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Coping with depression
EPA helps with depression click here
We have seen that sadness, hopelessness, loss, low self-regard,
loneliness, guilt, and shame are complex conditions or processes.
The causes are complex and so are the solutions. It is hard
to pull yourself out of a sinkhole of misery, sometimes impossible.
When you feel most like doing nothing, you need to DO SOMETHING!
When the future looks most bleak, you need to face it with
some hope. When hating yourself, you need to accept what you
have been and work on being better. So you may need help--therapy,
medicine, family counseling, and/or religious faith. But,
eventually, no matter which "cure" you take, you
will have to help yourself; there is no effortless, magical
cure.
No one should be ashamed of being depressed. But we are.
As Kathy Cronkite (1994) points out, people who openly discuss
going to Betty Ford's Clinic for alcohol abuse will carefully
conceal their depression. About 1 in every 10 of us will be
seriously depressed sometime in our lives. Baby boomers are
having even more episodes of depression, perhaps because the
high hopes of the 1960's were crushed by the economic troubles
of the 1970's and beyond. Remember, there is serious depression
which is beyond ordinary sadness; in this condition you may
have no appetite, no pleasure, no energy, no hope. And, there
is being "down" or in a bad mood for a few days;
it may involve crying, social withdrawal, being irritable,
having no ambition, being pessimistic, etc. These two conditions
are probably two different things. Both should be treated
but the really severe major depression must be taken very
seriously; 15% kill themselves, many more attempt it. Depression
is not your fault; you are not a terrible or hopeless person.
Unfortunately, 70% of people suffering depression never seek
treatment. Please be among the 30% who go for help and stay
with it. Depression is one of the most treatable emotional
problems--psychotherapy can help you, drugs can, and you can.
Note If your depression is serious (disabling or suicidal),
seek professional help immediately. If you are in therapy
or a group, be sure to tell the therapist how much you are
hurting. If not in therapy, call a therapist or your mental
health center. Do not delay by trying to treat yourself or
by hoping you'll get better. Serious depression and manic-depression
seem to have genetic, hormonal, and/or chemical aspects that
are activated by stress and upsetting life events and thoughts.
Thus, when the depression is serious, you always need to be
evaluated by an MD, who will decide if you need medication.
If your depression is primarily chemical, psychological coping
techniques are useful but not sufficient. Likewise, if your
depression has psychological causes, drugs may be useful but
not sufficient. There is usually no way to tell if your depression
is chemical or psychological, so consider both.
If you've read parts of the chapter relevant to you, you
probably already have some ideas about how and why you have
responded with sadness. Therefore, certain self-help methods
in this section will seem more appropriate for you to use.
Fine, try two or three and see if they work. If not, try something
else. In general, gaining some optimism about getting better,
having an easy going disposition, and utilizing family support,
along with selected self-help methods, will lead to a better
recovery from depression.
The methods for coping with depression are arranged by levels
in this section. Quickly read or skim the entire list of methods
before you select a few to use. This is a preview:
- Behavior--increase pleasant activities, avoid upsetting
situations, get more rest and exercise, use thought stopping
and reduce your worries, atone for wrong-doings, seek support,
and use other behavioral changes,
- Emotions--desensitize your sadness to specific situations
and memories, vent your anger and sadness, try elation or
relaxation training, etc.,
- Skills--learn social skills, decision-making, and self-control
to reduce helplessness,
- Cognition--acquire more optimistic perceptions and attributions,
challenge your depressing irrational ideas, seek a positive
self-concept, become more accepting and tolerant, select
good values and live them, and
- Unconscious factors--read about depression, learn to recognize
repressed feelings and urges that may cause guilt, explore
your sources of shame (perhaps even going back to childhood).
