excited for my next chapter: playing lacrosse at Maryland.