how to be depressed

"Depression was, indeed, the hand of a friend trying to press me down to the ground on which it was safe to stand--the ground of my own truth, my own nature with its complex mix of limits and gifts, liabilities and assets, darkness and light."
- Parker Palmer, Let Your Life Speak

I don't think I've ever been "clinically" depressed. Well, maybe I have, but it certainly didn't feel clinical. It felt morbid, cosmic, and unavoidably essential. When I was thirteen, my parents split for the umpteenth and final time and a few months later, my dad brought it to my attention that I'd been wearing the same hockey jersey for weeks and that I needed to start doing the dishes again. I was definitely depressed.

And there was the dark night after Magic Man flew back to London and the apartment felt like a keyless heartbreak hotel with barred windows. But my last extended dark night was about ten years ago. It was a new depth of crushing aloneness. Another break up, this time with Hot-but-Needy Actor Man in LA (I was equally needy, duh,) which triggered an exorcism of self doubt and psychic bile that, being thirty-something and ambitious, I just needed to get out of my system. {Note: it's often not the actual loss that causes the depression - it's all the crap that's tied up in it that you needed to deal with anyway.}

In that spell of depression I wore the same pair of butt-ripped Levi's for weeks. I'd lie in my backyard at two in the morning in nowhere New Mexico, smoking Marlboro's, looking up at the stars, wondering about the fatality of scorpion bites, and praying for aliens to abduct me. {Not joking in any way.} I cried every single day, sometimes twice a day, for weeks. I felt profoundly unheard...empty. As I'd fall asleep I felt as though chunks of my being were decomposing into the bed. It was a brutal ordeal of the psyche, but I knew I was being reborn. I did have faith that whatever new face was emerging, she would eventually smile back at me.

I learned a thousand subtle and mighty things about Life from those existential passages, but what I learned about depression itself is that, the more you resist it, the longer it lasts. When depressed, I find it's best to just be...depressed. Happiness returns more quickly when you give yourself permission to be blue...or any shade of black you need to be.

I understand that for some people, depression can be so severe as to be life threatening. It can grip a soul for decades. The kind of depression I'm addressing here falls somewhere within the category of disparaging life passages to profound melancholy...which is to say, likely manageable without drugs and positively surmountable. But I will go on record to say that, while I think meds for depression can be a viable option to break a cycle and regain one's footing, I think we're a culture overly prone to numbing out. And in doing so, we not only deny our own power, we carry our demons with us far longer than we have to.

HOW TO BE DEPRESSED SO THAT HAPPINESS HAS A BETTER CHANCE OF RETURNING -- SOONER RATHER THAN LATER

1. Give yourself full permission to be pathetic for a short period of time. In fact, relish the pathetic-ness. Enthusiastically wallow in self pity. If people let themselves have downer days more often, there might be fewer heart attacks and road rage. Being a total loser for a morning or a weekend isn't the slippery slope to despair. It's a direct route to what your emotions are trying to tell you...feel, heal, know thyself. And move on, more empowered than before.

2. Watch or read something depressing. Rent a some heart wrenching documentaries like, God Grew Tired of Us or War Dance and ball your eyes out. Chances are that your life will be looking pretty damn good in comparison.

3. Be incredibly, sublimely gentle with yourself, like you might be with a child or dear friend whom you deeply adore.

4. If someone who loves you asks how you are, admit to being blue. When a girl friend calls, let her know that it's a dog day afternoon and that you're happily in despair.

5. When the novelty of being depressed is starting to wear off, shake your arms above your head like you're being saved by the Almighty Holy Spirit itself, turn on some loud Opera music, and shout, "I'm depressed! I'm sooo depressed!" Gauranteed: you will start laughing smirky giggles to deep belly laughs and you will decide to listen to the rhythm of your blues and keep on walking...more empowered than before.

6. Break your happiness fast with a treat. Write a kind note to yourself about how brave you are for being still in the dark, for standing down a monster or two. Dress up even if you work from home. Bring a plant to work and water it. Freshen up. And give yourself full permission to just be ... deeply happy.