The Use of Anti-depressants
Anti-depressants have been a major part of the pharmacological
era in psychiatry. In the last twenty years, psychiatric practice
has changed in major ways, namely, the shift from talking
to giving pills. Many factors have contributed to this treatment
revolution: (1) the development of safer drugs with fewer
side effects, especially the SSRI anti-depressants. These
medications may not reduce depression better than older drugs
but they are less likely to kill you when an over-dose is
taken. (2) The pharmaceutical companies have advertised intensely,
turning consumers into drug advocates and permitting drug
sales representatives to target primary care physicians rather
than the much more rare psychiatrists. Moreover, (3) HMOs
have realized their profit-margins can be greatly increased
when the drugs are dispensed by a family physician requiring
only brief and occasional follow-up visits rather than by
expensive psychiatrists. The distribution of drugs got much
easier: just tell your regular doctor that you have been feeling
down or tired and have had some crying spells, and you immediately
get a prescription for anti-depressants paid for without question
by your health insurance. Millions have started taking anti-depressants
and while they may have shifted from one brand to another,
many have been satisfied. Nevertheless, it is generally recognized
that anti-depressants take about 30 days to work and about
30% of depressed patients get little benefit from anti-depressants.
During the last two decades, the stigma against taking psychiatric
drugs seems to have been considerably overcome but the stigma
against “seeing a shrink” (psychological or psychiatrist)
is still strong. Moreover, while Cognitive-Behavioral therapy
has developed during this period, it hasn’t had a breakthrough
in terms of highly publicized effective techniques or in terms
of cheap or easy treatment. In other words, anti-depressant
drugs haven’t had a lot of competition. Also, most people
do not realize how little training and experience primary
care doctors, in general, have in dealing with serious psychological
disorders, including depression. Yet, as you know, if you
have read the rest of this chapter, depression is a very complex
and potentially dangerous disorder. It isn’t something
to be diagnosed in a few minutes. Since anti-depressants take
30 days before having full impact, a significantly depressed
person needs frequent and careful monitoring immediately and
during the first several weeks. The treating physician needs
to get a detailed mental health history (mental problems or
illness often accompany depression) and he or she should strongly
encourage the patient to also get psychotherapy as well as
drugs. Depression is not an easily treated disorder. The doctor/therapist
should be expected to maintain long-term contacts with their
depressed patients, at least every week for a few months and
maybe much longer. Depression frequently comes back.
Ideally, a health care service for depression would have
enough coordinated psychiatric and psychological specialists
to carefully diagnose each case of depression, assessing the
possible psychological, personal, circumstantial, interpersonal
and physiological or genetic causes of the disorder. As a
part of this evaluation there should be a careful assessment
of the risk of self-injury (see earlier sections of this chapter).
This initial evaluation is not a trivial frill; it is crucial.
This process should usually involve psychological testing
and a detailed history as well as medical tests. The general
practitioner is not this kind of specialist. (Light cases
of depression could, I suppose, be handled more casually—but
how can anyone identify a light case just by talking to a
person for a few minutes?)
Another serious problem is that the general public has NOT
understood or paid close attention to the research about the
frequency of suicide and the obvious connection between depression
and suicide. For instance, we often don’t like to think
about suicide as being an integral part of depression. Suicide
is the eighth leading cause of death in the US. It is the
third leading cause in 15 to 24-year-olds and the fourth most
common cause of death between ages 10 and 14. This is serious—60%
of high school students have had thoughts about killing themselves,
9% have tried. At every age, especially in old age, depression
must not be dismissed and taken lightly. The “just take
these pills and call me in three months” is not acceptable
treatment.
Not only has the risk of suicide underlying depression been
taken too lightly, the generally positive public opinion about
the effectiveness and safety of anti-depressants seems to
have a major disconnect with the scientific evidence. There
have been many, many studies. Of course, some of the studies
have shown anti-depressants to be effective, sometimes. These
drugs, however, are big sellers--among the best-selling medicines
in the world, with such names as Prozac, Serzone, Wellbutrin,
Zoloft, Remeron, Celexa, Effexor, Lovox, Paxil, and others—all
similar in chemical composition. The total sales world-wide
are about 20 billion dollars per year. In 2002 alone about
11 million prescriptions were written just for children and
teens in the US. Let’s think about why is it difficult
to honestly know the effectiveness of anti-depressants (or
any other treatment).
