You Wouldn't Be So Depressed if You Really Believed in God
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Dates2015 - Ongoing
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Author
- Location Brooklyn, United States
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Shortlisted
“You Wouldn't Be So Depressed If You Really Believed in God” is a photographic response to my lifelong battle with depression. Through abstracted self-portraiture I attempt to portray my inner world as I navigate life with an invisible illness.
“You Wouldn’t Be So Depressed If You Really Believed in God” explores the abstract aspects of living with depression and how this invisible illness affects my children, my creative practice, and my relationship with daily life. Through photography, I look at how my faith (or lack thereof), Latina cultural assumptions, and role as mother shape how I understand and relate to depression. I do not attempt to create self-portraits in the traditional sense; instead, I show the fragmented and sometimes distorted ways in which I experience relationships and the mundane rituals of everyday life. How inanimate objects can often represent more than just an uneaten food, and how depression can make your world, regardless of how beautiful and safe it might actually be, feel heavy, dark, and frightening.
Whenever I was having a particularly hard time, my mother would say to me: “You wouldn’t be so depressed if you really believed in God.”. As a child, this advice made me feel like I was not only failing God and my family, but that I was completely powerless. Years later I came across Jane Kenyon’s poem “Having it out with Melancholy”, and discovered that the same phrase my mother often said to me, “You wouldn’t be so depressed if you really believed in God.”. The poem is one of the most powerful and accurate depictions of depression that I’ve read, and it filled me with great emotion to read that the “advice” which had haunted me since childhood had factored into Kenyon’s life as well.
The first section of the poem, cited below, was a catalyst for me to begin this photographic series and allow myself a form of catharsis.
“When I was born, you waited
behind a pile of linen in the nursery,
and when we were alone, you lay down
on top of me, pressing
the bile of desolation into every pore.
And from that day on
everything under the sun and moon
made me sad even the yellow
wooden beads that slid and spun
along a spindle on my crib.
You taught me to exist without gratitude.
You ruined my manners toward God:
“We’re here simply to wait for death;
The pleasures of earth are overrated.”
I only appeared to belong to my mother,
To live among blocks and cotton undershirts
With snaps; among red tin lunchboxes
And report cards in ugly brown slipcases.
I was already yours - the anti-urge,
The mutilator of souls.
…….
3. Suggestion From a Friend
You wouldn’t be so depressed
If you really believed in God.”
- Jane Kenyon