Depression is nothing more than lack of self-esteem and identity. The depressed doesn't believe in themselves, they don't believe they have a destiny, they have no faith - nor do they work at creating it. — Agustino
What causes depression? Expectations that you deserve X or Y to be given to you. — Agustino
Who the hell are you to complain and ask why you're suffering, etc.? — Agustino
God told Job no point arguing with me. Who are you to question my decisions? I am the Lord your God, and if I decide to let you suffer, then you will suffer. — Agustino
This is a very radical position; one does not normally require that a doctor suffers from every complaint he treats, let alone a philosophical enquirer. But there is certainly some validity, to the extent at least that those who pontificate without either experience or listening will probably miss the mark. — unenlightened
This is a very clear characterisation that immediately suggests to me a way of understanding depression in terms of an active response to an intolerable and inescapable situation. One creates a dissociated identity as a refuge to preserve oneself from an overwhelming world. 'I' take refuge in the safety of an inner world that cannot be touched by the outer world, only to discover that I have become isolated and cannot in turn touch the world. And from there, one can see at once that there is no help for this dissociated self, either from itself or from the other in the outer world, and the only solution is for it to die.
Fortunately, this psychological death can be accomplished without physical death; indeed physical death does not do it at all. The inner self cannot by any means reach the outer world, but the inner self can end, and then one finds one is already in and part of the outer world. This is a terrifying prospect, to become, as one once was, completely vulnerable to the world, and this terror is what makes it seem impossible. — unenlightened
Some people develop quirks and kinks and screwy ideas about the way life is, and these quirky, kinked, and screwed up ideas just don't work in the real world. Trying to dislodge these ideas is very difficult -- and here we're not dealing with some vague disorder as depression. — Bitter Crank
Are you deeply alienated, in a state of anomie, loneliness, and abandonment? — Bitter Crank
Per above, the depressed are not in a good position to analyze their depression. — Bitter Crank
Miscommunication continues ad absurdum because (to some extent) there can not be a definitive analysis to which all will readily agree. — Bitter Crank
The observable symptoms of depression are not sure signs of depression. There are other reasons for people experiencing these reportable symptoms. — Bitter Crank
Talk therapy by a good therapist would seem to be in order. — Bitter Crank
The fact is, the people who might tell us the most about depression (the people who are depressed) are observing their condition with impaired skills. — Bitter Crank
People who are deeply alienated, in a state of anomie, loneliness, and abandonment are probably not going to be very articulate about the details of their unhappy state, either. — Bitter Crank
You know the truth of why therapy works. Because you think it does, — Wosret
Truth is, that you can make someone fall in love with you by asking each other fifty deeply personal questions, answering honestly, and responding positively. — Wosret
No... I'm afraid that it's nothing you haven't already heard a million times before... that's why it's hardly worth saying in the first place. — Wosret
You're not going to think of something new. Fine some secret, get an aha moment, or in any way think and suppress your way out of it. — Wosret
It won't be finding something new, it will be breaking down and accepting something you already know. — Wosret
Perhaps this dependency rests of your desire to maintain it? I knew a woman who had constant anxiety, her emotional malady always present despite years passing and I soon realised that despite all the advice given, she was unable to perceive what happiness actually was to her that her happiness almost became the anxiety. — TimeLine
Misery breeds company, no matter how happy you are. No one is truly happy in a miserable world. — Wosret
There's something going wrong in the brain/mind of a person who suffers from depression. We don't know the mechanisms behind depression because we lack scientific knowledge of what exactly is going on in the head of a depressive. — Purple Pond
That is factually not true. Most therapy is done through rational means, such as searching for the root cause or trying to figure out what emotions are being held back consciously or unconsciously. — Question
It is what it is, and I think that we should call it what it is, once we know what it is, contrary to Question's approach that we should treat depression as this or that based on how fruitful it will or won't be to do so, regardless of the truth of the matter. — Sapientia
There do exist people who, for periods of time, are genuinely neither depressed, nor coping with depression, but for whom depression has no place in their life. — Sapientia
This leads into the second aspect: unintentional self-sabotage. — 0 thru 9
Depression is a medical condition.
Medical professionals will not necessarily be able to cure your depression. — Terrapin Station
The stigma needs to be directed towards not getting professional help for it. — Terrapin Station
"You believe what?!?" I seriously thought that people were playing a big practical joke on me--a belief exacerbated by the fact that there are a lot of practical jokers, who'll go to pretty elaborate lengths at times, in my family and among friends. — Terrapin Station
He would. Just that most people who choose to work there have other reasons. — Agustino
Never. It is a man's duty to do as much as possible for the world and for his fellow men while alive and capable. What's the goal? Doing your duty. — Agustino
I agree. But their aspiration isn't to work. It's to drive expensive cars, and have lots of women around them. — Agustino
How about you start telling me why workaholism is a problem then instead of beating around the bush and sending me to do research? — Agustino
That's his problem. — Agustino
Yes, what's the issue with it? You dispute the value of helping others, inspiring others, and doing your duty to God? — Agustino
This isn't an area I know much about, I'm just spouting off on the internet, so anyone in crisis shouldn't take anything I say to heart. — Sivad
I referenced working at McD's in a positive light in terms of that being your start. You wouldn't be like other McD's workers - you would actually care about customers, put soul into serving them, try to speak with them, be nice, kind, bear with the lack of nobilities coming from your collegues - do great work for the sake of work. And then you'd go home, and study, work, learn. Sooner or later, you'd graduate McD's. — Agustino
No, I don't think their corporate "greed" is what's reprehensible. — Agustino
What's reprehensible is that you're there just for status. Not to work. Not to do a great job. You're there for the parties and for the sniffing of cocaine and the driving of expensive cars. That's who you sold your life to - not to work. — Agustino
No. There's never too much work. Work sets man free. — Agustino
A curse - give me a break, us mortals are not worth cursing. Who the hell would waste their time to curse us? Would you curse ants, worms and dust? — Agustino
People who help others are remembered. People who inspire others are remembered. People who render service unto the world, and do their duty to God - they are remembered. — Agustino
So you'd rather throw away your life? No gratitude at all, for having been gifted with it. — Agustino
No my friend, it wasn't workaholism that destroyed them. It was their lust, greed, shamelessness and sloth — Agustino
The truth is - they've never worked. Not real work. — Agustino
So you'd rather throw away your life? No gratitude at all, for having been gifted with it. — Agustino
Well, based on my experience, people who work a lot, live a lot - and people who don't, don't live a lot. — Agustino
would you rather be remembered as an upstanding man who devoted himself to the betterment of mankind, who struggled and toiled each and every day for something greater than himself - or would you rather be remembered as the sloth who never rose up to the challenge, and whose sole achievement in life was casting a shadow over the earth? — Agustino
I think it is to a certain extent, despair could swallow any one of us if we let it. — Sivad
Some people just never developed good coping skills, that's where counseling can be helpful. — Sivad
If a person hasn't experienced any horrific tragedies or traumas or are facing some fate worse than death and they're contemplating suicide because of some general existential despair, well then they're just blowing life way out of proportion. They're taking it all far too seriously. — Sivad
