Articles
Help
For Depression
By Dr. Bill Gaultiere
"I've
been depressed since I was nine years old," Veronica lamented
(not her real name). "My mother was depressed when I was a child.
It seemed she was in a bad mood all the time. I never knew if
I'd get a smile or a slap.
"My
depression took a severe turn for the worse a few years ago
when I had a nervous breakdown at work. At first I fought against
going to the hospital and taking medication, but then it came
together for me: `This is a biological illness. It's not my
fault. I don't care what anybody thinks. I want to be happy
again. I'm going to get help.'
"I
did get help. I got the medical and therapeutic help I needed
and I started improving. I was getting my life back. I could
sleep peacefully. Food didn't taste like cardboard anymore.
I could concentrate. I could smile again!"
Veronica
is not alone. Depression is the most common complaint heard
in doctor's offices today. One in five women and one in ten
men will at some time in their lives be diagnosed with clinical
depression. Many more people become depressed at one time or
another in their lives, but aren't diagnosed. Some people are
just too embarrassed to admit that they are depressed. They
may think that it's weak or bad or sinful to feel depressed
and therefore try to deny their feelings. Others have asked
for help and been disappointed and so they've gone into hiding.
And still others are so depressed that they can't seem to muster
up the energy to get the help they need; they don't have any
hope that they could ever feel better anyway.
Those
who are depressed need to feel better. Depression is serious.
Left untreated it is not only painful, but can be disabling
and even life threatening when it leads to a suicide attempt.
Those who are depressed can feel better. There is hope. Depression
can be treated. Like Veronica, those who are depressed can smile
again, they can find the pep in their step, they can feel love
and peace and joy in their hearts.
Symptoms
of Depression
As with any psychological or relational problem the first
step to getting help is diagnosis. You need to accept that you
have a problem and understand the nature of your struggle before
you can get help. People who are depressed have negative feelings
and perceptions about themselves, their life, and their future.
They say or think things like:
-
"It
doesn't matter. Why try to do that? It won't work for me anyway."
-
"I
feel empty inside."
-
"Nobody
really cares about me."
-
"I'm
a loser. I just keep messing things up."
-
"I
don't care anyway."
-
"I'm
caught in a long, black tunnel, and there is no light at the
end."
-
"It's
like I'm trying to walk in mud. I can hardly put one foot
in front of the other."
People
who are depressed also struggle with some of the following symptoms:
-
Lethargy,
fatigue, general slowing down
-
Loss of appetite or weight gain
-
Insomnia
or sleeping too much
-
Neglect of responsibilities · Lack of concern for personal
appearance and hygiene
-
Poor memory · Difficulty concentrating
-
Irritability over minor things
-
Sudden tearfulness
-
Inability to find pleasure in relationships, hobbies, or other
activities
-
Headaches, backaches, and other aches and pains
Reactive
or Biological Depression?
Not all depressions are the same. The key distinction is identifying
whether the depression is reactive or biological. Veronica's depression
was biological. She had a family history of depression, had been
depressed a long time, and her functioning was severely impaired
by her depression. She was not only emotionally depressed she
was physically and biochemically depressed. She responded well
to medication and supportive therapy and has an active and full
life today, volunteering some of her free time to help other people
who are depressed.
A reactive
depression is different than a biological depression. It is a
short-term response to a stressful or painful life event. If you've
had a loved one die, been fired from your job, experienced a health
problem, or been hurt or disappointed in a relationship, then
you probably feel depressed. This is a normal and healthy response.
When dealing with these emotional heartaches we need a season
to grieve. Talking about our sadness with a friend or in a support
group helps us to heal. We need to be listened to. We need comfort.
If, in this way, we grieve and get support with a reactive depression
then in time we will feel better.
If you don't
get help when you start to feel depressed then your problem may
become more serious. Reactive depressions can become acutely overwhelming
or chronic and disabling if you don't get the help you need when
you're hurting. How does this happen? Consider Steve's story (not
his real name). When he was a six years old his parents divorced.
His father moved out of state and remarried, and then Steve only
saw him sporadically throughout his childhood. His mother remarried
when he was a teenager, but he was reticent to let this man fill
the role of step father.
Steve was
still depressed about losing his father when I met him in his
thirties. He had never grieved. Dad told him on the phone that
"Big boys don't cry." His mom was hurt and bitter about the divorce
herself and she just got upset whenever Steve tried to talk about
it, so he didn't feel safe sharing with her. Tragically, he spent
25 years "pulling himself up by his bootstraps," denying his pain
and his needs for support, and trying to be strong and independent.
