Depressed? Net-based Treatments Can Help
Jung and the Restless writes "Researchers at an Australian university have found that regular visits to therapeutic and educational web sites can successfully treat depression. Researchers directed patients to The MoodGYM, a cognitive behavior therapy site, and BluePages, a depression education site. After 12 months, users of both web sites reported improvement, with the educational site working out better than the behavior therapy site. A psychotherapist who did not participate in the study says that the results aren't all that surprising. 'Cognitive behavioral strategies — sometimes in conjunction with medication — are the most effective means of treating depression,' and 'a person who is visiting an educational site like BluePages is taking the necessary steps with her own self-care. That's a key component of successful treatment for depression'"
As the article points out, someone who visits any website at all is taking steps to deal with their depression and so you'd expect them to get better. Surely they needed a placebo website, with 'neutral' content, that could act as a control group. They get a little of that by comparing one website against another, but they haven't shown that either is a better choice than just browsing. They could even be a bit worse.
-- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
I'm one of those depressed people psychologists treat (I've been more than I can remember in the last twenty five years) and while cognitive behavioural therapy is one of the big tools in their arsenal, I'm afraid most of them consider CBT + Antidepressants to be the ONLY tool they'll use. It's done little to help me, yet when I see a psych, it's more laying on thick CBT with another round of antidepressants. My past experience with it is ignored, and they'll go so far as to say I'm clearly getting better despite evidence to the contrary.
Moving sideways for an analogy, it's like going into hospital with a stab wound and being given aspirin. When that doesn't work, more aspirin is given, and the doc insists it's better, despite nothing healing and the pain being just as bad. 18 months later, when the doc has done nothing more than to give more aspirin, I realise it's another bum move, and I try another doctor. The next doctor says he has just the right treatment... and whips out some aspirin.
Psych training is pretty damned poor in Australia.
But what if it's spending so much time on the internet that makes me depressed?
-Grey
Silver Clipboard: Time Management Tips
Lots of fun stuff to watch. Enuff said.
. o O ( TwO hEaDs ArE mOrE tHaN oNe... )
I used to have depression, and have only recently (this month) gone back to work. I think these sites are interesting, but use them as an 'extra' to getting proper help. Go and see your doctor, they'll help identify what the best course of action is, and go from there.
Of course, realising that you are depressed isn't easy and realising you need help is even harder. Actually going and getting help is the hardest of all, but you'll never be so glad when you finally do. And remember, your friends and family are there to help too - don't feel embarrassed asking for their help, everyone needs help at sometime in their life
- Andy.
Now that would surely make the world a better place.
Cute overload.
Works for me.
Powered by Web3.5 RC 2
I think a psychotherapist would have a field day with slashdot users. Either that or they'd end up needing therapy themselves. ;)
Video Game cheats, hints a
it has the word "cognitive" in it, so it must be very advanced and useful. highly recommended.
Cutting back on masturbating cured me of depression, though, now I have anger management issues.
Wanna fight ? Bend over, stick your head up your ass, and fight for air.
Eliza http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ELIZA anyone?
I was going to RTFA, but, you know, what's the use? It's not going to change anything. Sigh....
Whenever I'm bored or feel like wasting time (or about to slit my wrists from manic emo depression), I just go to collegehumor.com or break.com and laugh my ass off at the pictures and videos people post.
Hi,
Just thought you may find http://www.beyondblue.org.au/ of interest.
I just did the first set of tests (feelings) on that site. Did it quickly, so the end result is probably not totally accurate but it can't be too far off either. What I like about the site is the educational approach. Helping people to understand these type of problems is important first step to healing. What I don't like about it, is that my results chart is almost identical as Cyberman's. No feelings.
I tried to use /. to cure work-related depression. The problems are still here, but now I also feel lazy.
...I'm depressed now 'cause the first site uses flash.
"goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
Just avoid myspace.com
Increases serotonin levels, and for guys testosterone completely naturally. You start to look good and feel good about yourself. There are a bunch of other beneficial side effects. It seems that the human body is designed to be physically stressed on a regular basis.
