What does depression feel like? Trust me – you really don’t want to know (Guardian) [View all]
Tuesday 19 April 2016 20.05 BST
Darker than grief, an implosion of the self, a sheet of ice: no matter how you describe it, this is a terrifying state to be trapped in
This is Depression Awareness Week, so it must be hoped that during this seven-day period more people will become more aware of a condition that a minority experience, and which most others grasp only remotely confusing it with more familiar feelings, such as unhappiness or misery.
This perception is to some extent shared by the medical community, which cant quite make its mind up whether depression is a physical illness, rooted in neurochemistry, or a negative habit of thought that can be addressed by talking or behavioural therapies.
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From the outside it may look like malingering, bad temper and ugly behaviour and who can empathise with such unattractive traits? Depression is actually much more complex, nuanced and dark than unhappiness more like an implosion of self. In a serious state of depression, you become a sort of half-living ghost. To give an idea of how distressing this is, I can only say that the trauma of losing my mother when I was 31 to suicide, sadly was considerably less than what I had endured during the years prior to her death, when I was suffering from depression myself (I had recovered by the time of her death).
So how is this misleadingly named curse different from recognisable grief? For a start, it can produce symptoms similar to Alzheimers forgetfulness, confusion and disorientation. Making even the smallest decisions can be agonising. It can affect not just the mind but also the body I start to stumble when I walk, or become unable to walk in a straight line. I am more clumsy and accident-prone. In depression you become, in your head, two-dimensional like a drawing rather than a living, breathing creature. You cannot conjure your actual personality, which you can remember only vaguely, in a theoretical sense. You live in, or close to, a state of perpetual fear, although you are not sure what it is you are afraid of. The writer William Styron called it a brainstorm, which is much more accurate than unhappiness.
cont'd...
Link:
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/apr/19/depression-awareness-mental-illness-feel-like