. . . . . . .

RELATED:

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in praise of anger: feel it to free it
Let Your Life Speak: Listening for the Voice of Vocation, Parker Palmer

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  • i find the faster i get into a great cry the better i feel and some how stronger. my sister died this march. i barely cried. you just don't have time to cry, its all business and holding on and getting rid of shit. i cried 2 weeks later while watching a u-tube video. when i need to, i call that video up and cry all over again. oh, its good to be italian:)
  • Jen
    I'm severely, chronically, clinically depressed. I take meds and go to talk therapy and things are getting slightly better as I learn to change my thoughts - and the bottom line is, depression sucks. It's real, it's horrible, and it bites.

    But I no longer believe it's forever. I have hope again because I *have* seen a difference since I started seeing this therapist. And I guess that's the part that I really want to share - having suffered, more or less, from depression on and off for the last 25 years, I can tell you that what makes the difference is finding the right therapist. Not the right one for me, or for your best friend, but for you.

    I've tried eleven? twelve? over the years. Some I knew right away were not a good match for me. I wanted so badly to believe in another that I stuck with her for two years even though nothing was changing. Now that I've found one that really and truly *isn't interested in my story*, things are getting better. Did you get that part?

    She'll listen - for awhile - if I really feel I need her to - but my story is just that - story. I've rehearsed it to myself and everybody else for years. And years. And years. I'm really really good at telling it. And at reinforcing all those depressed, sorry-for-myself feelings when I do. Which is not to say that my story isn't horrid - it is - or that the feelings aren't valid - they are. But as you said so well in your post, it's just time to get over it. Unless, of course, I want to spend the rest of my life trapped in that awful time, putting myself through that pain over and over again...

    And this therapist helps me change the thoughts that control the feelings. I'm beginning to be able to do it on my own! Yowzer.

    Yes, venting is important. Being validated is important. But there comes a time to let it all go, to learn a new dance. To get on with life, to CHOOSE to quit being a victim. And that's what I'm learning, and that's my wish for anyone else feeling as I did for so long, that life isn't worth living.

    Btw, even depressed people get giggles over silly things from time to time - I got a laugh over your #2 "...and ball your eyes out." I'm thinking maybe you meant to type "bawl" your eyes out, cause the other way might be more fun, but gives me visions (sorry) of couples in bed together, screwing until their eyeballs pop out of the sockets...