Deleted
Have you tried electroconvulsive therapy yet?
Lithium may also work, but from my experance they try to avoid giving you lithium so there's probably something bad about it that they don't put on the leaflet.
thank God the internet isn't a human right.
Eliza is my AI-therapist.
Stop the world; I need to get off.
Is it just me, or is this way of presenting research even more superficial than usual? Nobody would present a (even minor) scientific breakthrough with the words "Some scientists somewhere in Northern or Southern America discovered...", even in a Slashdot blurb. By the way, it's The Australian National University in Canberra, as clearly stated at the beginning of the article.
Nuffsaid
________
Don't know about his cat, but Schroedinger is definitely dead.
I'm one of those people who's not really depressed, but just has a very bleak outlook on life.
I went to a psych, but all he did was start digging. There were some good points there, though. They hold up a mirror and let you see what you say/think about yourself.
However, it was somewhat overkill. I'm just one of those people who first think about the stuff that _must_ be done and only every now and then think about what could be _fun_ to do.
Any slashdotters thinking the same? Any solutions, for that matter?
A psycho, the rapist who did not participate in the study, says that the results aren't all that surprising.
Slashdot is powered by your submission.
Have you any idea how condescending you sound? There's a difference between feeling low and feeling depressed. And if you haven't been through the latter, then you wouldn't suggest to 'realize that life isn't a dance on roses'.
You can't imagine how it's like to drive on the highway with 90 mph and thinking "I might as well turn the steering wheel real quick and be done with it". For weeks on end. Every day.
So cut the "know-it-all" attitude and accept that there are thing you don't know a rat's ass about. Asshole.
8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
Well you are right in that I have never been depressed in the way you describe, but unfortunately, I do have some knowledge within this field. The problem with a large chunk of the population seeing therapists for minor issues is that they are clogging up the system; hence the more serious cases are not getting the attention they need. This is due to that a private therapists will not differentiate between who needs treatment and who doesn't, but he will no the less have to turn away clients at the end of the day if his schedule is full. BTW, I am really just repeating my first post, but as it seems I stepped on your toes I thought I should clarify.
I started reading this book (or at least, the Dutch translation).
Already it has learned me a lot about my complaints, ranging from severe tension problems and psychological problems (which could be categorized as depression, I'm afraid).
It is really written very well and it's worth reading just about every page, but what it boils down to is that people today (and both me and computer programmers in general not in the least) try to rationalize too much of what they feel, or channel it in accepted ways.
For instance, when I was totally angry at a collegue once, but couldn't deal with it appropiately, all I did was go to my boss and say 'I would like to go home now, I cannot concentrate on work any longer'. It went downhill from there because I couldn't cope with being unhappy with the situation (I like to be positive about things, but I couldn't find too much to be positive about). I thought I was going crazy (I was) and my muscles ground my bones to dust every day. On top of that I started to worry about my (mental) health, of course.
For a large part I already learned to accept that I would be so much better off simply finding a more normal place to work (it can be crazy here), but the book gives me insights beyond my current problem. I have not finished it yet, but for the first time I enjoy reading a book that tries to teach me exactly how I am 'crazy'.
"We can confirm that Debian does *not* ship the version with the trojan horse. Our version predates it." [CA-2002-28]
Why do people keep falling for these tricks that are supposed to help your depression when it's been proven that body thetans are the cause of depression.
Give us all your money and we'll give you some books to read and some nifty technical stuff to help you get rid of them.
