Depression
" Depression exhausts me.
Depression blinds me.
Depression strangles me."
- Sri Chinmoy
Ask five different health professionals for a definition of
depression, and you are likely to get five different answers.
To a physician it is a disease, something you can treat with
medication. To the pharmacy industry, it is an opportunity
to make lots of money and some psychiatrists will define it
as a physical brain disorder.
Depression is a term for a complex set of processes but is
not necessarily a 'thing'. It is a useful label, but telling
someone that they are depressed could be seen as permission
to adopt a certain way of thinking and reacting. This is not
to deny that to experience depression is a real and debilitating
event and should always be taken seriously by any therapist,
but it may be more useful for the person suffering, to acknowledge
that people can be involved in the process of depressing themselves.
That is, it is not an outside force that attacks them, but
a process that they have the power to turn around and change.
A therapist can help their patients or clients to realize that
they have control over their own fate and do not have to be
passive victims of a disease.
People describe their 'depression' in many ways and the words
used are symbolic representations of complex facts and feelings.
Expressions such 'falling endlessly into a black hole', 'locked
inside a cage', 'silently screaming and knowing that no one
will hear' are only some of the phrase used. Everybody 'does'
depression in different ways but the pain is the same. In some
people, depression is denied and unrecognized because they
control it by acting out in self harmful ways, such as eating
disorders, alcohol or drug abuse or aggressive behaviour.
As a psychotherapist I have a duty of care when a client presents
to me with depressive ideation, to ensure that they do not
have suicidal thoughts and plans. In such cases, I will always
recommend that they see a GP to discuss anti depressant medication
as well as continuing therapy. In most other situations I do
not suggest pharmaceutical medication because I do not see
depression as an illness but as a way of coping with overwhelming
circumstances. These may be past traumas that have not been
dealt with, current issues such as loss of a loved one or most
often, a build up over time of many losses, griefs and causes
to be sad.
Depression can then be seen as a coping mechanism which can help
to numb the overburdened person from life's pain and opt out
of dealing with unwanted issues. This should not be seen as a
sign of weakness but as a survival skill.
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