Different Slants

Seeing the World from a New Angle

Depression, Despair and the Human Voice………….by Robert M. Katzman

Filed under: Depression and Hope,Robert Katzman's Stories — Bob at 3:29 pm on Friday, July 4, 2008

(Author’s note: This story was originally written to assist my Rabbi in counseling people in our Illinois synagogue. I posted it after deciding its contents might possibly have a wider audience.

Since July 4th, 2008, it has become the single most viewed story I’ve ever written for this blog. Realizing this, to my surprise, I rewrote large parts of it on Sunday, 7/27/08 to give it greater clarity and to expand some thoughts I felt were too cryptic. I appreciate that so many people have connected with it, so I felt I owed them, my unseen readers, my giving the story a second look.  If this true story has meaning for you, please tell others about it.  Thank you.— Robert M. Katzman

 

My goal is to turn words into pictures.  To make it possible for people with no concept of clinical depression to comprehend what life is really like for people who live with that condition.  People like me.

 

So, I mined my life for some specific moments to try to convey the cold futureless world I lived in for over fifty years, before reluctantly accepting the possibility that new medications would change, literally change, my mind and make my life livable.  Not just livable, but worth living.  

 

Some people never get that far, and those are people you sometimes read about whom, in some cases, seem to have so much at their fingertips, so many resources, even a loving and supportive family, but none of whom were able to detect the subtle, deadly and progressive power of a simple chemical imbalance in a person’s brain.

 

Unlike so many illnesses with physical manifestations like coughing, fever, rashes, flu-like symptoms, loss of vision, hearing, heart problems, ulcers, anemia, osteoporosis and dementia, depression is silent.  Invisible to the eye.  About as obvious as a single blade of grass not moving, in a sea of meadow grass being raked by the wind.

To experience depression is a solitary experience.  No one can catch it from anyone who has it.  It may alienate family, friends and co-workers who believe that a person is unpredictably “moody” and someone who can dampen the festive atmosphere of any social event by simply showing up and being their grim, joyless uncommunicative selves.  Those kinds of outward symptoms serve only to deepen the pain of the depressed person and cause the subsequent reaction of others to them, to make their existing, self-fulfilling assumptions of their social unpopularity become reality.

 

(Author’s note: This story was originally written to assist my Rabbi in counseling people in our Illinois synagogue. I posted it after deciding its contents might possibly have a wider audience.

Since July 4th, 2008, it has become the single most viewed story I’ve ever written for this blog. Realizing this, to my surprise, I rewrote large parts of it on Sunday, 7/27/08 to give it greater clarity and to expand some thoughts I felt were too cryptic. I appreciate that so many people have connected with it, so I felt I owed them, my unseen readers, my giving the story a second look.  If this true story has meaning for you, please tell others about it.  Thank you.— Robert M. Katzman

My goal is to turn words into pictures.  To make it possible for people with no concept of clinical depression to comprehend what life is really like for people who live with that condition.  People like me.

So, I mined my life for some specific moments to try to convey the cold futureless world I lived in for over fifty years, before reluctantly accepting the possibility that new medications would change, literally change, my mind and make my life livable.  Not just livable, but worth living.

Some people never get that far, and those are people you sometimes read about whom, in some cases, seem to have so much at their fingertips, so many resources, even a loving and supportive family, but none of whom were able to detect the subtle, deadly and progressive power of a simple chemical imbalance in a person’s brain.

Unlike so many illnesses with physical manifestations like coughing, fever, rashes, flu-like symptoms, loss of vision, hearing, heart problems, ulcers, anemia, osteoporosis and dementia, depression is silent.  Invisible to the eye.  About as obvious as a single blade of grass not moving, in a sea of meadow grass being raked by the wind.

To experience depression is a solitary experience.  No one can catch it from anyone who has it.  It may alienate family, friends and co-workers who believe that a person is unpredictably “moody” and someone who can dampen the festive atmosphere of any social event by simply showing up and being their grim, joyless uncommunicative selves.  Those kinds of outward symptoms serve only to deepen the pain of the depressed person and cause the subsequent reaction of others to them, to make their existing, self-fulfilling assumptions of their social unpopularity become reality.

I speak only as one of the inflicted and not in any other capacity.  What I know, I learned by reading as much as I could to make solving my misery possible.  A person’s intellect doesn’t cease to function, but motivation can stop cold.  Mine did.

But I also learned that having an innate and irrepressible sense of humor, plus a solid central core of self-worth were as essential to my survival as microscopic white blood cells are to fighting equally invisible infections. Those two immeasurable assets in my life-long struggle with depression proved to be mighty weapons, until they too were overwhelmed by the progressive nature of the illness.  But it took half a century for that battle to be lost.

It is impossible to will or wish away one’s genes, and in my family, the force was very strong.  Both sides of my immediate family and grandparents possessed the capacity for depression. While I believe her witnessing a series of deadly pogroms in Poland in the early part of the previous century powerfully triggered my maternal grandmother’s depression, so many of my aunts and cousins have it that it must be as common to all of us as our dark brown eyes.  I wish it were as easy to remove an “infected” gene as an appendix.  Maybe someday.

(Read on …)

A Soft Moment with “Uncle”, in a Hard, Hard Life…by Robert M. Katzman

Filed under: Black/White relationships,Hyde Park (Chicago),Robert Katzman's Stories — Bob at 2:42 pm on Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Robert M. Katzman’s Amazing Story: www.differentslants.com/?p=355

This brief moment in my life lingers on in my memory, because it reminds me that a little compassion can make all the difference–when the world is crashing down on a guy.