Best regards
Thetan of L. Ron
In my own experience and I recently suffered a very serious depressive episode which resulted in my being absent from work for two months. It went on, seemingly endlessly, with the pills I was presecribed and the counselling making no noticable difference. Until a friend of mine, who had seen the above mentioned study, offered me a line of k. I had only ever taken k once before, about 4 years previously, and thoroughly enjoyed it. So I snorted it and had my trip which enabled me to look into myself and see my problems from an entirely new angle, get some perspective on them and do a proper mental inventory. The next morning I woke up for the first time in weeks not feeling tearful or suicidal and, in the two months or so since I took the k, my recovery has been consistent and marked. Of course, it could just be a coincidence and other peoples' mileage may vary, but I firmly believe that just one line of k (I didn't take any more) made a real and lasting contribution towards treating my depression and psychiatrists should be open to trying it (which I would imagine the drug companies would hate, given the prices they charge for proprietary anti-depressants).
after a year, most mildly depressed people are going to feel better anyway. without a control group you can't conclude that treatment made a difference.
I was medically diagnosed with Depression in the early 90's but I am pretty sure that I have been experiencing it since the 70's. I am still taking the meds so anything that follows may or may not make any sense. (I do make enough sense these days to make over $100K/yr, which is no way to judge a person's personal success, but it may be one way to judge whether I can function in this culture of ours.) I seem to have accidentally found something that actually works. At least, I am happy about it and that is saying something. In my quest to understand my depression, among the many ideas I have explored are various religions. I examined, practiced, and discarded quite a few. (Having something to do keeps one's mind busy.) I happened on the Buddhist philosphy of "totally caring for others", otherwise known as compassion. It seems to work. I now "fixate" on making other people happy (as far as I am able and I try to improve at that) instead trying to always make myself happy and trying to find "permanament" happiness for myself, which really is what we all seem to be trying to do. Well, at any rate, my family and friends seems to be happier. I find happiness in that. Good luck, Cragen
I suffer from depression, and my recovery gets prolonged by well wishers who spend their time spouting idiotic comments like you just did.
Depression is NOT the same as feeling a little sad or 'blue'.
It is NOT something you can "just get over it", nor is it something "you brought on yourself".
Do you HAVE to be in a strait jacket, spazzing out to deserve treatment? Where does that put people like me? I've lost my education to it, and all i keep hearing is "Buck up, snap out of it, stop wasting time, Life sucks - deal with it" even when my greatest achievement has been to NOT stay in bed and cry - To have defeated the urge to give up.
It takes EVERYTHING I have, to just be able to sit up and talk to people and try and have as "normal" a day as possible.
Someone once said that - for some people the very act of going on, going on, is the greatest act of them all.
Would you have these people suffer because you are incapable of seeing anything but the obvious?
Ps- Please, please, please learn. My life has suffered because of people who said the same things as you, dont ever be in a position to regret doing it to the ones you love.
First, it's amazing to me that someone says 80% of depression patients don't have it gets marked insightful and someone with the opposite opinion his marked flamebait. Second, if 80% shouldn't be popping the pills doesn't that mean that doctors are misdiagnosing and mistreating patients? I.e. Malpractice?
I was locked away for depression. I admit that. I also admit that my psychiatrist answer to any problem was shoving more pills in me. I stopped going to them. Since my depression is mild enough I CAN do holistic instead of pills so these sites might help.
On a more personal note: As an MS patient, it irks me to see people saying "You're not sick" or "Just get over it". Unless you're in their skin, you HAVE to take their word for it.
Ask not what you can do for your country. Ask what your country did to you
8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
I've seen highly creative and active people fall into depression for no external reason whatsoever. Is it so inconceivable that it can be a serious illness, and that it's hard to fight that illness with the very organ afflicted by it?
Even if depression is purely reaction, a being-overwhelmed - once you're choking on insidiously persuasive infinite loops of "I'm filth, everyone can see it, I have no right to ask for help, I have no right to feel better", once self-injury sounds like a perfectly reasonable punishment for being yourself, once meeting your friends makes you cry with fear, once writing, painting, coding, loving, laughing all seem increasingly bizarre - how do you chill out with that shit screaming in your head?
Please excuse the angst and drama. I suppose it's exactly the kind of stuff people love to make fun of... but it's my description of depression. Not a "light" depression, maybe, but what kind of depression could ever be "light"?
