By KRISTY CHAMBERS.
The American recording artist, Charlene, is arguably most well known for singing ‘I’ve Never Been to Me,’ a poignant ballad that topped the charts for a brief period in 1982.
I interpret the song’s lyrics as a cautionary tale of regret from a narrator who was formerly an international escort. Upon reflection, a lifestyle of drinking champagne on yachts and being undressed by kings has left her with a lot of glamorous memories, sure, but also a resounding sense of emotional vacancy.
‘I’ve been to Paradise,’ Charlene laments, ‘but I’ve never been to me.’
Well, Charlene, I have been to me and as a travel destination, it’s highly overrated. In fact, I’ve spent most of my adult life and income trying to get the hell away from me, through travel, alcohol, food and drugs.
Much of my desire to run away is rooted in the depression that I was diagnosed with at 15 years of age. With little understanding of the condition, I assumed that depression was an illness with a clear trajectory, much like the tonsillitis I had as a child. That is, I would feel horrible for a while and then I would have my tonsils taken out, eat a lot of ice cream and jelly and emerge from hospital feeling perfectly fine. Imagine my dismay when the depression took several months to resolve, and had the audacity to return again the following year, and the next…
Like a flat mate who doesn’t do the dishes, living with depression isn’t bad all of the time, but just when you’re beginning to relax, to almost forget, you’ll come home to a mountain of resiliently greasy, baked on washing up. That’s what depression is to me, the jerk that still manages to surprise me in the most disappointing, disheartening way, even after 25 years of intimate cohabitation.