    lol
  • Jennifer
    I had a friend. Of course, I have more than one friend, but this particular friend was different. Her and I don't talk any more, and it's mainly because of this reason. When I lived on my own, in my apartment, my Opa (Grandfather) was going through severe alzheimer's disease. I spent a lot of time with him, and he was my closest family member. He was my best friend. While going through this horrible disease, I'd find days when I'd come home from work, and did not want to do anything. I would cry, or I would just lay in bed. This friend of mine, however, always tried to push me to be happy. She had lost her Grandfather, which I was there for her at that time, and she always told me "be happy your Grandfather is still alive" and she'd always push me to be happy no matter what. I do believe, in my heart, this was the downfall of our friendship. She'd never let me be sad. I don't know why, but she just didn't believe in being depressed for even an hour. She pushed me constantly to keep smiling. So, I forced myself to smile. I don't know if she had good intentions, because when she was sad, I let her be sad and cry. I always knew it was good to feel emotion, wether it sad or happy, but I never felt I could show any emotion with her other than fake happiness. After reading this post, I feel that I've long ago made the right decision in moving on from our friendship. A friend that doesn't want to allow me to have genuine emotion, happy or sad, was never really a friend at all. Thank you.
  • Finding myself in a severe state of melancholy was the best thing that has happened to me this year. Thank you for writing this post. I resisted depression and suppressed it without even realizing what I had done. Experiencing authentic feelings, whether they be happy or sad, means to surrender and let it be what it is. xoxo
  • this is one of my favorite topics, dancing with this for most of my life and now helping others to heal from it too. I love the speaking of faith show on the topic, which talks about the very word depression, and how it is at best inadequate to describe despair. It is an excellent show worth checking out. http://speakingoffaith.publicradio.org/programs...
  • Mary...sending you light.
    Danielle
  • Mary Duckworth Destefano
    I enjoy these writings, I suffer from agraphobia, however I have a beautiful little min-pin, & I know everyday she has to be exercised, sometimes I procrastinate, other times I can go out , but only for immediate purposes. Five years ago my husband died at 47, his family came in & demolished our home, stole everything I've ever owned, the police wouldn't help me, I was married 13 yrs & I don't even have a photo of him. Funny thing was , they ate at my table all those years, borrowed monies, I was part of the family. They even stole the min-pin my husband had bought me. Hurikain died shortly after my husband did, looking for Daddy.My eldest brother took me to the breeders just before the first anniversary of Mario's death, fearing as i was unable to have children, & I got another new puppy, luckily it is Hurk's sister. So I bought a home in a "Mobile Home Park" owned by john Holer, owner of Marineland Canada. This place has been here since 1963, (Holer bought it 5yrs ago) being a well established place, 47 families, I paid cash, ($25,000) for a unit. My brother died, mom,dad,best friend & childhood sweetheart.No one left, just me & puppy. To ice it off, Marineland has decided now that they want our homes & have evicted us, claiming he needs the land for storage, offerring "0" compensation, I can't take much more, I pray for death, but I cannot abandon my puppy. She has picked up my depression, & I feel so torn about that.She lays with me as the tears flow, always content to be with me, even with all my off days.They have put me on a disability, & I feel so incompitent.I won't even to begin to express my ideology, I can't hurt my pup, but if she ever goes, i'm going with her. I'm so so so tired.Meds work for a while, but I know there is no pill for a heart as hurt as mine, only my puppy.
  • Amy in Ann Arbor
    "Bawl," not "ball."

    ;-)
  • Anne Sherwood
    "...and ball your eyes out"; perhaps you meant to say "bawl" here, as in weep? Or did you mean, in fact, to ball, as in, to enjoy intercourse until your eyeballs fell out?
    In my experience, balling is often, in fact, a more effective remedy for depression than bawling. Marvin dubbed it sexual healing.
  • i love "let your life speak". Thank you Danielle, for this post. How often it helps to know that we are not alone during dark times. You were praying to be abducted, I to be free of my restless mind, once and for all. This brings me back to that deep feeling. And it gives me joy to see that I can still feel that way and know that I'll come out on the other end. Even if i don't!
  • Olivia
    Wow. This is just so powerful -- and exactly what I needed to read tonight. Thank you, thank you.
  • MoJo
    My last major bout was 10 years ago too D. Seems we're riding a similar wave. I think the point you make about actively resisting the depression is a universal truth that's applicable in a lot of situations. As a wise person once said to me - it's learning when to 'lean into the sharp edges' that is a skill I have come to hone. That balance is most definitely a very individual process. I pray that anyone who goes through depression (whether it be the blahs or clinical) can learn to turn it into a lesson like any other, and make use of it, rather than having it 'happen' to them. I've been through both. And the skills developed are about living life - if you don't develop them, then what's the alternative?

    Thanks for the honesty and clarity, as always....
    xo
  • AM
    For the record, curiousjessica, I'm NOT confused. And I'm a big fan of Danielle's. I agree that what she's said can be helpful for people going through hard times... I'm not trying to "cheapen or lessen" that; indeed, I have used ideas like these to help myself when I feel down.

    What I'M trying to say is that when people using the term "depression" to talk about the blues, the blahs, deep sadness... essentially emotional states ... it can contribute to a misunderstanding about what clinical depression IS. That misunderstanding helps to create a stigma about mental illness that is pervasive in our society.

