But, disidentification is not similar to what you are describing. — Posty McPostface
So, how do you overcome this process of the mind that tells the depressive that they cannot address their depression? — Posty McPostface
"Depression" is a term that can mean different things. Ambiguity lies in usage. MIs-use is - can be - problematic, beyond mere error. I do not doubt that, if you say your'e depressed, you're depressed. But that's not a ticket or a license, it's a condition. To call it "depression" is simply to pass through the main door - you haven't really got anywhere. Now you have to figure out the details, in a sense find out which inner door you have to pass through - and the wrong door is of no use.Fine then, depression is a term laid with ambiguity, at least until it is experienced. — Posty McPostface
Ok, I agree that I may not be clear on what you mean by the term disidentification. Clarify if you wish. — Jake
The volume of thought can be managed through simple mechanical exercises. It's like working to get a flat stomach, we don't really need to understand anything, we just need to patiently do the situps. — Jake
"Depression" is a term that can mean different things. Ambiguity lies in usage. MIs-use is - can be - problematic, beyond mere error. I do not doubt that, if you say your'e depressed, you're depressed. But that's not a ticket or a license, it's a condition. To call it "depression" is simply to pass through the main door - you haven't really got anywhere. Now you have to figure out the details, in a sense find out which inner door you have to pass through - and the wrong door is of no use. — tim wood
Near as I can tell, disidentification is getting out from under being mislabeled, whether by self or others, whether by group or as an individual. — tim wood
Yes; but, depression indicated a dysfunction of being able to perform simple tasks. It simply robs us of willpower to be able to do simple tasks. Not in all cases though; but, the majority of cases experience anhedonia and lack of energy and a diminished power of the will — Posty McPostface
There are techniques - tricks, if you will - for dealing with this. In short, you just have to do it, whatever it is. Intervention that can get you over the hump is worth considering. And you might consider - or revisit because you likely have considered - issues of anger (including rage). It's axiomatic to me (maybe only me) that depression is inward-directed anger that properly should be outward directed.
So-called clinical depression is a dfferent animal, and for that you need professional animal control. — tim wood
The inherent nature of mind is to process thought.
To attempt the cessation of thought goes against what is natural.
The goal, therefore, is not the cessation of thought.
The goal is cessation off identification with thought. — Wu Hsin
Joots is a word coined by Douglas Hofstadter in Godel, Escher, Bach. It means, stands for, "jump out of the system." I've found it at times a powerful idea. — tim wood
The above depressive sentiment is due to identifying with my depression too closely. Now, I don't know how to (dis)-identify with depression anymore, it's been with me for so long, that I've become accustomed to it. — Posty McPostface
That's already complex enough, but there can also be another form of negation, that denies the whole thing, as self or other. One might say that sometimes I am happy, and sometimes I am miserable, and it is not a thing I have, or a thing I am, but just a flow of existence. Perhaps that is what you mean by dis-identification? — unenlightened
I wonder what you mean by dis-identify? — unenlightened
This othering one might say is identification by negation - "I am" ... "not-depression", equates to "I have depression", or even "Depression has me". And in such case, dis-identifying with othered depression looks rather like identifying with depression. — unenlightened
True, one would want to be prudent and logical while attempting to disindentify. Like someone said above, turning down the volume can help. — 0 thru 9
I'm not sure you can turn down the volume on 'depression', it's a lingering feeling that doesn't just go away. It's a persistent and deep mood so to speak. — Posty McPostface
Another thing that might help is the more general realisation that thoughts and identification are allways only mere abstractions. And abstractions are necessarily crude simplifications of what's really going on, and never the whole story... sort of a deflationary approach to though in general, so you don't take it so seriously anymore, either way. That's why they sometimes call it the chattering monkey in eastern philosophy, to reduce the importance it is typically given. — ChatteringMonkey
But if I understand what you are saying, it may also be the cause of staying more depressed because that's what you come to expect (identify with). — ChatteringMonkey
I'm not sure what the solution is here, because it would seem to disidentify you would need to build up an ideal self again that doesn't take depression into account, but then that runs the risk of backfiring if you happen to feel depressed again… — ChatteringMonkey
Another thing that might help is the more general realisation that thoughts and identification are allways only mere abstractions. And abstractions are necessarily crude simplifications of what's really going on, and never the whole story... sort of a deflationary approach to though in general, so you don't take it so seriously anymore, either way. That's why they sometimes call it the chattering monkey in eastern philosophy, to reduce the importance it is typically given. — ChatteringMonkey
Yes, well, the point would be not to identify with a label and simply accept the symptoms of depression in this case. Is that possible? — Posty
Interesting. So, identification is a crude simplification. Seems true. What do you mean by the chattering monkey analogy? — Posty
It's interesting because, in CBT, there's even an attempt at disidentification, at least not overtly. It's mainly to stop labeling oneself with various labels instead. — Posty
Yeah, it's a futile concept in my opinion to address internal problems of the mind such as depression and other maladies. You don't negate depression by not identifying with it, I think. — Posty
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