People come to see doctors and therapists because they are
feeling badly, often their discomfort has gotten gradually
worse, and they are seeking help at the height of their depression.
If so, the chances are (for a variety of reasons) that the
problem will later get better rather than staying awful or
getting worse. This amelioration process is observed so often
when scientists re-assess unusually high or extreme conditions;
this going back towards normal (for you) is called “regression
to the mean.” So, you see a doctor with a bad cold,
an aching back, a tension headache, etc., and soon in the
natural course of things you begin to feel better (closer
to average for you).
There is another process that also makes it hard to evaluate
the effectiveness of a treatment method—the suggestion
or placebo effect. It is well known that a sugar pill can
help many people feel better (if the doctor suggests it is
very effective medicine and will take care of the problem
in a couple of days or weeks). If such a suggestion is made
or just implied when actual medication is given, then the
placebo effect and the drug effects combine together and both
may be working. To prove the effectiveness of a drug (or any
treatment) the amount of improvement shown to be due to the
drug alone has to be significantly greater than the placebo
effect by itself. Note: according to testimony given in the
fall of 2004 to the Congressional Energy and Commerce Committee,
about half of all studies of anti-depressants have not shown
in adults that the SSRI drugs are significantly more effective
than a placebo alone. Even worse, insignificant results were
found in two thirds of the studies in which children were
given anti-depressants and compared to children given a placebo.
This is not well understood by the general public. Please
note that these research findings certainly do not prove that
anti-depressants are entirely ineffective (in fact, half the
studies may suggest anti-depressants yield some benefits),
but these results cast considerable doubt on the effectiveness
of the drugs. Psychiatrists know the effectiveness of anti-depressants
is limited; they commonly point out that anti-depressants
do not help about 1/3 of their depressed patients.
In addition to these difficulties interpreting the results
of research, more recently there is a new and very disturbing
possible problem with using anti-depressants, especially with
children and teens. Over several years, there have been occasional
clinical reports of suicide and violence associated with taking
anti-depressants. For instance, it was reported that Eric
Harris, one of the suicidal shooters in Columbine High School,
had been taking an anti-depressant (Luvox). Parents have described
the sudden, out-of control suicide of a college student after
taking a regular dose of anti-depressants (http://www.nypost.com/news/nationalnews/30505.htm).
Britain prohibited prescribing anti-depressants to children
and teenagers in late 2003 (a year before the US considered
such action). Even more alarming, Shankar Vedantam of the
Washington Post reported on September 10, 2004, that testimony
was given at a congressional meeting that two internal FDA
analyses showed that anti-depressants, given to children and
teens, were associated with increased suicidal thoughts, actual
self-harm, and hostile behavior. How much of an increase?
FDA recently estimated that these drugs might double the risk
of suicide in children. This sounds very risky but if the
risk of suicide without drugs is 1% and with drugs 2%, there
the anti-depressant doubles the risk. But if the 1% higher
risk of suicide is associated with taking an anti-depressant
that reduces depression in 60% of patients (compared to 35%
who improve taking only a placebo), then you would probably
take the drug if you are miserable. Bigger and better controlled
recent research has yielded results about like that example
(The Journal of the American Medical Association study of
Prozac also confirmed an increased tendency towards suicidal
thoughts and action). So, taking a drug that slightly increases
the very low suicide rate, which sounds terrible, could be
a very reasonable thing to do. We need a lot more information.