Maybe you can chill out in that state and look forward to working on your projects or spending time with your kids or what have you. That's great... quite amazing, actually. And I suppose it does help having built up a sensible life - ideally before falling to pieces. But even then there's no guarantee you'll recognise it once push comes to shove. Well, I guess I shouldn't presume to speak for you.
I find that a little bit of marijuana takes care of... um... what were we talking about?
I don't think ALL depression is faked. I just think MOST depression stems from the fact people have really unimportant lives [even to themselves].
:-)
Same thing with ADD kids. I seriously doubt all of the kids have ADD. Most of them could just use sterner discipline. You can't look sideways at a kid today without getting a lawsuit up your ass. I remember getting kicked out of class, having to stay for detention, getting yelled at, etc when I was a shit disturber.
Nowadays kids get away with murder, and what's worse, we can't even fail them anymore, it might hurt their self-esteem!!!
I think western society really needs a kick in the ass, and this is comming from a 24 yr old, twice published, college graduate who likes nothing more than to hack code and play GTA:San Andreas....
Tom
Someday, I'll have a real sig.
Have to post as AC since all of my co workers are reading this. /rant
I have been depressed for the last 2 years or so. I had no idea what was causing it and attempted to take care of it myself.(big mistake) My work performance was declining and the constant stress of completing a simple daily task was causing even more stress and anxiety.
Last April I went to my Dr. and told him my issues, explaining that I had a serious case of loss of concentration, short term memory loss, extreme sadness, and wanting to turn my car into the divider every morning and night just so I could end my suffering. (I see another poster mentioned feeling the same way.)I was given the name of a therapist and called to make an appt. I was told that they could see me in about 3 months! WTF? I called my insurance company for an emergency contact number in an attempt to see someone sooner. They could not get me in for 10 weeks. I gave up at that point and went back to trying to fix myself. A few weeks ago it was unbearable and I went back to the Dr. He gave me some pills for anxiety and depression, and I made an appointment to see a therapist.(I still had to wait a few months for the initial appt.) if you get sick of code or IT, there is great demand in that job market. Back to my story! After about 4 weeks off of work and taking the meds with serious side effects, I started to think clearer. I am now in meetings and feel like a hawk, I can pay attention, I do not search endlessly for the right word to say ect. I would say this is a huge improvement. This also has caused me to be able to look at myself and figure out what is bothering me, what my issues are. There are many that I can take care of myself even before I go see the therapist in a few weeks. Unfortunately, I have realizes that my marriage has been suffering by the way my wife has been treating me for years. So I may finally get over the depression and be productive again. Just realizing what the issue was may have been denial, but I still could not figure out just what it was. I now feel about 80% better since I have identified what is causing most of my stress. I have recently confronted my wife with my feelings about our relationship and she agrees that she has issues in the way she interacts with me and want's to change it. The part that is killing me is, I know that people do not change. This is her personality & just the way she is. I hope we work it out, but I am not sure at this point.
The moral of this rant is:
If you are having issues, SEEK HELP SOON!
Talk to your Doc.
Do not put it off thinking you can take care of it yourself.
Seek help from friends, co workers would not be a good idea as they will not understand if they have not experienced this condition and being labeled as a nut may lower your future earnings potential.
Most of all know that you will get through it, but it will not be overnight.
It made my day reading the other posters with similar issues, remember you are not alone or crazy. (does not apply to all slashdotters!)
I'm glad I read the FDA approved MDMA studies. I've read that Harvard and MAPS is continuing psychedelic research once again for the first time in 30 years.
Thanks for the insight, Mr. Cruise.
I am not a crackpot.
Fight the world's problems and you'll have ups and downs, but the downs will be good honest pain as opposed to depression. And you'll be getting your daily input from better-than-average people.
(Acknowledging that if you can initiate a project like that you're already out of the worst stages of depression).