I know that is so, because at different times in my life, I was that guy.   Because when your luck turns, or everything you’ve tried to do goes south, suddenly, no one has any time to bother with you, as if bad luck rubs off, or something like that.

What follows is true, and this is exactly how it happened:

On a merciless July scorcher of a day, in 1969, so hot that the very air shimmered, I was working the lunch shift in my kosher delicatessen in Hyde Park, which is part of Chicago, on the South Side of the city.

I was looking out of my big glass windows, over the round pale green paper sign that advertised:

Lunch Special!!  

          Hot Dog–Chips–And a Cold Coke!!

                             $2.50!!!

when I saw this young black kid get forcefully tossed out of the drugstore next to me, where he lost his balance and fell to the ground, scraping both hands on the hot concrete walkway.  And there he sat, looking morose, rubbing his sore hands together, and occasionally, wiping tears off his face.  People walked around him.  No one stopped.

He was this neighborhood punk, then about fifteen, whom I’d known about for years.  When I was running my corner newsstand, he’d run up and try to swipe a comic book off the display rack and then run away.  Sometimes I would catch him, and sometimes he was too fast for me, and then he’d run off laughing.

I was only a few years older than he was, still a teenager, and pretty fast myself, except he knew I couldn’t leave my newsstand so, that gave him an advantage to exploit, which…he did.  He was a little, local, pain in the ass, and not just to me.

(Read on …)

Vladimir Horowitz and The Generous Drunk by Robert M. Katzman

Filed under: Robert Katzman's Stories,Snow stories & poems — Bob at 4:59 pm on Friday, February 22, 2008

This 2008 story by me has been rewritten, retitled and is now posted in another place on this blog:

The Great Vladimir Horowitz, the Clueless Paperboy and the Generous Drunk

The Great Vladimir Horowitz, a Clueless Chicago Paperboy and the Generous Drunk…by Robert M. Katzman

Take a look. You’ll be surprised by where it goes.

Bob Katzman

The Buddhist-Jewish-Christmas Query……….by Robert M. Katzman

Filed under: Jewish Themes,Robert Katzman's Stories,Snow stories & poems — Bob at 10:46 am on Saturday, December 29, 2007

Robert M. Katzman’s Amazing Story:  http://www.differentslants.com/?p=355

On Christmas Day, I always close my back-issue magazine store, Magazine Memories, just north of Chicago, and I try do something else more spiritually stimulating.

This year, my son David, then 29, and I decided to spend the day together, going to movies and also have dinner. He is a filmmaker and had just returned from eighteen days in Asia after being hired to record the daily activities and performances of a DJ.  He went all over, including Hong Kong; Jakarta, Indonesia;  Taipei, Dubai; and Bangkok. He especially liked Bangkok.

So, after hearing that, I suggested we go to an intimate Thai restaurant I knew about for dinner, because that’s one of my favorite Asian cuisines, as well.  We had green tea, mild tom-yum soup with shrimp, bamboo and lemon-grass, mini toasted egg rolls, spicy crispy chicken wings with sweet and sour sauce, and then roasted duck. Great food and great conversation, too.

For Dave’s 12th birthday in 1990, my wife Joy and I gave him a video camera, and it must have been the right thing to do, because now he’s traveling the world, filming it.

After dinner, I went to pay our Thai waitress, who was also the cashier. After handing me my change, she wished me a “Merry Christmas” as people had endlessly said to me that day and other recent days. Then she looked uncertain, and she said, quietly: (Read on …)

Katzman Reads His True Story Of Revenge, in 1968, against The University of Chicago! On Stage in Naperville, Illinois!!!

Filed under: Humor,Robert Katzman's Stories,Social Policy and Justice,Uncategorized — Bob at 11:32 am on Sunday, July 15, 2007

I invite all of North America to come and see me read my story titled: “The Thousand Dollar Bill” from my 3rd book, titled Saul Bellow,Kosher Pickles and the Aluminum Fortress.

It will be on July 26th, 2007, Thursday at 8 pm

My web page is www.fightingwordspubco.com.

Is a great story of an individual standing up for himself and up to one of the largest educational instutions in the United States.

The place is The Comedy Shrine, 22 East Chicago Ave. suite 205 Naperville, Illinois 60540 Phone: (630) 355–2844

There will be no charge for this performance.

If people are pleaed by what they hear, and see, the theater owner, David Sinker may have me as a regular performer, but you’d have to buy tickets if that happens. Sorry.

If any of you reading this are able to come, bring a friend, especially one who had trouble paying their tuition, once upon a time.

Thank you,

A Very Short Tale About A Very Short Tail…by Robert M. Katzman

Filed under: Robert Katzman's Stories — Bob at 10:05 am on Thursday, May 31, 2007

May 31,2007

One early morning in May 2007, I was standing in front of my bathroom mirror, bleary-eyed and sleepy. My creaking fifty-seven year-old spine takes a while to loosen its rigidity and I move slowly for the first hour or so after waking up.

So I’m standing there, my left hand filled with a small cloud of white shaving cream, trying to remember what to do next. Then I heard a sudden sound of loud, ferocious barking from my backyard. It was our family wolf pack, whose barks came in a variety of sizes: Rosie, a black Miniature Dachshund, Betsy the lovable Beagle and Jasmine, our Labrador/Spaniel with her piercing yellow/brown eyes.

High-pitched squeaks to deep rumbles. These were not friendly sounds crashing into my ears. All three dogs are hunters.

Then I heard Sarah’s scream. (Read on …)

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