Depression makes me hard to get to know. (Well, the bipolar globally, but I’m primarily depressed, so I’ll focus on that.) I didn’t know this for the longest time. I thought I was an open book. And, really, if you ask me something, I’ll tell you about it. There’s very little that I’m not comfortable talking about. I’m honest. I engage in long conversations — sometimes about me. I thought that meant it was easy to get to know me but it turns out this isn’t the experience other people were having. Then the other day, I saw a list of 10 characteristics of perfectly hidden depression and I realized those characteristics described me. So, as it turns out, depression — hidden depression — makes me hard to get to know.

Hidden Depression Makes Me Hard to Know

Like many people, I try very hard to hide my depression. While it does affect everything in my life, I don’t want it to affect others in my life. I want to protect these people that I care about from the horrible effects of depression. And in many respects, it is perfectly hidden depression.

This list of 10 characteristics of perfectly hidden depression was written by Dr. Margaret Rutherford and you can find her original article here.

10 Traits of Perfectly Hidden Depression that Makes Me Hard to Know

  1. Perfectionism and a constant, critical, and shaming inner voice
  2. A heightened or excessive sense of responsibility
  3. Detachment from painful emotions by staying in your head and actively shutting them off
  4. Worrying and needing to control yourself and your environment
  5. Intense focus on tasks and use of accomplishment to feel valuable
  6. Focus on the wellbeing of others, but not allowing them into your inner world
  7. Discount or dismissal of hurt or sorrow and struggle with self-compassion
  8. Possible accompanying mental health issues, such as an eating disorder, an anxiety disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, or addiction
  9. Strong belief in “counting your blessings” as the foundation of wellbeing
  10. Success with a professional structure but struggle with emotional intimacy in relationships

I only got through the first three when I realized she had me pegged. The jig was up. (Pretty surprising as most people do not see through what I’m doing.)

How Hidden Depression Makes Me Hard to Know

I won’t go through each characteristic one by one as I could write an article on each one, but I will mention a few.

It's hard to know someone with depression. This is due to how hard a person works to hide their depression. Learn about the effects of hidden depression.
  1. Perfectionism — This is a very common characteristic in those with depression. This makes sense, actually. Perfectionism perpetuates depression. If you believe you must be perfect you will always exert all your energy in an attempt to achieve this and you will always fail. This constant failure feeds depression nicely.
  2. Control, responsibility, focus — I’m a control freak and I know it. I don’t like it when I don’t know what all the variables are. I don’t like it when there’s no plan. I’m always afraid of screwing everything up unless I know ahead of time exactly what I have to do. And I’m afraid others will need me or want me and I won’t be there if I don’t know what’s happening. I need to know where all the pieces are on the board.
  3. Detachment and living in my head — I’m an intellectual. I always have been. Nonetheless, the amount that I stay in my head is a result of the agony I experience when I don’t do that. It’s a huge problem for me. I can be in the middle of something that should be pleasurable and not “be there” but, rather, be thinking about my grocery list. It’s so second-nature to me at this point it takes a crowbar to get me out of my head. It almost never happens. (And this is mostly for the best.) I often feel like an observer to my own life. It’s not surprising I’m hard to know me if I’m not even living.
  4. A focus on others and not allowing them into my inner world — Um, yeah. That’s kind of my job description and, yeah, it spills over into my real life. Enough said.
  5. Professional success but difficulty in personal relationships — Some would argue that I’m professionally successful. Okay. But relationships are tricky because of the constant pain I’m in and my wanting to protect others from it. And dating? Yeah, I haven’t done that in a very long time.

I don’t fit all the 10 characteristics, but admitting to the above makes me realize I’m significantly as outlined and I want to cry for the distance I place between me and everyone else (so much for detachment).

What to Do About Being Hard to Know Because of Hidden Depression

Now that I’ve had this wake-up call, the next steps seem, blurry. I mean, I want people to know me but I also think that everything I do that prevents that is really important for my wellbeing and theirs. I do manage my life like this for a reason, after all.

Nonetheless, knowledge is power and knowledge of the self is even more so. So, now that I’m clear on the barriers, I can pick and choose which ones to remove and when. I can choose what to lean into and what to try to let up on. And I can become even more aware of how this makes it hard for other people too. After all, there are people who love me and want to know me.

So, yeah, recognizing myself in this list is depressing, but it’s also empowering. You can’t fix something if you don’t know it’s a problem and you can’t fix something if you don’t know its makeup either. So, now, knowing the issue’s components, I can address it if and when I want to.

PS: Just knowing the above might not be enough for a person. A person might need the help of a therapist to work through the heavy issues presented in that list. That is totally okay.