Subtle Signs You Are Not Okay (That You Should Not Ignore)
Lany-Jade Mondou

12 Subtle Signs That You Are Not Okay (That You Should Stop Ignoring)

“While there are many not-so-subtle signs, I think one that gets overlooked often is ‘emotional autopilot’. You know, when you’re just going through the motions without much feeling or awareness. Everything (good or bad) is ‘meh’ and devoid of wonder or pleasure. You’re bored and unamused and disconnected but not at the same time.” — LuneNoir211

“Everything feels ‘heavy.’ Tasks that would be 2 or 3 steps in your brain suddenly feel like 10. Instead of ‘get up, make coffee’ it becomes ‘take off the covers, sit up, put on pants, walk down the stairs, find the coffee ground container, open the lid…’ and so on. Everything feels so much more difficult, and so you have so much less motivation to do it. Instead of walking up a hill the day seems like climbing a mountain, so it becomes so much harder to even get started.” — Experiment_Number626

“Their house is a mess. Their car is a mess. They procrastinate anything small or major. They avoid even minorly unpleasant scenarios. They lack a routine. Their diet is poor and they either eat too much or not enough. They overindulge in video games or streaming or similar activities to escape reality. They neglect their responsibilities and loved ones, often slowly and unknowingly. They suffer from a memory deficit. They suffer from fatigue. They lack motivation. They sleep too much yet struggle to fall asleep.” — IQDeclined

“Seclusion. People assume that they’re ignoring others, but the reality is if they’re depressed, they want social interaction, but also simultaneously find the work required to attain it overwhelming. It’s a sad symptom because it leads others to reaching out less, which reinforces the depressive cycle.” — sendphotopls

“Sleeping simply to pass time. This is easier than being stressed at not doing anything productive.” — Over70Substances

“I feel like exhaustion is easy to ignore as a sign of depression. We’re so busy working and jumping from task to task, it’s easy to pass it off as being ‘just a little tired from work’ when hustle culture (and a lot of other stuff) is actually throwing us into a pit of despair.” — RavenPuff_23

“Hygiene. It starts slowly and you often don’t notice when people begin to let themselves go.” — sexualphenotypes

“When someone asks, ‘are you okay?’ And you automatically reply in the affirmative but inwardly wonder why you feel so low… then go about your day. Rinse, repeat, slowly burn out.” — HippieWitchyWoods

“Boredom is a part of life and we need to get bored every now and then, but malaise, when nothing seems fun or exciting, is the enemy. Your hobby time has dwindled, you don’t start new things or projects because ‘it’s just a bit much right now. It’ll get better soon.’” — IOnceWas

“Finding something (anything really) that takes up enough headspace that you don’t have to think about life, or the next thing on your to do list. Could be reading books, podcasts, video games etc etc. You start finding creative ways to be ‘productive’ while still taking up 100% of the extra brain space with the distractions because you don’t want to face whatever it is in your life that sucks right now. In essence, the first signs of depression are subtle avoidance and fear of free flowing thought.” — Leora_Living

“Taking longer to do things. Sometimes a person might not be actively crying or sad but their body and mind are running on slow-mo.” — sewcrazy4cats

“Difficulties holding a conversation. You ask someone what their plans for the weekend is and it’s a struggle to focus past their third word, so you have to ask again, and again.” — studsper