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Almost half of us will suffer from depression at some point in our lives, but the condition
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remains badly misunderstood and therefore often poorly treated. At the heart of our
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collective difficulty with depression is a confusion about what it actually is - and
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in particular, how it can be distinguished from a state all of us know very well and
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with which it is has a distracting number of similarities, namely sadness. It's because
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we unwittingly tend to apply to cases of depression a number of assumptions drawn from, and better
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suited to, an understanding of sadness that we end up suffering far more than we should.
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There are, on the surface, some notable similarities between those who are sad and those who are
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depressed. Both groups cry; both withdraw from the world; both complain of listlessness
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and a sense of alienation from their normal lives. But there is one categorical difference
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between depression and sadness. The sad person knows what they are sad about; the depressed
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person doesn't.
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Sad people can, without difficulty, tell us what is troubling them. I am sad that my grandmother
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has died. Or that I lost my job. Or that my friends are being unkind to me. And - though
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it might sound strange - this is precisely what the depressed person is not capable of
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doing. They may be tearful and at a very low ebb, but they can't conclusively put a finger
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on what has drained life of meaning for them: they simply say it has no meaning per se.
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They aren't depressed about x or y as one might be sad about x or y. They are, first
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and foremost simply depressed.
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The inability of the depressed person to account concretely for their mood can lay them open
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to unwarranted charges of faking, malingering or exaggerating. Friends who begin in a well-meaning
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search for a soluble problem can end up frustrated by the lack of progress. When pushed, the
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depressed person may latch on to rather odd or minor-sounding issues to account for their
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state: they might complain that there is no point going to work because the earth is due
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to be absorbed by the sun in 7.5 billion years. Or they might insist that life lacks all meaning
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because they've just dropped a glass on the floor and everything is now completely
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hopeless.
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At this stage, one can hear it said that if depression doesn't have any any sensible
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psychological causes, the problem must be bound up with some kind of imbalance in brain
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chemistry, which it would be kinder and more effective to treat with pills - an idea of
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great appeal to the pharmaceutical industry first and foremost, but also to worried families
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and schools and employers who crave rapid and cost-effective solutions.
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But there is another approach to depression which, though slower and more arduous, may
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be a great deal more effective in the long-term. This stems from insights drawn from psychotherapy,
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the discipline that has - arguably - been able to understand depression better than
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any other. The basic premise of psychotherapy is that the depressed person isn't depressed
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- as they suggest - for no reason. There is a reason. They are very distressed about something
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but that something is proving extremely difficult to take on board, and has therefore been pushed
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into the outer zones of consciousness - from where it wreaks havoc on the whole person,
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prompting boundless feelings of nihilism. For depressives, realising what they are concretely
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upset about would be too devastating, so they unconsciously choose to remain dead to everything,
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as opposed to very distraught about something. Depression is sadness that has forgotten its
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true causes - forgotten because remembering may generate overwhelming, untenable feelings
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of pain and loss.
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What might these true causes be? Perhaps that we have married the very wrong person. Or
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that our sexuality isn't what we once believed. Or that we are furious with a parent for their
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lack of care in childhood. In order to preserve a fragile peace of mind, one then 'chooses'
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- though that may sound more willed than it is in reality - to be depressed rather than
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to have a realisation. We pick unceasing numbness as protection against dreadful insight.
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To make things yet more difficult, the depressed person doesn't typically consciously feel
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that they are in fact lacking insight. They are not aware of a gap in their self-understanding.
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Furthermore, they are nowadays often taught to assume that they are 'just depressed',
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as one might be physically ill - a verdict that can be of appeal as much to the pharmaceutical
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industry as to certain people close to the patient with an interest in insights remaining
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buried.
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There's another key difference to note between sadness and depression. Sad people are grief-stricken
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about something out in the world but they aren't necessarily sad about themselves,
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their self-esteem is unaffected by their grief, whereas depressed people will characteristically
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feel wretched about themselves and be full of self-recrimination, guilt, shame and self-loathing
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paranoia that may, at tragic extremes, culminate in suicidal thoughts.
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For psychotherapy, the origins of these violent moods of self-hatred lie in anger due for,
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but unable to be directed towards, someone else in the world - that has then turned against
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the sufferer. Wrathful feelings that should have gone outwards, towards a partner who
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is relentlessly defensive and denies one sex or a parent who humiliated one in childhood,
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are instead driven back onto the sufferer and starts to attack them. The feeling: 'X
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has horribly let me down' turns into a very unpleasant but in some ways more bearable
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'I'm an unworthy and unbearable wretch.' One becomes self-hating as a defence against
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the risks of hating someone else.
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Also worth noting in all this is that, in many cases, depression is associated with
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an apparently opposite mood, a kind euphoric state termed mania, hence the term 'manic-depressive'.
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The mania in question looks, from a distance, a bit like happiness, just like depression
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can look like sadness. But in one area in particular, the relationship between mania
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and happiness is identical to that between depression and sadness. The common element
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is a disavowed self-knowledge. In mania, one is euphoric, but cannot go into one's own
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deep mind and discover its bitter truths. Which explains one of the leading characteristics
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of manic people: their habit of being in flight from themselves, talking too fast about nothing,
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over-exercising, working continuously or spending too much - all as an escape from a submerged
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grief, rage and loss.
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It is from this kind of diagnosis that a suggested cure emerges. What people in depression need
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above all is a chance to arrive at insight. For this, they will tend to need a hugely
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supportive and patient listener. They may also - used appropriately - benefit from temporary
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use of medication to lift their mood just enough so that they can endure a conversation.
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But the assumption isn't that brain chemistry is where the problem either begins or ends;
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the despair is caused by an undigested, unknown and unresolved trauma. Far from needing to
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be taken through reasons to trust that life is beautiful, depressives must be allowed
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to feel and to remember specific damage - and to be granted a fundamental sense of the legitimacy
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of their emotions. They need to be allowed to be angry, and for the anger to settle on
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the right, awkward targets.
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The goal in treating depression is to move a sufferer from feeling limitlessly despairing
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to mourning the loss of something in particular: the last twenty years, a marriage, a hope
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one would be loved by one's father, a career... However agonising the insight and mourning
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might be, these must always be preferable to allowing loss to contaminate the totality
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of one's perspective. There are plenty of dreadful things in every life - which is why
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it is wholly normal to feel sad on a regular basis. But there are also always a sufficient
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number of things that remain beautiful and hopeful, so long as one has been allowed to
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understand and known one's pain and anger - and adequately mourn one's losses.
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Our Know Yourself Cards can help us understand the deepest and most elusive aspects of ourselves.
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Follow the link now to learn more.