Hi, Ava,
Being MDD is a huge thing in one's life. It's a battleground and as such it leaves us drained and exhausted and wounded even as we regain chemical balance from the meds and then some emotional balance from having confronted our own, perhaps faulty, psychology.
So, whether we liked it or not we were sent into battle, we had to soldier for uneven periods over years with the usual stretches of fearful boredom and then periods of heightened panic and despair.
So, we come "home" to ourselves and it takes time and study and focus on the Self to get rid of the PTSD - to "normalise" ourselves - but that is such a tall order, yes? We work at ourselves with group therapy, one on one psychiatric or psychological help and we take the meds. But we still seem to "remember"that living was more like an 8 on the Happy scale before depression and now we can't get past a 5.
"Happiness" is such a hard, subjective thing to define - same as "normal" is. It must have taken me two years at least to get over the shock and the pain of the depression; to deal with the chenical and psychological balances and maintain some working 'happiness'. Now there are improvements as the months tick by and my happiness or contentment has levelled out. I function very well with my disabilities and I get "joy" every day knowing that I have resolved many of my psychological conflicts and my meds are stable and working well.
I don't know what your state of happiness is like and I never will, I suppose. My happiness is internal, it's patrick-made and I protect it so that it remains durable in the face of hardships. I don't suddenly burst into song like some boyfriend of Julie Andrews, but I do smile at a cow scratching it's butt on a fence; that's big 'happiness' for me and I watch and wait for those elements. And, all that vigilance pays off insofar as I see many more beautiful things in this world than I did before I sank into major, immobilising, depression.
I guess what I'm saying is that I have learned not to expect to erase all that my mind has been through and reach some earthly nirvana - this doesn't stop me seeking a touch of satori now and again!
Patrick