The suicide prediction problem is an increasingly important
part of the decision to use anti-depressants or not. Also,
the patient and his/her parents, if a child or teen, should
be involved in the tough decision-making about the use of
drugs, the kind of psychotherapy needed, the precautions to
take, how to measure progress, etc. It isn’t just a
question of what approach offers the most hope for improvement
but also what methods have helped and not helped in the past,
how desperate the situation is, the patient's level of motivation,
etc. If I am feeling terribly miserable, I’d be willing
to take more chances with a risky drug…just the same
as when risky surgery is an option.
Please remember I am not a physician. I have no expertise
concerning drugs. My review is just a summary of the relevant
available about anti-depressant research which suddenly seems
very important. The data and my comments should in no way
be interpreted as opposing the use of anti-depressants. There
surely are circumstances in which it is a very good judgment
to give anti-depressants to children and teens. This new information
about anti-depressants with children just makes it critical
that case studies and treatment plans are done at the highest
level of professional competence.
I strongly recommend each depressed patient (and his/her
parents, if the patient is a minor), with the help of his/her
physician (the prescription writer), explore the pros and
cons of taking anti-depressants. It is not a simple decision.
If the prescribing physician is not a psychiatrist or a psychotherapist,
then a therapist (Psychologist or Social Worker) should permanently
join the team. At this time (fall of 2004), only about 15%
to 20% of children and teens being treated for depression
are prescribed anti-depressants. If research continues to
find suicide risks are associated with anti-depressants, surely
a number of changes are likely to be made in the treatment
of depression. Probably many family doctors will avoid prescribing
drugs having a strong warning label. Certainly, since therapists
know more about the potential for suicide, they will increase
the safe-guards used against the risk of suicide.
We will need to know the rate of suicide in certain types
of patients in specific circumstances depending on whether
they are taking anti-depressants or not. Science needs to
map the high risk points for depressed patients on and off
medication. Certain dangerous times have been known for many
years, like when released from a hospital, but we need to
know more. For instance, Wessely, Kerwin & Kaye (2004)
found that the most dangerous times for adults and children
taking anti-depressants were in the first nine days of treatment
(a four-fold increase in non-fatal suicide behavior). The
risk is also three-fold higher during days 10 to 29. What
if they were not taking anti-depressants? We don't know. Other
high risk times for children and adults are when anti-depressants
are started at a high level or when suddenly stopped. Start
anti-depressants at a low dose and gradually increase. Reduce
doses gradually. It is important that the doctor, the patient,
and others around him/her know the high risk times so everyone
can be especially vigilant, looking for extreme restlessness
or agitation (can't sleep), violent outbursts, psychotic behavior,
talk about suicide and so on. Close supervision is really
important--usually there are warning signs that people dismiss.
If you think you see a warning sign, consult with others,
including school counselor, close friends, and others who
might know more. The patient and family members or others
who are with the depressed patient should have the therapist's
cell phone #.
A recent study at the University of Colorado by Valuck, Libby,
Giese & Sills (2004) illustrates the crucial need for
more research into the risks of self-harm for adolescents
taking antidepressants. These researchers followed 24,000
depressed adolescents for six years. The risk of a suicide
attempt, in their sample, was not greater for young people
given antidepressants than for those not getting antidepressants.
Of possible additional significance, the adolescents given
antidepressants for at least 180 days made fewer suicide attempts
than adolescents taking the drug for less than 55 days. Standing
alone, these results are difficult to integrate with the above
studies: Do different outcome measures (suicide attempts,
near-lethal acts, and suicide rates) yield different results?
What factors correlate with being prescribed antidepressants?
Why did some subjects take medication much longer than others?
The authors suggest that the quality of health insurance may
influence what medication one gets, who administers the antidepressant,
who gets antidepressants alone, who gets only psychotherapy,
and who gets both? Many, many studies are needed to answer
these vital questions.
In summary, moderate or serious depression carries with it
a threat of self-injury. This risk requires special precautions.