While I am a firm beleiver in Cognitive Behaviour strategies I should point out that depression has been shown to be cyclical in nature. There is just as likely a chance that a depressed person whould feel better if they did nothing for a year vice reading a web site. This is not to say that education is not important. If a person knows how to recognise when they need help, that is a big step. Minor depression and/or stress reactions can be handled by an individual but major clinical depression is irrational and often ends in suicide therefore a professional intervention is required.
Today's vices may be tomorrow's virtues.
Kid, I'd wish a bout of severe depression on you, but that's not even something I'd do to my worst enemy. When you say "people have really unimportant lives", you're making a value judgement that you have no place making. Don't argue with me now, just think about that and come back and argue 20 years from now.
Depression is a very difficult disease to deal with. It's also a complicated disease (or set of diseases) where the symptoms of all the different types of depression are pretty much the same. There are multiple causes and they often feedback on themselves which makes things a whole lot worse. It's not a trite saying to say that depression has a significant fatality rate as a disease. It needs to be treated as a potentially life-threatening disease. But like all diseases, there are various levels of severity ranging from mild to severe.
There's external-induced (events, relationships, or other things not under your control) depression which overloads the individual and causes them to give up hope. That's more amenable to talk therapy or even simple counseling where someone sits down with you and helps you formulate a plan. Some of the exercises are learning how to separate / identify which things you can change and which things are out of your control, then focusing on changing what is possible. Other goals of therapy are to help you identify which thoughts are incorrect views of reality ("everyone thinks that I'm ugly / worthless / stupid / etc") and to take steps to challenge those thoughts. See "Feeling Good" by David D. Burns for a good book about CBT.
Then there's the chemical side of the disease where the brain (other organs) don't make the right chemicals, or the receptors for those chemicals aren't working right. (This is where things get very experimental, theoretical, and understandings are constantly revised.) Even though there are no external events that would seem to cause depression, the individual spends their waking hours in pain and is seriously considering suicide as a viable solution to end the pain. Speech becomes slow and slurred, there's mental confusion, short-term memory issues, and you feel like you're viewing the world through a piece of gauze (or an oily lens).
And the two major sides of the disease often combine in a particular case, making it even more difficult and twisted. They'll feed off of each other, as the individual starts to sabotage relationships which makes them feel even worse as a person. And which also destroys the person's support network (unless the friends understand what is going on, which is rare) making recovery an even more difficult road.
Where things get tricky is that when you are depressed, it is very difficult to seek treatment. Seeking treatment requires you to believe that you can get better, which is 180 degrees in opposition to how you feel about yourself at that point in time. You'll be worried that they'll lock you up (resulting in friends, family, coworkers, bosses thinking that you're simply "crazy"). Or you could simply be worried about being branded as "crazy" or "seeking attention" by the above people. There's a huge social stigma towards mental disease and popular culture (TV, Movies) usually perpetuate the misunderstandings and misinformation in order to make for more 'engaging' story lines.
The reality of the matter is far different. Once you've been through a successful cycle of treatment, a lot of depressives become very outgoing and honest about their disease with others. Basically, you decide that the potential stigma is nothing compared to the pain and suffering that you've been through and that your suffering was increased because you were trying to hide the fact that you have depression. That relieves a lot of the pressure and you start trying to educate people around you about the disease (if they're willing to listen). Often, that forwardness and truthfulness results in someone else realizing (or admitting to themselves) and seeking treatment.
Wolde you bothe eate your cake, and have your cake?
Dude, you are soooooooooooo right. I'm not kidding.
:) hah
Been there, thought that,... even did some trajectory calculations and timings to see if the bridge was empty before I take it out. My problem was that I'm too considerate of others. I didn't want to go fuck up someone else's day. No need to be selfish and take myself out if I also end up smashing a lady's minivan with her 3yo daughter and 8yo son. That'd be stupid.
So yeah. I guess I should score a 'win' for "traffic"?
