Home  
Web Our Site  
tile

Understanding and Overcoming Chronic Depression

Have you ever considered the possibility that if you are depressed, you should be?

Popular media and our society in general tend to teach us that it is normal to be perpetually happy. But is it normal to be happy all of the time?

Before you can overcome chronic depression, it is critical that the following point becomes clear in your mind: depression and happiness are normal states that all of us will and should experience when our lives call for them.

Everything that your body does is for its own good. When your core temperature is too hot, your body will sweat to cool down. When you are too cold, you will shiver to warm up. When you are disappointed by something in life – having a fight with a loved one, not having a loved one, losing a loved one, losing a large amount of money, hating the way you look, not getting a job that you really want, feeling like you are useless, or any other painful experience that is common to the human experience – it is normal for you to feel depressed.

A period of feeling low can give your body, mind, and spirit some quiet time to mourn, and then to assess the realities of what is happening to you so that you can learn something that is helpful to you and/or others, and make a decision about how to proceed with your life.

We can re-write the preceding paragraph as the following series of experiences:

1. Disappointment over something in your life.
2. Depression, doubt, quiet time.
3. Assessment of the realities of your life.
4. Decision(s) about how to proceed with your life.

Unfortunately, many people with chronic depression cannot move past step 2. Their disappointment is so deep that they cannot generate enough momentum to work on steps 3 and 4.

I suggest that just being aware of all four steps is essential to experiencing steps 3 and 4. Specific dietary strategies and mental and emotional exercises can help you move on to steps 3 and 4, but to actually see them as real destinations that you walk yourself to can make all the difference with your health.

When I was 28 years old, I returned to Toronto, Canada after having spent the previous ten years going to school and working in the States as a chiropractor. I felt that it was time for me to return to my family and look to get established in Toronto so that I could begin my own family.

Not knowing the ins and outs of the health care system in Canada from a doctor’s perspective, I felt that it was wise to work as a chiropractor in a large clinic for a year or two before I began my own clinic. But after visiting more than a dozen clinics, I was extremely discouraged; all of the clinics that were offering positions were earning the bulk of their income from questionable personal injury practices, and I did not feel good about milking the system the way that I thought they were. Within a few months, my search left me wanting to quit my profession for good.

So there I was at 28 years of age, feeling like I had to start all over again. Ten years and more than a hundred thousand dollars in education costs left me with little but feelings of despair and humiliation.

This low point of my life was clearly a disappointing time for me and my family. I did not want to see anyone, my health began to suffer, and all I did for days at a time was watch movies that I rented from the public library.

Fortunately, after a solid period of feeling sorry for myself, I began asking myself effective questions. How could I turn things around? How could I begin living and working in a way where I could feel useful again while sticking to my beliefs? What could I learn from the corruption that I had encountered up to that point? How would I have to live so that I would not have big regrets in the future?

By striving to see my life as it truly was, and putting together and applying a plan of action, I gradually climbed out of my valley. It wasn’t easy – there were many hurdles to make my way over and many moments of doubt, worry, and pain. But I felt alive for every moment of it, and it felt much better to be working at something than it did to feel like a lump of hopelessness.

Today, whenever I experience disappointment, I take some time to rest, but then move on to think about why I am disappointed and what I can learn from the event that caused me to feel disappointed. By going through this process, I have been able to stay on track with the vision that I have for my life; for the most part, I am guided by my own thoughts and decisions, not by the difficult events that I run into from time to time.

Does this sound appealing to you? Would you like to have more control over the momentum of your life? Would you like to bid farewell to the days when other people’s opinions and actions and disappointing events could put you into a deep funk for weeks or even years at a time?

Please give yourself permission to feel hopeful right now. It is okay that you feel depressed. Your body knows what it is doing, and with the right knowledge and plan of action, you can turn things around.

Part 1: Understanding and Overcoming Chronic Depression
Part 2: How Do You Know That You Are Depressed?
Part 3: Nutritional Considerations for Chronic Depression
Part 4: Mind-Body Exercises to Help You Transcend Chronic Depression
Part 5: How to Use Physical Exercise and Acupressure to Address Chronic Depression

 

If you think this article is worth sharing with the world, please buzz it up at Yahoo by clicking here.

Please rate this article:
Your rating: None Average: 4.7 (6 votes)
 

wisdom

"Have you ever considered the possibility that if you are depressed, you should be?"

Dear Dr. Kim, the answer is yes.

Bless you for stating clearly that downtime is part of the human condition. The tide cannot always be in.

Wisdom like this is often missing in the
frenetically paced North American culture.

Keep up the good work!

depression/smiling

i just wanted to agree with your comments on smiling. as a manic depressive
i learned years ago that if im depressed or even very aggitated i go to the local grocery store and someone always seems to say something to me or just smile and say hello, it can change my whole attitude and therefore my out look for that day,yesterday i read on a sign
"PEACE BEGINS WITH A SMILE"
lets all try that if not for our selves for someone else, i live in cosby tn, and am very lucky to live in such a friendly place, we even wave to each other on the roads out here, i find that astonding for our times, so every-0ne keep smiling
thank-you michiline smile,smile.smile

 

Improve Your Health With Our Free E-mail Newsletter

Join thousands of people from all over the world who receive our natural health newsletter.

  • Always free. You can unsubscribe anytime.
  • No spam. We respect and protect your privacy at all times.
  • Valuable information that you can use to improve the quality of your health and life.

Reviews

Just a note to let you know how much I appreciate your newsletter. As a fellow health care provider (optometrist) and medical researcher, I find your distillation of the literature into lay terms to be accurate and very understandable. I really enjoyed your contribution regarding macular degeneration. Keep up the good work. - Kristine Erickson, OD, PhD, FAAO

I get a lot of e-mailed newsletters and yours is the only one I read thoroughly from top to bottom. Your advice is enlightening, educational, easy to follow and it works! Thank you so much for all that you offer. - Lisa Abramovic

Thanks for your excellent health newsletter. I look forward to it every week. Thanks for providing the best online health resource I have found. - Moorea Maguire, M.A.

I thank you and your staff for such a great website. I am former National Level Bodybuilder so I know a thing or two about health and fitness. Your site is very valuable and I do my best to pass it on to friends and people I train. It is also a helpful resource in my career as a human service provider working with clients who need to recover from substance abuse. I believe a major part of recovery is getting your body and mind feeling healthy and strong. Thank you again! Great Website! - Michael Christopher, MSW