Taking anti-depressants must be considered carefully because
the drugs may slightly increase the risk of agitation and
suicide in some young people while the drug may effectively
relieve depression in other people. The prescribing doctor,
the collaborating psychotherapist, the patient, and the parents
of a child or teen should be involved in making the treatment
plans. The prescriber and/or the psychotherapist must see
the patient frequently, probably weekly or more for an hour,
especially during high risk or high stress or high agitation
times. The FDA’s concern is now high enough that all
anti-depressants must display a warning label about the increase
risk of suicide if used with children or teens. For unexplained
reasons, the news reports describe the manufacturers as being
more eager to have a blunt, rather scary label placed on their
medications than was the FDA.
COPING WITH DEPRESSION
A review by levels of the useful Psychological Methods
Self-observation
Although depression frequently seems (to the depressed person)
to come from nowhere, i.e. isn't related to daily events,
that isn't true in most cases. The Lewinsohn research has
clearly shown that positive events or activities lead to positive
moods; negative events to depression (Grosscup & Lewinsohn,
1980). The depressed person must become aware that this is
true in his/her life too. So rate your mood on a 1 to 10 scale
(see chapter 2) and keep a log or a diary every day of positive
events and activities. It is likely that your mood will reflect
what is happening in your life.
As we have seen, depressed people tend to focus on negative
events and overlook positive ones. They don't know they are
doing this. So, it is important that they "give careful
recording a try and see what happens." Look for and record
all pleasant events and activities, even small, trivial, seemingly
unimportant pleasant events. It is vital that you learn, again,
to see the beauty, feel the warmth, and smell the roses. Don't
forget ordinary things: a cup of coffee, a walk, seeing a
bird, reading a book, helping someone, watching kids go to
school, watching the news, reading an advice column, going
shopping, listening to music, making yourself attractive,
visiting a neighbor, completing a chore, calling a friend,
daydreaming, playing with children, expressing an opinion,
getting a long kiss, getting or giving a compliment, etc.,
etc. Record in your diary (3 or 4 times each day, otherwise
you'll forget them) a brief description of these pleasant
events.
After about a week, plot your daily mood rating and number
of pleasant events for that same day on the same graph (see
chapter 2). See if your mood doesn't go up and down according
to how many pleasant events occurred that day. If so, this
is a powerful argument to increase the number of pleasant
events in your life and to appreciate the nice things that
happen.
This is a simplified version of a "behavioral analysis"
(method #9 in chapter 11) in which one would look for the
antecedents and consequences of good and bad moods. The objective
is to find cause and effect relationships that can be used
to increase happiness and reduce sadness. I would recommend
a behavioral analysis because it explores the causes of the
depression as well as the sources of satisfaction.
Look to the future
Like procrastinators, when we become depressed we tend to
focus on the past or to see primarily the immediate consequences,
not the long-term results of what we are doing now. We hurt,
so we focus on immediate relief, disregarding activities that
might be stressful but very important to our future, like
getting training for a new career. To increase your awareness
of the effects of your activities, do one "outcome analysis
" each day of some activity, i.e. estimate the short
and long-term, both positive and negative, outcomes. Examples:
| Activity |
Effect or Outcome
|
| |
Immediate |
Delayed |
| Watch soaps on TV |
+Distracting. Fun.
+I can tell others about show. |
|
| |
-May upset me. |
-Shows won't be remembered
-I wasted valuable time. |
| |
|
|
| Take a hard class |
+Interesting.
+Meet people.
+Get ideas for current job. |
+Career advancement.
+Adds hours toward a degree. |
| |
-Stressful.
-Takes time & money. |
-May be unemployed so class wouldn't help. |
The objectives are (a) to encourage realistic, long-range
planning, (b) to see the lasting consequences--or the wastefulness--of
certain daily activities, and (c) to make some important but
uncomfortable activities more tolerable today because they
pay off tomorrow. This is important for all of us to do, but
it is even more important and difficult for a pessimistic
person with low self-esteem to do.
