College is where my depression also turned into anxiety. The lacrosse aspect did not go exactly as I hoped and dreamed for. I went from being one of the top-ranked players coming out of Long Island to sitting on the bench. Never in a million years did I see myself as one of those players that did not play when they got to college. That made me feel like I had lost the connection I had with my dad because I wasn’t in between the white lines anymore.
From dealing with not playing to new college classes, assignments, meeting all new people and being away from my mom and family, I fell into a deep depression. I developed anxiety and started to worry about every little thing. Anxiety crept into every aspect of my life without a single person knowing what I was dealing with. Once again, I began to internalize everything.
I could not sleep. There were nights I was up until 4 a.m. There were nights I was up all night. I would think about every decision, every step, every shot I took at practice, every word I said in a conversation. The anxiety got to a point where I was having panic attacks and could not control them. Some nights I had to leave where I was and go home because I couldn’t get them under control. It became so bad that I started to make myself throw up. The anxiety was so bad that I needed a way to release it. That feeling of hopelessness and frailness was what I felt when I made myself vomit, so I wanted to reinforce that feeling. This was my lowest of lows.
It became so low because I had let my mind take over my entire world. I thought about every single detail that was going on in my life at that time. I didn’t have a way to cope with what was really going on. I became so overwhelmed with who I was, with my thoughts, with my life.
At the end of my sophomore year, I decided to go on an antidepressant. Why did it take me so long? I thought that if I gave into the medicine, the monster in my head won. I did not want that feeling of that thing inside my head to win. I did not want to have to let people know I was on medication for depression and anxiety. I did not want the medication to determine my happiness.
But in reality, I couldn’t control my happiness on my own at that point in my life. I needed something to kickstart me into gear. The medication allowed me to put my depression and anxiety to the side and focus on me first, something I was not able to do for years. I was able to control the thoughts I was feeding myself.
Slowly but surely, I made a commitment to myself to get better each and every day. I started to change my mindset and find ways to release the anxiety. I did not let myself spiral into deep depression like before. I started to change what I was telling myself. I started to find the things I could control in my life and let the universe take care of what I could not control. I could control the effort I put in, how hard I worked, what kind of teammate I was and what kind of daughter and friend I wanted to be. I started to open up to the people I loved around me and lean on them rather than isolate myself.
The thing is, it’s a process. It does not happen overnight. It is something that takes time and patience with yourself.
Going into my senior year, I did the one thing that I never did before — I trained my mind. It is the biggest muscle that most athletes forget about. The mind is what controls your movement and your ability. I decided to focus all my training on that.