nebe
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- Aug 22, 2007
- Messages
- 954
I am in treatment, I''m just looking for other perspectives. Thank you for the kind words, Zoe & AHGDate: 6/3/2008 9:18:14 PM
Author: ZoeBartlett
I''m sorry to hear that you''re dealing with this, Nebe. I''d definitely recommend speaking to your doctor who will be able to provide you with recommendations about how to seek help. It''s very tough, but you can get through this.
Nebe: When you do see your doctor, please insist on a check of your hormone levels in addition to the thyroid tests -- no matter what your age. At one point I had symptoms similar to CJ's, accompanied by a rapid and deep spiral down into depression, that were absolutely, demonstrably due to changes in hormone levels. Suffice it to say I was very young at the time.Date: 6/4/2008 6:45:19 PM
Author: CrownJewel
Then in the past two years, the scariest and most disabling symptoms showed up - I started mixing up words, listening to people but not comprehending their words, forgetting words (constantly, to the point where it would take me several minutes to get one sentence out). I felt like I wasn't speaking coherently anymore. I started to have difficulty reading and solving problems. Decisions that would have taken me 1 minute before, now take me 30 minutes. Choosing a flower arrangement to send to my mom took me almost 8 hours. I couldn't concentrate on ANYTHING. Every thought in my head was accompanied by dozens of related or unrelated thoughts. I assumed I had brain degeneration.
Date: 6/4/2008 11:09:44 PM
Author: MINIMS
Date: 6/4/2008 6:45:19 PM
Author: CrownJewel
Then in the past two years, the scariest and most disabling symptoms showed up - I started mixing up words, listening to people but not comprehending their words, forgetting words (constantly, to the point where it would take me several minutes to get one sentence out). I felt like I wasn''t speaking coherently anymore. I started to have difficulty reading and solving problems. Decisions that would have taken me 1 minute before, now take me 30 minutes. Choosing a flower arrangement to send to my mom took me almost 8 hours. I couldn''t concentrate on ANYTHING. Every thought in my head was accompanied by dozens of related or unrelated thoughts. I assumed I had brain degeneration.
Nebe: When you do see your doctor, please insist on a check of your hormone levels in addition to the thyroid tests -- no matter what your age. At one point I had symptoms similar to CJ''s, accompanied by a rapid and deep spiral down into depression, that were absolutely, demonstrably due to changes in hormone levels. Suffice it to say I was very young at the time.
CJ: Your mention of ''brain degeneration'' sparked a memory. I used to almost wish that the doctors would find a brain tumor, just so I''d know what was causing me to be the way I was.
Thanks MINIMS and mimzy. Yeah, I thought that was an important point to make in a discussion about depression and anxiety. It''s such an awful feeling, to think your brain is dying and to desperately wish there was a tumor (MINI, yup, I thought the same thing) to explain the decline of your memory, verbal skills, intellectual abilities, etc.Date: 6/4/2008 11:44:20 PM
Author: mimzy
Date: 6/4/2008 11:09:44 PM
Author: MINIMS
CJ: Your mention of ''brain degeneration'' sparked a memory. I used to almost wish that the doctors would find a brain tumor, just so I''d know what was causing me to be the way I was.
CJ - most people don''t associate the two, but severe depression is a known cause of reversible dementia, which it sounds like you might have experienced.
A few of you mentioned exercise. It''s true, exercise is good for your body and brain in so many ways. But the problem for people who are severely depressed or anxious is they cannot bring themselves to go to the gym, or out for a run, or on the treadmill in the corner of the living room, or even to do jumping jacks in the bedroom. And it''s a vicious cycle...we know we "should" exercise, we gather enough courage to PLAN to exercise after work or whenever, but then we don''t exercise for whatever reason, and that causes us to feel guilty and inadequate.Date: 6/5/2008 1:08:27 PM
Author: Independent Gal
Hey there Nessa,
Have you tried cognitive behavioural therapy? All the research (and a few of my friends) supports it. It empowers you, plus, it works much faster than psychotherapy.
Another thing that research supports: exercise. Do you work out vigorously, several time a week? Apparently, it is as effective as medication at helping people suffering from depression. AND it makes you buff!
I started having problems in early childhood, with my first depressive episode lasting several months, when I was about 8-9 years old. I didn''t receive any treatment until I was 16, and at that time they gave me valium. (197Date: 6/3/2008 8:46:37 PM
Author:nebe
Does anyone else have trouble with chronic depression? If you have/do, I''m curious what kind of treatments you''ve tried that have or haven''t worked for you? (ie: psychotherapy, drug therapy [which kinds], DBT) I''m kind of losing hope.