    And, frankly, I don't think these suggestions would be helpful for someone suffering from a major depression. I agree with Vi, above, that permission to wallow is far from what someone in a major depression needs -- seriously, if I didn't put pressure on my husband to occasionally engage with the outside world during a depressive episode, he would NEVER leave the house. Also, during an episode, he (and the other family members we have who suffer from depression) are not able to "be gentle with themselves." They are seriously not able to be rational enough to do that, their whole minds are consumed with feeling horrible about themselves. The same goes for #6.

    Now, I am happy that people who are going through an emotional rough patch CAN do these steps for themselves. Seriously. Celebrate the fact that you are able to think about your emotions and process them and get to the other side safely.

    Just please think for a moment about the language we use. Language structures our world, and changes the way we think about things. It's important. Let's not conflate things that are, in fact, quite different.
  • jenny
    love it...sent to me today by my lovely roommate...i have chronic depression and take meds which save me from flinging myself dramatically off a bridge...but, most of what you wrote TOTALLY applies...and I laughed and cried....good stuff.
  • I love it!
  • AM
    I must say that I have a number of family members who have clinical depression, and I think that conflating emotional downswings with real mental illness is truly problematic. I agree with what you've said about profound sadness, Danielle, but I don't think your disclaimer about depression is quite enough. I think we do people who have serious chemical imbalances a disservice when we confuse the terms -- my family members have been told so many times to just get over it, stop being weak, pick themselves up, etc etc. But every time they try to battle it on their own - or go off their meds once they seem more "stable" - they find that they can't manage it without help. There is a real stigma about mental illness (the idea that it's "just the blues" or a sign of weakness) that keeps people from seeking the help they really truly need. Emotions can be painful but you won't know what real depression can do to someone unless you've held someone who is so depressed they've been laying in bed, staring up at the ceiling crying for the last 2 weeks, unable to talk, unable to even gather the energy to be suicidal. I've been deeply sad, hurt, confused. I haven't changed my clothes on occasion, yeah. But I can't imagine what THAT feels like.

    I'm sorry if it seems like I'm being dramatic but this is my real life experience. Depression is a real disease, with real, physical symptoms that can be treated. I feel like romanticizing depression is not that different from romanticizing, say, polio.
  • I just want anyone who is confused to read back Danielle's points:

    1. Give yourself full permission to be pathetic for a short period of time.

    2. Watch or read something depressing.

    3. Be incredibly, sublimely gentle with yourself

    4. If someone who loves you asks how you are, admit to being blue.

    6. Break your happiness fast with a treat.

    Which of these points DONT apply to both people who are sad and people who are suffering from full-blown depression? Granted, I don't see # 5 happening with too many people who are clinically depressed, but that's not to say its a bad idea. Depression is a huge, debilitating problem but that doesn't mean people need to cheapen or lessen the sadness/depression people NOT suffering mental disorders experience.
  • Thank you, Danielle, especially the encouraging thougt that allowing oneself to
    be depressed brings happiness back to you sooner.
  • What a great post, Danielle. Thankfully, I haven't been depressed in a long time (but when I was, it was a doozy!) but I get the "blahs" fairly often. It's nice to put on a whimpery face and pout, and whine to my husband "I got the blahs!" like I'm 3 years old. Thankfully, he thinks it's adorable and lets me be while making me laugh or just cuddling with me on the couch. So yes, I second the notion to let other people know about your less-than-stellar moods so you don't have to keep them bottled up inside.
  • Emerson Zora Hamsa
    totally good stuff. i have finally learned to embrace the dark times and to be gentle with myself.
  • Sooz Weissberg
    Good stuff. Printed it out for that next inevitable time.
  • Beautifully written. The core message for me is the notion that it's okay to just be and that doesn't always have to be pretty or presentable. Allowing myself to experience 'it' completely is a part of being fully present. Not every day is going to be dipped in honey and, ya know what? That's okay.
    Hugs!
  • Beautifully, poetically insightful. You speak my thoughts. How do you do that? I've been there, too. Struggled, suffered, re-emerged. I think it was Gurdjieff who said, "Sacrifice your suffering". Life is beautiful.
  • mmm...love me some Gurdjieff in the morning. And for lunch, there's Nietzsche: "What doesn't kill you makes you stronger."
  • jo martin
    Having been clinically depressed for 30+ years before anyone would believe me, I did it all: meditaiton, herbs, anger management, etc., and finally drugs. Now I'm off the drugs and learning the signs that say: Whooopsie, you're sliding into the hole agaion. So Danielle's adviice and disclaimer are both right on -- there *is* a dpressed that is not the clinical that can lead to amazing insights and life changes -- that is to be embraced and learned from. Then there's the get yourself to a therapist and take some drugs before you kill yourself depression. Both need to be recognized and honored for what they are -- they just need to be treated differenty.
  • Emily-Sarah
    Jo, I like what you said: "Both need to be recognized and honored for what they are -- they just need to be treated differently."

