Re: Is depression a disease, and how should we treat it?
Posted: Tue Dec 11, 2012 10:56 pm
Imagine a dodgy comedown + actual depression. that would suck.herbs wrote:1) All of the above.
2) Self medicate with MDMA.
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Imagine a dodgy comedown + actual depression. that would suck.herbs wrote:1) All of the above.
2) Self medicate with MDMA.
From my point of view this is pretty much spot on. The trouble with testing in more "natural" conditions is that:test recordings wrote:A lot of testing is currently carried out in very unnatural conditions with carefully selected participants that uncommonly have certain specific disease characteristics unrepresentative of most patients (who will most likely have co-morbid diseases in an uncontrolled environment). Independent testing in more natural conditions would give a more accurate assessment of a treatment`s effectiveness.
Also, non-pharmacological treatment is probably going to be more effective in the long run in giving them the tools they need to manage their problems themselves. It has been well documented since the start of `standardised` diagnoses and pills for everything that they can delay recovery as they encourage people to adopt a passive, patient-as-receiver role and so do not try to make themselves better. I will try dig the research out but I have seen it myself with my friends and some are being held down with unnecessary diagnoses or the treatment of such.
wub wrote:Interesting view, considering the number of mentions of depression that there are on here from various users.garethom wrote:Feel like the ones that are always talking about it might not have it
Yeah adult onset depression can be pretty grim. I saw one fellow who was a very high functioning oil exec (full 6 figure, probably 7 figure salary) with seemingly the perfect life (wife was happy, kids were doing great in college) and he said over a period of one week he began having this full feeling of despair, for no reason at all. Going from fully functioning to functioning at the level of a person on disability in 1 wk stuck out in my mind. Interestingly enough there were no feelings of suicidality, just despair and anhedonia (he barely fit DSM criteria iirc).Sonika wrote:wub wrote:a friend of mine's dad killed himself suddenly because of a very sudden onset of depression (or at least, seemingly sudden). Real depression definitely has a chemical component as far as I can tell.
But I'd agree with garethom that a lot of people who go around moaning about how they have depression probably just have some things that they're not too happy with in their life at the moment and....dare I say it....are possibly seeking attention maybe just a little bit?
idk, trying to formulate my thoughts on this is pretty tough
Your still in school. I doubt you know many, if any people with depression.Sonika wrote:yeah I'd tend to agreewub wrote:Interesting view, considering the number of mentions of depression that there are on here from various users.garethom wrote:Feel like the ones that are always talking about it might not have it
a friend of mine's dad killed himself suddenly because of a very sudden onset of depression (or at least, seemingly sudden). Real depression definitely has a chemical component as far as I can tell.
But I'd agree with garethom that a lot of people who go around moaning about how they have depression probably just have some things that they're not too happy with in their life at the moment and....dare I say it....are possibly seeking attention maybe just a little bit?
idk, trying to formulate my thoughts on this is pretty tough
So you disagree with the 97% bullshitting then.nowaysj wrote:I don't know about that one. I recall almost everyone in my high school class as being fairly fucked up. Kids that got into drugs too early (looking away from Sonika), jocks that had fucked up fathers and all kinds of really profound issues with self worth and their (repressed) sexual relationships, loners who just couldn't find a way to relate to other people, I'm leaving a lot out, but... shit was a wasteland. A lot of those people were really really unhappy a lot of the time, and some did not make it through.
Could've just as easily been guilt as sudden onset depression - got caught masturbating in a porn theater whilst stroking the spine of a fat young boy, that sort of thing.Sonika wrote:a friend of mine's dad killed himself suddenly because of a very sudden onset of depression (or at least, seemingly sudden). Real depression definitely has a chemical component as far as I can tell.
Are there any people in particular on DSF that you would accuse of attention seeking with regards to their claims of depression?Sonika wrote:But I'd agree with garethom that a lot of people who go around moaning about how they have depression probably just have some things that they're not too happy with in their life at the moment and....dare I say it....are possibly seeking attention maybe just a little bit?
Oddly specific...wub wrote:got caught masturbating in a porn theater whilst stroking the spine of a fat young boy
2 much stand against war for u m8.Sonika wrote:wub wrote:Interesting view, considering the number of mentions of depression that there are on here from various users.garethom wrote:Feel like the ones that are always talking about it might not have it
yeah I'd tend to agree
a friend of mine's dad killed himself suddenly because of a very sudden onset of depression (or at least, seemingly sudden). Real depression definitely has a chemical component as far as I can tell.
But I'd agree with garethom that a lot of people who go around moaning about how they have depression probably just have some things that they're not too happy with in their life at the moment and....dare I say it....are possibly seeking attention maybe just a little bit?
idk, trying to formulate my thoughts on this is pretty tough
Choice is an option, even if it`s not available to everyone. What I was pointing out is that this option`s never given to many people and any such notion is automatically withheld. It would be nice, and clinically useful, for them to exercise such choice.butter man wrote:from my limited experience, choice doesnt seem to be an option. You cant escape ur head like u cant escape this world. You can read techniques, philosophy, excercise, eat healthy, work hard, try and get as much out of your day as you can and its still with you. People with depression arent stupid or lazy (in some cases, maybe but not as a rule) theres a barrier in between them and a normal life, one where you dont have to struggle to do things that comes naturally to others. To think that people would consciously hold on to that barrier, and for what? Top trumps in the woe stories again, pretty weak, or sympathy from family, friends and sympathetic listener, fuck that! Noone likes a mope. Im not saying that some people dont do this just seems an insult to people who suffer in what seem unnecesarrily.test recordings wrote:It`s also not letting go of negativity, and not necessarily chasing positives at that.Electric_Head wrote:It seems loads of depressions stems from being alone or am I reading into it too much?
Some of you need to find peace within yourself, you'll start enjoying time alone.
now why would I call out someone like that? I don't want to start any argumentswub wrote:
Are there any people in particular on DSF that you would accuse of attention seeking with regards to their claims of depression?
BlueyTeamTom wrote: 2 much stand against war for u m8.![]()