
I have never really had depression (touch wood) apart from a day or so a year. On that day, I become absorbed in my own situation and inadequacy. I don't know why it happens - perhaps it's a purge of sorts...
Anyway, whatever! I prefer to stay


Moderator: Fist and Faith
Krazy Kat wrote:Seems like everytime I click on a thread I get this depressing shit.Cambo wrote:Lorin -![]()
Surprisingly I've not had any major struggle with depression over the course of this whole sudden illness/girlfriend leaving thing. I've been sad, scared, worried, and in pain, but not depressed. Too busy just dealing with what's in front of me maybe.
imgur.com/7jRKAAgAvatar wrote:Don't click on threads called "Depression" then.
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Thanks for providing the opportunity for me to post in this thread, I have wanted to for some time.Lady Revel wrote:Nice talking to you, U. I am so glad we are both feeling better and finding ways to handle our depression.
Sure, there's a stigma around that phrase. But I think depression is demonstrably a mental illness. The medical profession agrees; if you get diagnosed, a doctor will prescribe you medication only people with depression are allowed. I can take a medical certificate into work and they have to give me sick leave. Most importantly, it's a condition that skews your perceptions of reality in a pathological way.Avatar wrote:Sheesh, I dunno if I'd call it mental illness.I mean, I suppose in a sense it is, the way that flu is physical illness. But the negative connotations are pretty strong.
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Thanks for the back-up ShawnShaun das Schaf wrote:The negative connotations seem to be strong because we as a culture perceive and portray mental illness very differently from physical illness. It's okay to be diagnosed with and treated for diabetes, but don't go revealing in public that you're bipolar or suffer from anxiety or depression. And I'm not talking about worrying a bit or feeling sometimes sad. I'm talking about long-term clinical and chemical realities. If it's an illness of the mental realm, guess what, it's mental illness and we shouldn't have a problem calling it that. I think also, that people tend to subconsciously and or consciously think of the extremes when hearing the words 'mental illness'. But, just like any phenomena, they exist along a spectrum, and being dynamic in nature, also vary within their position on the spectrum!
As for comparing long term /chronic unipolar depression to the flu, that's not a great analogy imho.
Sorry Av, if this is a bit terse /harsh. It's a button-pressing area. I can give you a list of other areas of you want to dodge the bullets in the future![]()
ETA: Seems Mr Cambo beat me to it.
Just call me Rasputin.Shaun das Schaf wrote:I'll have to try poison next timeKnowing you though, you've got the constitution of an Ox!
Y'see though, this is part of what I was saying...I get that sense from the people who suffer from it.ussusimiel wrote:There's a sense that once a person 'gets' it that they are 'broken' and will never be 'right' again afterwards.
Not me.With regard to chronic unipolar depression I am very careful (now!) about the language I use in relation to it.
Really excellently put. I think I couldn't agree more. Sometimes we're our own worst enemy. And we should stop that sort of thing.I now always use the words 'experience', 'engage with', 'indulge', 'immerse myself in' when I am talking about depression and how it is present in my life. It took me years to dig myself out of the position of 'victim' which the phrase 'suffering from depression' mired me in. One of the key stages in my engagement with the reality of my situation was taking more and more personal responsibility for it, the whole lot of it! That was hard, very hard. It's like some sort of nightmare to be faced with having to accept that much of the suffering I had gone through was self-inflicted
Depression is a tough experience on its own terms, when I surround it with powerfully negative language and perceive it as a social stigma, I simply inflate it to a point where it seems/feels overwhelming.
I'm sure sometimes you do. I've felt that way before. And it's a bullshit illusion, but it feels pretty real and irrevocable (to borrow one of Donaldson's favourite words). But that's neither here nor there when it comes to the status of depression of a mental illness. Illnesses don't necessarily break people. I know now that my depression won't break me any more than Crohns disease will. But they are both ongoing and fairly serious conditions I expect to deal with for most of my life. That's what makes it an illness.Avatar wrote:Y'see though, this is part of what I was saying...I get that sense from the people who suffer from it.
Sure, I've felt it myself...and that's again my point...it is an illusion. And knowing that is half the battle, however it may feel.Cambo wrote: I'm sure sometimes you do. I've felt that way before. And it's a bullshit illusion, but it feels pretty real and irrevocable...
On that we are agreed.Avatar wrote:Sure, I've felt it myself...and that's again my point...it is an illusion. And knowing that is half the battle, however it may feel.Cambo wrote: I'm sure sometimes you do. I've felt that way before. And it's a bullshit illusion, but it feels pretty real and irrevocable...
Unless somebody has a physical defect or abnormality that prevents the normal functioning of neuro-chemistry or similar aspects, then the solution is in there, just like the "problem" is.
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