One small step at a time
Earlier we learned that global thinking (or end goal wishing),
e.g. "I need to get better grades," overlooks the
necessary details of how to get there. Also, unrealistic,
perfectionistic expectations, e.g. "I'll get all A's,"
may lead to disappointment and self-criticism. Thus, it is
important to learn to have a plan, to set realistic goals
and sub-goals, and to have some success experiences. It is
important to be satisfied with small gains. So, decide on
some practical, possible, important self-help project--dieting,
increased socializing, more detailed and prompt record keeping
at work, learning to play tennis, spending more time alone
with spouse, or whatever. Then, for each project goal, set
several clear, explicit, attainable sub-goals (small steps),
perhaps things you could do every day or every few hours (see
goal setting in chapter 2). Schedule the time, give it priority,
and be sure you are successful. Record your progress in a
diary, along with the positive outcomes.
Self-evaluation
When discouraged, we feel at fault when things go wrong and
"just lucky" when things go well. Rehm has an exercise
to help you realize your contribution to success and reduce
your responsibility for failure:
- Think of an important recent event and describe it.
- In what ways were other people, chance, luck (good or
bad), or fate responsible for this event?
- In what ways were you (your efforts, skills, abilities,
experience, appearance, etc. or lack thereof) responsible
for this event?
- What percentage of the responsibility for this event was
attributable to you? _____%
Do this for several events, including both positive and negative
ones. You have almost always worked for positive events and
against depressing events. So, if you do not think you are
truly responsible for more than 50% of the pleasant events,
reconsider your explanation of those events and see if you
aren't causing more positive things than you thought. Factually
based confidence in your self-control is a powerful antidote
to pessimism and helplessness (remember depressed people underestimate
their problem-solving ability).
Usually others or circumstances or just bad luck cause unpleasant
events (the exception to this general rule is when our passive-dependency
is the cause). So, if you see yourself as responsible for
negative events--over 50% of the time--go back and see if
others and chance aren't more responsible. If your passivity
is the problem, see chapter 8. Ideally, you will come to believe
(accurately) that your general, stable abilities and traits,
e.g. intelligence, personality, organizational, and communication
skills, etc., cause good things to happen and uncontrollable,
temporary external factors that you are not responsible for
produce the downers. (You are correct if you are thinking
this fits better in level IV. See #29 below.)
Self-reinforcement
Self-depreciating people feel that giving themselves overt
self-rewards--going out for dinner--is being selfish, and
they think giving themselves covert self-rewards--"I
really handled that well"--is shameful bragging. These
attitudes become barriers to using some of the most powerful
self-control tools, such as self-reinforcement and self-praise
(see method #16 in chapter 11). Rehm recommended making a
list of assets--true positive traits. Read it frequently and
add accomplishments to it. Make another list of possible rewards,
as in method #16 in chapter 11, and use them in self-help
projects. Depressed people need more good things in their
lives.
Get active. Actually, research has shown that we do fewer
fun things when we feel low, but simply doing more pleasant
activities is no guaranteed cure-all (Biglan & Dow, 1981).
Yet, actions do change feelings. Increase your activity level,
get out of bed (or your chair or house), find interesting,
fun things to do but, more importantly, undertake profitable,
beneficial activities that solve problems, improve your situation
or future, and replace sad thoughts. Start with easier tasks,
work up to harder ones. Reward your progress.
Several therapists recommend that every major activity on
your daily schedule be rated for "mastery" (how
well you did it) and for "pleasure." From these
rating we can learn a lot, e.g. that we are getting more pleasure
than we thought out of life, that we can do many things pretty
well, that many activities are satisfying even though we aren't
very good at them, and so on. You may have to push yourself
to be active. A book by McGrath (1994), stressing converting
depression's dissatisfactions into motivation to self-improve,
could also prod you into constructive action. Examples: feeling
like a victim may lead to correcting the situation, anguish
about aging may encourage exercising, a poor evaluation may
inspire us to learn more, etc. Deep depression makes it very
hard to get active (in those cases medication may be needed).