    I think that we often fail to honor our feelings, especially the less than positive ones. I'm also reading "Care of the Soul: A Guide for Cultivating Depth and Sacredness in Everyday Life" by Thomas Moore. In it he speaks of meeting pain (physical or mental) and asking why it has appeared, what it needs from us (in what ways can we "nurture" or care for our pain -- acknowledge it and perhaps by listening to it thereby lessen its outcry) ... And while that deeper clinical depression can't simply be quietened by acknowledging it (and while I'm not sure I prescribe to allowing pain such a headache to fester instead of popping a Tylenol!), we still need to honor the way in which our "innards" are calling out for our attention. Thanks for the reminder of this kind of honor.
  • Emily-Sarah
    I think Danielle does give enough of a disclaimer for those who are in need of medical intervention -- and I can't help but agree that we (especially in the U.S.) want to mask/treat/wipe out so many emotions. Have any of you read Against Happiness: In Praise of Melancholy by Eric Wilson? I've just started the book, but it seems the true message will be authentic happiness is fine; however, moments of sadness are inevitable (and useful instead of something to be avoided at all costs). His problem is with elevating a surface happiness above all other emotions and not realizing the benefit of the whole range of emotions we can experience. But again, I've just started reading! ... And again, of course clinical depression is a different animal totally. But when we feel a case of the blahs or blues coming on, I think if we'll allow ourselves that "moment" to revel in it, we will see more creativity, freedom, and empathy once we're through it.
  • Thank you for writing a thought provoking post. I know that you wrote a little disclaimer, but as someone who has suffered and recovered from major depression, I feel compelled to say the following: Depression is completely treatable and there is no reason to suffer. No one should suffer more than necessary. Perhaps you are speaking about a "necessary" amount of suffering -- that is, some amount so that you are not denying yourself of feeling blue. I don't disagree with that.

    I don't believe that people who are depressed should indulge in it by finding more ways to continue the path of depression, such as listening to depressing songs or watch depressing movies. I believe in actively finding ways to make yourself feel better -- getting support from family/friends, distracting yourself, doing something creative, channeling your energy into something positive, or in the worst case scenarios, mustering the strength to see a therapist.
  • Vi, I think Danielle's point is giving yourself permission to be depressed before picking yourself up and moving on. Only by experiencing feelings fully can we overcome them. Everything requires a certain healing period, even for those who have suffered clinical depression can't just "flip a switch". Because you can go so far as to get on medication, and the doctor will tell you "it will take a few weeks to start feeling better".
    But I really think thats beside the point, anyway. Danielle is talking about fully embracing the experience of sadness here.
  • biren
    had a double whammy. after your post, this is what i got in an email from brian johnson:
    "You must wish to consume yourself in your own flame: how could you wish to become new unless you had first become ashes?" ~ Friedrich Nietzsche from Thus Spoke Zarathustra.

    the description of your last depression was so mouthwatering... and after 9 months of quitting smoking, i felt like getting together with them (my smokes) once again.
    probably my lady-love depression is a-visiting again. how quaint that is going to be!
  • Absolutely, unequivocally perfect, Danielle. Beautiful, and inspiring, just like your light unto this world. As always, thank you for being you.
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