I've posted many times about depression. I don't know what more is to say about it other than just accept it and move on. Yet, I'm here again posting about it beating the dead horse. I want to say something profound about depression; but, there's not much for me to say about it. It really is an unpleasant feeling to have to talk about it all the time; but, I figure it is something worth talking about so here I am again taking about it. — Posty McPostface
I'm very much like that too, as you can see from this excessively wordy post. — Jake
However, if we analyze well enough and long enough we may come to realize that analysis may be more of a problem than it is a solution. But, if the truth is that we're not really seeking a solution, then so what, on with the analyzing. — Jake
It's an analysis of the desire to live a better or more fulfilling life. — Posty McPostface
I have to say that your Skinnerian approach to depression is very much welcome; but, how do you deal with the self-criticism and my honesty about my form of depression? — Posty McPostface
n my dreams, I am not depressed. Everything flows effortlessly and without restraint. Why is that so? Why are dreams an escape for me from depression? — Posty McPostface
Just babbling here; but, I want to live as in my dreams - away from responsibility, deficiencies, self-labeling and so on. Dreams are amazing to me because they are the self-generated content of the mind. Nothing is more original or authentic than a dream. — Posty McPostface
This could be a very interesting thread of it's own. You know, the whole culture is moving steadily towards ever an deeper fantasy dream immersion with technologies such as virtual reality etc. — Jake
I would very much like to see a thread on that topic if you could start one. It's not a challenge, just out of curiosity. — Posty McPostface
I'll ponder on what you said. It seems like the correct solution, logically. — Posty McPostface
Dreams are amazing to me because they are the self-generated content of the mind. Nothing is more original or authentic than a dream. — Posty McPostface
And the techniques are described in this book. For me, it was a transformative book; just reading the accounts of sessions and the theory of them took my life in a different direction. — unenlightened
I am very critical of psychology in general and think of it more as a branch of religion than of science. — unenlightened
Depression is amazing to me because it is the self-generated content of the mind. — unenlightened
Nothing is more unoriginal or inauthentic. — unenlightened
What should I suspect of it? — Posty McPostface
You mean to say that depression is non-dysphoric? Doesn't that mean they have learned to cope with it? — Posty McPostface
What do you think about dreams as a return to the belly of a pregnant mother? It sounds silly, but it seems to point that way. — Posty McPostface
I think it is fairly common to think that depression is a coping strategy itself. Feelings one cannot cope with are depressed, because one can cope with depression. Then there are the pills that numb the numbness... Coping is the reasonable insanity that most everyone suffers from. — unenlightened
What would it be like not to cope? — unenlightened
It seems to me that depression is, more or less depending on its intensity, a refusal to carry on; that is a refusal to cope. As living beings there will always be for us adversities to either cope with or attempt to ignore, run away from and so on. — Janus
I think unenlightened's monolithic view of therapies is not only unenlightened, but uninformed and unhelpful. Of course different therapies have different and more or less helpful things to offer different individuals; you have to search and find what works for you. It's also true that any form of therapy, just like other forms of human activity can become cult-like, and that's a danger for the unwary, to be sure. — Janus
Jake's advice to simply distract yourself with activities that short circuit thought is OK, as I see it, but it's a very partial, limited approach. Adequate diet and physical activity are certainly a necessary part of any healthy life, though.The point is that you have to find what works for you. Of all things there is nothing more pragmatic than therapy, I would say. — Janus
I like Jake's pragmatic approach. But it's too mechanized and people are intricate to put them through such a cookie cutter approach. — Posty McPostface
Which is fine, but this is a philosophy forum and so a reach for clarity is appropriate. If this thread is just talk for the sake of talk, ok, no problem, but let's face that, admit it, and accept it. — Jake
So, let's talk about depression? It seems like we're making progress in that regard. — Posty McPostface
what is it about depression that makes it so enduring? — Posty McPostface
For starters, how did our ancestors deal with depression? I mean, all the way back to homo erectus? Did they all die off, and if not, why hasn't natural selection dealt with depression in evolutionary terms of survival of the fittest genes? And, if depression is hereditary, then is the reason why it has not 'died off' through natural selection due to the fact that it is so widespread and common amongst folk? — Posty McPostface
Second, what is it about depression that makes it so enduring? Why does it persist for many years? You would think that it would go away; but, in my case, it's always in the backdrop somewhere in every activity or doing of the mind. — Posty McPostface
I don't think anyone would be aware of what they are coping with in depression. It's just a state of mind that doesn't bode any utility to living life. — Posty McPostface
His analysis is derived from fear. Fear of what is the pertaining question... — Posty McPostface
If this thread is just talk for the sake of talk, ok, no problem, but let's face that, admit it, and accept it. — Jake
I think that's why depression is so enduring. Because we may be able to recognize it, identify it, talk about it -- but we do not have the same kind of knowledge of minds as we do of bones. — Moliere
I think Jake's contention that we cannot think ourselves out of our situations is right, or at least half-right. I think we must see our way out of our situations or at least into coping with them. And of course seeing will require much prior thinking, even if the seeing itself goes beyond mere analysis. But seeing also requires physical activity and well-being, even if it goes beyond mere health and activity. The way out of depression is to cultivate a balanced vision I would say. — Janus
I guess that's why I said in one of your other threads about depression that you really just have to experiment with anything -- or at least that's what I did -- to finally find what works for you. While the description seems to be similar enough across time, or you can at least see a thread, the cure seems to vary incredibly. — Moliere
I should say that I think medication is great. That's what works for me. Though there is variability, the common prescriptions work great -- I started with the basic exercise, diet, sleep, etc., and eventually I landed in a place where that was not enough. But medication got me out of the deepest slump and gave me the opportunity to work through what I needed to. It's not over yet for me, but it's also much better than it has been. — Moliere
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