Entertainment


Beloved Irish American musician Seamus K admits battling crippling depression

One of irish America's best known entertainers discusses battle for his sanity


Seamus K
Seamus K
Photo by Handout

Popular Pennsylvania-based Irish musician Seamus K has earned fans and praise on both sides of the Atlantic, but his success meant nothing when depression came calling. Here, he details his ongoing battle against depression, hopeful that others who are also suffering will learn from his story.

A little over two months ago, I admitted myself to Horsham Clinic in Pennsylvania suffering from chronic anxiety and depression.

In the weeks leading up to my admission, I was sleeping less than two hours a day, could barely eat, could not focus on the job and was losing weight at an alarming rate. I was constantly sad, and it took everything to get out of bed in the morning to get on the Septa train and head down to my work in Philadelphia.

The warning signs were everywhere. I felt a sense of desperation unlike anything I’ve ever experienced. I was suffering from chronic anxiety and depression.

After talking with my wife, my sister who was visiting from Ireland and some close friends, I came to the conclusion that I needed immediate help. My wife and I went to the crisis center at the Doylestown Hospital emergency room in Pennsylvania.

After a brief consultation, they arranged for me get into Horsham that evening. It was a tough decision to make, but my wife and I knew it was the right one. 

Before going to hospital, I went home and sat down with my four young children, one by one and explained what was happening. I did it in as calm a way as possible so as not to alarm them. Later that night, my oldest son told my wife he knew I was not doing well when I stopped playing guitar about a month earlier.

After a week of intensive treatment, therapy and the right medication, I was released from the hospital well on the road to recovery. The clinic has a wonderful staff that work together as a team to make sure each patient is on the right course of treatment.

Since leaving Horsham, I have continued to attend weekly therapy sessions and in the process learned a lot about my illness and how I ended up in such a bad state.

It’s almost impossible to describe what depression feels like unless you are going through it. Some of the more common forms of depression are reactive, recurrent, endogenous and manic. Most all share the common feelings of hopelessness, despair, fear, anxiety, shame and the inability to enjoy life.

It is believed that most depressions involve a chemical imbalance in the brain. There is less known about what exactly triggers depression. It’s the whole nature versus nurture argument.

Depression is often but not always accompanied by anxiety. Anxiety is also difficult to describe, but it’s basically a feeling of anxiousness about simple tasks such as getting out of bed or going to work or even something as simple as answering the phone.

We all experience some form of anxiety in our daily routines, but as long as we are mentally fit we are able to manage it, and it can be a positive factor in our lives. It’s when anxiety is combined with depression, that’s when everything gets exaggerated and reality gets distorted.


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7 Comments

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Thanks for sharing this, Seamus K.! It's super-important for all the world to understand health issues that may have a "stigma" attached, as you say! I also hope you are aware of alternative nutritional advice which has been helpful to those who suffer with depression and other mental health diseases. Thank you again!
Both my Irish-born parents tended towards depression. My 3 siblings have had some issues with it, and at least one with alcoholism. As for me, for some years now I have been taking medication and going to counseling for it. I don't go over up to 2 drinks a day if that much, and to quote my mother, I "watch it like a hawk". I had constant anxiety, suffered from both high and low self-esteem, and stuttered for years, and am only getting better now, quite late in life. God is good. And I realize more or less all the time now: I am good, too.
i hope seamus gets through his depression, its a terrible illness and most people arrograntly think its people just being unhappy. Its ALOT more than that and is the most common psychological illness on the planet, 1 in 5 will experience it once in their lives. Get well seamus and i hope you pull through
Firstly,Murph46,get yourself a good doctor as the current occupant of 1600 Pennslyvania ave.is going to continue his occupancy for the next four years.Seamus God bless you and your family.I will remember you in my prayers.If you ignore knuckledraggers like Murph46 they eventually crawl back in below a rock.
Seamus, first let me say, please excuse the retarded remark of "angry white guy" "Murph46," whose puerile trivialization of a serious illness such as depression betrays his own affliction, overdosing from Ignorance Addiction from Fox "News" and Rush Limbaugh. As you probably know, "angry white guy" syndrome strikes GOP, Tea Baggers, and the like, It causes their higher faculties to rot from too much Hannity, O'Reilly, and Limbaugh. Getting Serious, I would like to thank you for also humanizing "depression" as the illness it is, not a "character defect" as many uninformed, mostly right wingnut types argue. I am waiting for the shoe to drop, when Limbaugh and his ilk have another contraception moment, and suggest that our liberty is compromised if employers must continue to pay for "character defects." Those of us who suffer from Clinical Depression, who seek treatment for ourselves and families are not the weak ones. It those in denial who either reject their condition, or insult others such as ourselves as weaklings, who fall short of facing life's challenges. All the best !
I get depressed every time they show the roomer at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue!
Seamus, I admire your courage, and your wife's as well. Good luck to you and your family. I look forward to seeing you perform in PA and elsewhere.
 




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