Thank you so much for your concern. I'm so sorry I disappeared for a time, I hope I didn't worry anyone. I have looked into new treatment and medication adjustments, so hopefully things will get better soon. I was having a hard time living with my FBIL, so I've decided to move back to my father's house until FH and I buy a condo/home within the next year. That may help out some as well, we'll see. I'm trying to think good thoughts and keep my head up. Thank you so much everyone for your input and reccomendations.Date: 6/6/2008 1:20:58 AM
Author: CrownJewel
Jeez, talk about anxiety and anger. I just lost a looooooooooooong post. The point of it was, Nebe, how's it going? (The rest of my post was a bunch of stories...but maybe I will post those later if something relevant comes up.) Do you have any thoughts or questions about anything that has been written or suggested? I feel very strongly about this topic, and it looks like several other PSers do too. How can we help?![]()
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Date: 6/3/2008 9:54:53 PM
Author: mimzy
hi nebe,
i''ve struggled with this since high school, and unfortunately there has never been one thing that really gave me a huge boost, but there have been a few things that when in combination has helped huge amounts.
- therapy: it wasn''t psychotherapy, but more cognitive/behavioral, and it helped to a degree. i was in individual and group therapy, and it was nice having the group for support and perspective, and individual was of course nice because it was so personal. i didn''t have a great therapist, but it was still beneficial
- drugs: after trying three or four different ones i settled on zoloft for a few years, along with xanax and eventually neurontin for comorbid anxiety. i think it helped, but it''s really a trade off with other side effects. i''m on nortryptiline (sp?) right now, but it''s more for my headaches than anything). it''s impossible to predict how you''ll react to medications, so really my experience could be totally different than yours.
the biggest changes that helped were made from a cognitive standpoint, and thus much harder to make. i had to make a HUGE, conscious effort to do a couple of things -
- be open/honest: i had a serious aversion to talking about how i was feeling to anyone. i hated being asked and i hated the idea of even hinting that i wasn''t ''fine''.it was much more comfortable being withdrawn and depressed by myself; after all, letting other people in on my sadness only made me feel more pathetic and made me hate myself even more. but i realized that being so withdrawn and quiet was counterproductive and i resolved myself to discussing my day to day feelings and struggles with FI (then BF). This WASN''T easy, because he really didn''t understand, and that was hard, BUT it got easier and he learned to react a little more appropriately. verbalizing how i was feeling helped to demystify the depression a bit, and made it a little more tangible, and thus a little easier to handle. this was especially true when the thoughts crossed over into suicidal (i hate that word). i had a meltdown just this past weekend because the self-hate was snowballing and i didn''t want to acknowledge it. as soon as i broke down and talked/cried it all out i felt a lot more inspired to make the changes that i needed to (which i did, and i''m feeling good today).
- get rid of triggers: i''m not sure if you experience this, but i had a huge number of triggers for more severe depression that i would indulge in on daily/weekly basis. i was most comfortable when i was sad, and i wanted nothing more than to be comfortable, because i was so uncomfortable in my skin. but the sadness was familiar, and thus my best friend. the depression was like a safety blanket, that i really really needed to give up. that meant deleting songs that i knew would make me sad, scheduling every part of my day so that i wouldn''t have time to sit and cry, not reading old journals, giving FI my box cutter that i used for ''projects'', even staying away from windows if it was raining. and i wanted to do those things SO bad, but i wouldn''t let myself. it was INCREDIBLY uncomfortable for me to give things like that up, but i knew that i had to, and i did, for the most part.
- be accountable: sort of going along with the last two, i asked FI and another friend to really keep me accountable. They wouldn''t let me indulge in my old behaviors and really stayed on top of me and encouraged me. i wanted to keep things from them, almost out of defiance, but they wouldn''t let that happen.
- kept things going: my depression was especially bad when life slowed down. i was in school and worked year round and the redundancy KILLED me. i made sure to plan special things to look forward to or always have a project going that kept me excited. a friend back in high school told me that when things get hard, they have to change. for me this meant that when i starting getting bad, i had to do something different, so i just kept changing. clothes, hairstyles, the furniture in my apt (rearranging), the way i took notes in class, anything. i did everything i could to keep my life interesting.
it was incredibly exhausting and uncomfortable trying to feel better, but it paid off. i still have episodes when i get incredibly down, but i am able to cope much better now. it''s not likely something that you will ever ''get over'', but it can get better. this was all really long winded, and i''m sorry if it wasn''t helpful or relevant, but i just wanted to let you know that there is hope. *hugs*, nebe