Though millions of people suffer from anxiety, most people don’t talk about. And those who don’t have anxiety have no idea what it’s like to suffer from this condition.
But Laura Mazza, the Australian mom behind the blog The Mum on the Run, thinks that’s just silly.
She’s always talking openly and honestly about anxiety to eliminate the stigma around mental illness and to help those who have anxiety feel a little less alone. If your familiar with Mazza’s blog or her social media pages you’ll know she is not shy when it comes to talking about taboo topics.
She’s even gone viral after telling a ridiculously hilarious story about the time she went to yoga and farted really loud in the middle of class. Well, Mazza has gone viral again for talking about another taboo topic.
Her open letter “To the man whose wife or partner has anxiety,” is being shared like crazy on the internet.
The post has gotten more than 325,815 shares on Facebook and has been featured on a number of media outlets. It’s Mazza’s “real talk” that makes her so relatable to readers, moms, and women everywhere.
Here’s what her letter states:
“To the man whose wife or partner has anxiety,
You might have heard that she has anxiety from sitting by her side in a doctors office, holding her hands while the tears stream down her face. You might have seen her get angry and explode because she’s overwhelmed,” writes Mazza. “Wondering where this rage has come from. You might have seen her sit quietly staring into the distance with a panic in her eye. You might have guessed, or she might have told you, but either way, there are things you should know.”
Mazza offers readers a full glimpse into what it’s like for a person to experience anxiety and how it doesn’t look the same to everyone.
“Anxiety isn’t a one size fits all, it isn’t consistent and it isn’t always easy to tell. You might think she’s just snapped at you, but it was anxiety that did it, you might think she’s angry, but it’s the anxiety that’s got a choke hold, you might think she’s not enjoying herself when you go out and it’s your fault, but it’s not. It’s anxiety,” she explains.
“You know how she can’t understand when she asks you what are you thinking, why you would respond with ‘nothing’… it’s because she never thinks nothing. Her thoughts replay like a freight train in her head full steam ahead, over and over. It’s exhausting for her. It’s why she’s tired.”
A person who experiences anxiety can feel such intense and persistent overwhelm that it physically exhausts them.
“There isn’t a day that goes by where she doesn’t think. She thinks about everything, and usually it is the worst case scenario. She worries that something will go wrong. That some days if she leaves the house, something will happen. Kidnapping, deaths, falls, cars spinning out of control, that’s why she can’t just leave the house or just go out, even though you’ve suggested it with good intentions,” she explains.
“But it’s not so easy. That’s why when she’s home alone or out by herself she will text you a million times, telling you her every move or telling you everything that’s going wrong, she knows you can’t change anything, she knows you feel helpless, but so does she, that’s why she needs to share it with you, otherwise her head will explode with panic.”
Mazza goes on to outline the unique difficulties a couple must endure when one of them has anxiety.
“Sometimes she wonders why you’re with her, and if you knew she had anxiety would you still be there, do you regret it? Being with her? Do you wish you were with someone else that didn’t have this vice around their neck? I want you to know I see that this is tough on you, tough to see your loved one hurt, tough on you, the pressure for you would be immense. But don’t think for a second she doesn’t see you, don’t think for a second she doesn’t worry about you too. She even gets anxiety about you. She knows it’s not your fault, and she knows you want to fix her and in the way that means you help her, but you can’t fix her. She’s not broken,” Mazza continues.
“But you can help her, you can loosen the vice. You can see what gets too much for her, the crowds of people or bedtime, dinner time, see it and help her by holding her hand and tell her you’re with her. Do it with her, take over, tell her to sit down for a while and breathe. If you see her struggling with appointments, reschedule them for her, encourage her to take it slowly. Too much is overwhelming for her, even though she has good intentions. Don’t make her feel bad for missing an appointment, a party, whatever. She wanted to go, but she couldn’t. She already feels bad. Tells her it’s okay. Take the kids out for a play when you see her struggling, encourage her to take time out for herself. If the kids are awake all night and she’s worse if she has less sleep, get up with her, take over. Tell her to go back to bed.”
She also offers some advice on how someone can deal with a partner who has anxiety.
“Sometimes the answer won’t be so obvious. Sometimes she won’t even know the answer is to what she needs, but so long as your patient with her, she will feel your love. She or you won’t benefit if you get frustrated, it’ll just escalate and make both of you miserable. She doesn’t want her anxiety to define your relationship and when you are patient, you’re telling her you’re willing to do the same,” Mazza explains.
“Anxiety is heartbreaking for her. Really it is. She wishes she could just feel free. The free feeling of just being carefree and not a prisoner to this ugly illness. Free of the voice that follows her listing all her insecurities. Not every day will be bad, and those days should be celebrated, but on the bad days, still celebrate her, because she needs it.”
Basically, Mazza says the key to surviving anxiety is love.
“She appreciates you, she loves you. She’s vulnerable and scared. But she chose you to share her biggest deepest scar tissue that resides in her heart, and she knew the day she met you that you were the one worthy enough to see her in all her imperfections. She will love you with that whole heart, and you know she will because she’s already listed the pros and cons… and just as you are by her side she will be fiercely loyal to yours. Forever and ever, you just to need take her hand and tell her, ‘I am with you.’
Love,
A wife, a woman and a mumma who has anxiety.”
Mazza’s post has encouraged thousands of other women to speak openly about their experiences with anxiety. You can read some of their stories in Mazza’s original post below.
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