Sorry Liz, I did jump to conclusions too fast.
Your uncanny ability to be right on just about everything is remarkable. How do you do it?
But Longmire's statement "This is very common across society and across professional sport" doesn't gel with the seizure incidents, which I would not think are all that common. When the little bits of information that leak out are all you have to go on what else can we do but speculate?
Last edited by Ludwig; 8th September 2015 at 07:03 PM.
I think this is the time when all us Swans supporters need to get behind our team and support them with everything we have.
Hope Buddy gets the support and respect he needs and that if he cannot make it back this year, then he gets himself right for 2016.
You see a big strong footballer with bags of money and a model girlfriend and you think he would be invincible... How fragile we are... Get well Buddy.
Gotta say watching the presser, Horse is one impressive individual. A very well-rounded person and leader.
I'm just assuming from the various reports and statements that Buddy is suffering from depression. I think if it were drugs or some other kind of mental illness things would have presented otherwise.
I am really empathetic with Buddy's situation.
I have been on a lifelong 5-7 year cyclic bipolar disorder and have spent loads of time with psychiatrists which started when I was 10. The depressions are really awful and it's just a terrible helpless feeling. It has nothing to do with one's status in life. My depressions often started when I was at the top of the world, only to see relationships, jobs and everything come crashing down. I remember friends in Sydney smashing down my window when I didn't answer the phone for a few days, thinking that I had committed suicide. Your friends feel helpless too, because there's nothing they seem to be able to do to make things better, no matter how hard they try.
Sometimes Buddy has that look in his eyes. I could feel for him.
On reflection, I have been one of the lucky ones because I have always cycled out through those truly wonderful 2-4 month manic periods when everything is possible and superhuman would not be an overstatement for how life is during those times. It's made for a very interesting life. It's a very special experience. I would even call it a privilege. I have only the greatest empathy for those who are unfortunate enough to only experience the depression side of things.
I've been on SSRI's in the past. They really take the life out of you, and are very difficult to ween yourself off from. Sometimes you can be left with a choice of being pleasant and completely bland or so listless that you can't get your body out of bed. It's hard to know where the energy went. It's like it's been sucked out of your body.
I've been out of the cycle for 9 years now. I managed to cure myself. It took a deep interest in the workings of the mind for me to figure out how to beat it. When you are Buddy's age, I think it can be much harder. It can be very difficult to reconcile how you can be someone that everyone would envy and why you can feel so bad inside your head.
Every case is different. It's hard to know what Buddy's situation is like and how much it affects his daily life. He seems really upbeat most of the time, and that's a good sign that he'll come out of it.
Bravo Ludwig...........incredible turn around
onwards and upwards !!
"be tough, only when it gets tough"
Thanks Ludwig. Wouldn't be great if bud heard your story and it was somehow helpful to him. Hope he gets the help he needs and it's effective
I usually am a clown. Live like a clown, act like a clown, like being a clown.
But Ludwig, seriously, that is just about the most impressive thing I've read on here. Good on you
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