I think it may be already over. I haven't had the 'symptoms' for a year or two now.
I'm very happy to hear that.
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I think it may be already over. I haven't had the 'symptoms' for a year or two now.
I want to add to what I said by saying my metaphysical beliefs are a humongous booster shot to keep me from depression. I believe that I will continue on growing and advancing beyond death and believe that progressively greater things are always ahead of me. The alternative belief of only declining physical and mental capacities being ahead of me along with the knowledge that consciousness extinguishes with the death of the physical brain would leave me quite susceptible to feelings of pointlessness, nihilism and depression.Each person is different. Medication has worked great for me. Therapy and honest conversation wouldn't help me at all. Prozac was better living through chemicals for me! But, the next guy may be different. 'Depression' is too general of a term for one solution..
It's a great relief to feel 'normal'. You know when you have a headache, and you get on with your day and it just gets worse. So you take an aspirin and the headache clears and you feel great because the lack of headache is wonderful all of a sudden. That's how the last 12 months have been.I'm very happy to hear that.
Aye, I avoided thinking about most of the things that could be 'causes'. Mostly this was because I was the cause of a lot of it and I didn't want to accept my failings.I found the best way to deal with depression is to try to get to the root of the cause, find out why you are depressed, and deal with it.
Thank you.Peace be on you.
I don't know that I beat it but it went away. Hopefully I can avoid it in future.I dunno if you could beat depression. Depression has always struck me as being pretty masochistic. You'd just end up turning it on and then you've got a whole other set of problems to deal with.
I think I know this feeling.jumi said:Yes. My secret was basically nature and meditation. It took me a long time, but when I figured it out it the sun shone on my life.
Yes you can....
- It takes getting fit = gravity weighs us down, unless we're physically strong enough.
- Eating healthy, i.e. going vegetarian, no additives = You are what you eat.
- Mindfulness meditation = spend the time to talk to your own self, much more efficient than any councilor as you ask the right questions.
- Plenty of nature = Crazy disharmonious cities, nature helps us re-harmonize us.
- Positive affirmations = don't allow ourselves to slip into bad thought processes.
I myself never experienced depression , but i feel one can beat it with positive attitude , volunteer service ,charity , physical exercise like running etc
Yes. My secret was basically nature and meditation. It took me a long time, but when I figured it out it the sun shone on my life.
I want to add to what I said by saying my metaphysical beliefs are a humongous booster shot to keep me from depression. I believe that I will continue on growing and advancing beyond death and believe that progressively greater things are always ahead of me. The alternative belief of only declining physical and mental capacities being ahead of me along with the knowledge that consciousness extinguishes with the death of the physical brain would leave me quite susceptible to feelings of pointlessness, nihilism and depression.
If we don't bring what is causing our depression out and deal with it, it will always be bubbling beneath our subconscious mind, never letting us go, drag it out by the roots, and forgive yourself.It's a great relief to feel 'normal'. You know when you have a headache, and you get on with your day and it just gets worse. So you take an aspirin and the headache clears and you feel great because the lack of headache is wonderful all of a sudden. That's how the last 12 months have been.
Aye, I avoided thinking about most of the things that could be 'causes'. Mostly this was because I was the cause of a lot of it and I didn't want to accept my failings.
Thank you.
I don't know that I beat it but it went away. Hopefully I can avoid it in future.
I think I know this feeling.
When sadness becomes hypocritial to ourselves do we talk about depression then?Can you deal with it on your own, no medication or therapy or much in the way of honest conversation about how you feel?
Can you deal with it on your own, no medication or therapy or much in the way of honest conversation about how you feel?
Can you deal with it on your own, no medication or therapy or much in the way of honest conversation about how you feel?
Can you deal with it on your own, no medication or therapy or much in the way of honest conversation about how you feel?
No, at least not with the sort of depression I have. If it's mild or perhaps moderate, perhaps. But if you have severe, suicidal depression that leaves you unable to function for years like I do, then no. I'm on 200 mg of Zoloft (the maximum they're supposed to give you) and I still wish I were dead, hate myself and can't function. All it's done, basically, is make the suicidal thoughts less severe than it was before, so I'm less likely to commit suicide.Can you deal with it on your own, no medication or therapy or much in the way of honest conversation about how you feel?
Sometimes, this doesn't suffice. It can help, but some people have neurological issues that must be dealt with. Medicine might not be necessary, but it has nothing to do with mere sadness.I myself never experienced depression , but i feel one can beat it with positive attitude , volunteer service ,charity , physical exercise like running etc
That sounds pretty heavy - I hope you can find some peace.No, at least not with the sort of depression I have. If it's mild or perhaps moderate, perhaps. But if you have severe, suicidal depression that leaves you unable to function for years like I do, then no. I'm on 200 mg of Zoloft (the maximum they're supposed to give you) and I still wish I were dead, hate myself and can't function. All it's done, basically, is make the suicidal thoughts less severe than it was before, so I'm less likely to commit suicide.
Evolve your Weltanschauung
No, at least not with the sort of depression I have. If it's mild or perhaps moderate, perhaps. But if you have severe, suicidal depression that leaves you unable to function for years like I do, then no. I'm on 200 mg of Zoloft (the maximum they're supposed to give you) and I still wish I were dead, hate myself and can't function. All it's done, basically, is make the suicidal thoughts less severe than it was before, so I'm less likely to commit suicide.