But I'm glad you made it back. I know it's tough (still is, isn't it?), but I hope you've been able to put some pieces back together and live good. I found it interesting when I lost all of my friends and then came back later to pick up some of those pieces and found all of it was changed greatly. Everything was almost unrecognizable. Very strange. But I liked it, because it gave me a chance to start over, in a way.
Welcome back.
May I suggest going here?
Anything is possible at ZomboCom! The only limit is your imagination! And if that's not uplifting, I don't know what fking is!
Still not dead.
It worked for me til my meds kicked in.
Great comment, thank you. I hope you get moded up so more people get to read this. Depression as a social phenomenon still doesn't get nearly enough (media) exposure. The issue, although affecting many more people than most would care to admit, just doesn't have a prominent place yet in our performance driven society. I am optimistic though.
Alot of depression is actually lack of sleep. Seriously. If someone is depressed, and they go to sleep, they will usually be happy. I'd even venture to say that the vast majority of depression cases would be cured, if they went to sleep for eight hours a night. Though, real results are seen after a week or two (as the body gets used to the rythem).
Have you read my journal today?
read ... what ... I am writing!
I'm not saying NOBODY has depression. I'm saying a lot of people lead unproductive lives and are "depressed" because of it. It's also a fad thing to have some diesease or another. All the kids are ADD and allergic to peanuts apparently...
All I'm trying to say is there are a lot of hypochondriacs out there who are truly not sick and rob the rest of precious doctor time and medicine.
Someday, I'll have a real sig.
"You don't know the history of psychiatry. I do" ~ Tom Cruise
Ask not what you can do for your country. Ask what your country did to you
Psh. If you're gonna do it, at least do it right.
An auto crash may seem appealing because it isn't obviously suicide, so your life insurance will still pay out. But if you pull in to a brick wall at 90mph, insurance is going to give your beneficiaries a very hard time in proving it was not suicide.
No, if you want to do it right, you take out a big insurance policy, and set a date a year in the future. You plan to trade in your nice car for a cheap beater without air bags (why ruin a good car over something as meaningless as your life). You determine what weather conditions would be most conducive of an accidental crash (rain/snow, late at night, fog, road without good lighting). Then, every time you feel like shit and want to wreck on the way to work, you think to yourself, "oh just wait a year and I'll get to do this properly! And dear-old-mom will get a check for $1M." That should put a smile on your face and start your day in a good mood.
A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
Depression is NOT the same as feeling a little sad or 'blue'.
While you may have real depression, it doesn't change the fact that many who consider themselves "depressed", really are not.
There are so many ethical problems and lack of safe guards. From kids pretending to be someone else, to someone who was completely anonymous and then says they're going to kill themselves. If they do the therapist is held responsible. This could be an interesting area but its ethically and legally dangerous.
- DenialX
What I don't get is this: why is depression a disease which needs to be cured ??
What if there's a real reason you're depressed. Yes, the world around you sucks. You realize your job is meaningless. And you don't know what to do with your life.
What if there IS something wrong with our society. Why SHOULD i waste my life working at something i don't really care about, so what, so I can spend two days a week doing something that I actually like doing ? OooOO... And all that for what ? So i can afford to buy my iPod, watch Tivo and all the crap that society is pushing on us ?
And don't give me some of that "your work should be your pleasure" thing. Recent numbers are that 80-90% of people do not like their jobs.
So this is a problem not just with myself but with society as a whole. I mean how many of us actually enjoy coding day in day out, on tight deadlines, and on projects know one cares about.
A million monkeys and this is the best sig they could come up with...
For $30 up front, and a measly $15 per month.
Buy World of Warcraft, raise a hunter, and either on a PvP server or in a battleground, one-shot a mage with an Aimed Shot critical hit of 2000+ damage. That will cheer you right up. I'm not only the suggestor of this idea, I'm also a client!
And they said zombies weren't real!