His strategy worked pretty well at work, but not in his relationships.
He wouldn't let anyone close to him. He was lonely, withdrawn,
and burdened with depression and low self-esteem. When I met him
he was having trouble getting out of bed to go into the office.
His depression had become physical. Fortunately, he finally did
get the help he needed by taking an antidepressant and entering
therapy, where he worked through his unresolved grief over losing
his dad and his family unit and took some important steps to turn
his life around.
Steps to
Get Help for Depression
If you're depressed you can get help like Veronica and Steve
did, but you need to work at it. Change isn't easy, but is possible.
You can get help for your depression by working through the following
eight steps. Start by focusing on the one or two steps that you
most need to implement.
- Get
medical help. Consult with your doctor or a psychiatrist
to see if you need antidepressant medication. If you're depression
is biologically based, or you have a severe and unresolved reactive
depression, then you need medication. Don't fight it get the
help you need.
- Talk
to trustworthy people. Talk to your friends, get involved
in a local church, find a support group, or consult with a pastor
or therapist. Don't stay isolated. You need other people in
your life to feel care, joy, and meaning.
- Grieve
your losses. Usually, people who are depressed are emotionally
blocked in some way. They have "ungrieved grief." Past losses
need to be grieved, whether the death of a loved one, the loss
of a job, a relational disappointment, childhood injuries, or
some other loss. Jesus described this process succinctly in
his beatitude, "Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall
be comforted." (Matthew 5:4). Indeed, to share your sadness
with a trusted confidante and to receive comfort is the blessing
that in due time will heal a reactive depression.
- Mobilize
your anger to take better care of yourself. If you're depressed
then you probably have a problem with repressed anger. You may
have been violated, criticized, or hurt in the past and accepted
a judgment that you are of little value or are "eligible" to
be mistreated. The pain of these past injuries then gets perpetuated
if you misdirect your anger inward as self-criticism or let
it stagnate in a pool of resentment. Instead, you need to mobilize
your anger to take care of yourself. What does it mean to mobilize
your anger? To mobilize your anger is to get in touch with the
anger by feeling it and then harness the energy in that anger
and focus it in helpful ways. Let me offer some very brief examples.
- Talk through the situation with the person who hurt you to
improve your relationship today.
- Write a letter you don't send or talk about the problem with
a trusted confidante.
- With the person who wounded you and in situations similar
to that with others, be sure to set boundaries of protection
or limits on what you will and won't do.
- Work on being proactive in meeting your needs by asking for
what you need in your relationships and by doing things that
you enjoy.
- Finally, let go of your anger by entrusting justice to God.
Tell God how you feel and ask him to deal with the person who
wronged you and ask him to help you to forgive.
As the Apostle Paul taught us, "Instead, speaking the truth
in love, we will in all things grow up.... In your anger do
not sin. Do not let the sun go down while you are still angry"
(Eph 4:15,26). Dealing with your anger in this manner will help
to lift your depression.
- Think
positively. People who are depressed struggle with negative
thinking. Low self-esteem, guilt, and hopelessness besiege them.
Don't give in to negativity. Discipline yourself to think positive
thoughts about yourself, your life, and your future. Meditate
on Bible verses that remind you of God's love for you, like
Romans 8:1: "There is now no condemnation for those who are
in Christ Jesus." (For more encouraging verses see my article,
"God's Love, Our Christmas Gift.")
- Do
something positive today. Do something good for yourself
even if you don't feel like it. Take a bubble bath while listening
to your favorite music. Go for a walk with a friend on the beach
or at a park. Write a letter to a friend. Smile to a stranger.
Even "little" things like these can make a big difference in
how you feel.
- Pray
or write a psalm to God. Powerful, positive, healing possibilities
await us when we pray to God about our hurts and concerns. When
we go a step further and write our prayers out, like David did
in the Psalms, we tap into even greater potential help. In many
of his psalms David models a simple, effective format for praying
and writing out your concerns. Simply talk to God honestly about
what you're experiencing, ask him for what you need, and then
remind yourself of God's goodness and past provision for you
as you wait on him.
- Help
someone else who is need. Jesus promised, "It is more blessed
to give than to receive" (Acts 20:35b). Helping others helps
us. Veronica's story at the top of this article illustrates
this point. We all need to be needed, to feel significant and
to know that we are making a difference. When we help someone
we experience the joy of connecting and we learn and grow even
as we help.
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