Your life shouldn't have to be important and your work shouldn't have to be productive to anyone else but *you*. I've been through a rough period recently (it's almost over if not over completely) and, as I get back to normal, I realize there's a joy in everyday life independent of whether anyone feels I am being productive. I think people need to treat life as a personal gift and make the most out of it for themselves while making sure to not do harm against anyone else. What you are writing seems to suggest that you think people are depressed because they aren't productive by other people's standards. The problem is, apart from being a stupid reason to be depressed, this claim doesn't really seem to be substantiated by any of the research on clinical depression. If you studied science or a related discipline in college maybe you ought to use the scientific skepticism that you should have learnt to evaluate your own opinions on clinical depression.
Cedars.
The fact that parent was labeled flamebait only proves his 'depresed' conspiracy. You're right everyone feels down from time, but real, strongwilled men and women pull are themselves out of it and not let it develop further into self-pity and suicdal thoughts.
US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
He's right and you're wrong for getting on his ass because of his age. At 31 I can agree with everything he says. Western medicine's favourite game is inventing new and new deseases seemingly w/o end. Tomes and tomes are filled with obscure diagnoses. Among them psychiatric diagnosis stands out as a partucular example of pseudoscience. So homosexuality was a psychiatric disorder and now it is not, purged from the books. Why, political correctness. How can I even aproach these clowns seriously? Now you're supposed to pay regular visits to the shrine of modern medicine, have regular checkups, trust your doctor before your family, expect a chemical pill for every condtion. So I believe that thje symptoms of depression may be rel for some but they have to take responsibility for it themselves, something that is so lacking in modern America. Meditation and talking to your family and friends seem like good options.
US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
It's quite coincidental that I should come across this article now. For my entire life I have suffered from severe social anxiety and depression. I am now 25 and am going through the worst bout of depression yet. I put off seeing a doctor(about 4 months)until I stopped eating regularly, stopped sleeping, started having crying fits, tremors, and couldn't wake up without spending the first hour of my day vomiting. I went to see a doctor. I explained my problems to him and thinking it best to be completely up front an honest I told him of the short period of time, about 7 years ago, when I stupidly fell into the rave scene and tried X. I also told him that I had tried to self medicate with pot in the past with very poor results. At that point he stopped me and said something that made my hair stand on end. He told me that pot was illegal but he wouldn't turn me in to homeland security for smoking with some friends now and again. His tone was very serious so I ruled out that he was joking. Does anyone know anything about this? Are doctors legally obligated to do this? If so I am just shocked beyond words. Honestly, I have doubt in this particular doctor's ability. When I tried to explain my symptoms and my families relevant medical history(anemia, diabetes, etc)he didn't seem interested. He didn't even run any tests to see if my depression might stem from some other disease. (Being that I cant keep food down anemia seems like a likely candidate.) He just wrote me a prescription for Welbutrin XL and sent me on my way.
Naturally it's not sensible to just send everyone on their merry way with a lifetime subscription to the drug of the year, if that's what doctors do where you are. If that's so, then I think there's a bit too much of this clinical "it's just like breaking a leg" mentality going around. That might have helped dissociate depression from its social stigmata, might have helped point out that it's way more than "just feeling bad", but it also seems to gloss over that depression and life(style) aren't separate domains. But to really discuss this I'd have to know more than I do, so I'll leave with my usual "dunno"...
much depression is hypothyroidism; the 'normal' range for TSH (Thyroid Stimulating Hormone) is unscientific and too wide; autoimmune hypothyroidism seems to be on the increase, but is that just improved diagnosis? regardless, there's an awful lot of undiagnosed hypothyroidism out there
GrimRC
If you are too unhappy to actually figure out what you should be doing to make yourself happier, you need treatment for depression.
Since you seem to have given up on this yourself, perhaps you should look into it. Not everyone hates their job, feels their work is meaningless, or is living for the weekend. And not everyone who does all those things doesn't think that it is worth it. And yes, life is difficult and frustrating a lot of the time, but sometimes you can get so discouraged that you are become an obstacle to your own fulfillment. That's depression.