Exercise promises long-lasting results. In just the last
couple of years, there have been a couple of interesting studies
showing that an aerobic exercise program--stationary cycling
or treadmill--for 30 minutes 3 times a week reduced major
depression as much or more than medication (Zoloft). After
16 weeks, the remission rate was 60% for both groups, but
at follow up after another 6 months the exercise group had
a higher recovery rate (than the drug group) and they were
less likely to relapse (8% vs. 38% in the Zoloft group). The
subjects in this study were middle-aged or older (Babyak,
et al, 2000). Be sure to check with your doctor first, but
exercise would be good for you in many ways, not just with
depression. Seriously consider this. Even more recently, other
studies report that daily exercise reduces depression by 1/3
or 1/2 within 10 days, that is faster than most people respond
to anti-depressive medications.
The data keeps coming in. Please pay attention to this. Another
well done study (Trivedi, M. , January, 2005, American Journal
of Preventive Medicine) shows that exercise alone three or
five times a week for 30 minutes reduces depression by about
50%. That is as good as taking antidepressants or as good
as getting Cognitive-Behavioral psychotherapy. The study observed
mild to moderately depressed 20 to 45-year-olds.
Avoid unpleasant, depressing situations. Take a vacation,
get complete rest and lots of sleep (just for a week or two--not
for months). Our interpersonal situation powerfully influences
our happiness and depression. Barnett and Gotlib (1988) found
that introversion, loneliness, dependency, and marital problems
often precede the onset of depression. Avoid losses and these
conditions if you can (of course, it can be a joy to lose
a lousy marriage).
Change your environment. Try to change your depressing environments
--working conditions, family interactions, stressful relationships
and so on. Our mood reflects our surroundings.
Reduce negative thoughts. Reduce the negative thoughts that
characterize depressed people: self-criticism ("I'm really
messing up"), pessimistic expectations ("It won't
get any better"), low self-esteem ("I'm a failure"),
and hopelessness ("There's nothing I can do"). How
do you stop or limit these depressing thoughts, memories,
or fantasies? Try using thought-stopping, paradoxical intention
(massed practice) or punishment (chapter 4). Or restrict unwanted
sad thoughts to specific times or places, e.g. a "depression"
chair; then reduce the time spent in the chair (see McLean,
1976). Or reward stopping negative thoughts; replace them
with pleasant fantasies (Tharp, Watson & Kaya, 1974).
Have more positive thoughts. Make an effort to have a lot
more positive thoughts: satisfaction with life ("Living
is a wonderful experience"), self praise ("I am
thoughtful--my friends like that"), optimism ("Things
will get better"), self-confidence ("I can handle
this situation"), and respect from others ("They
think I should be the boss"). Even if you don't feel
like saying these things every hour, say them anyway. They
will become part of your thinking.
Ask others to model for you how they control depressing thoughts
and guilt producing ideas. What self-instructions do they
use to "get out of a bad mood?" Practice talking
to yourself out loud, then silently. See method #2 in chapters
4 and 11.
Become aware of any payoffs for depression or self-putdowns.
Reduce these reinforcements: don't complain or display sadness,
ask others to ignore your sadness (but interact with you more
during good times). Remember excessive talking about your
depression may sometimes make you more depressed (don't use
this as an excuse for not seeking help).
Act happier. Practice smiling more, speaking in a less whiny
voice, standing up straight with chest out, dressing up more
and expressing compliments, feeling self-satisfaction, and
acting as though the future will be better. Acting happier
can change our mood.
Become a better self-helper. Become a better self-helper
as you work on a variety of personal problems (Rehm, 1981).
Learning to master a life--your life--is not easy. Read self-help
books. Use the steps in my chapter 2 to make some self-improvements.
Prove to yourself that you can change your environment, your
behavior, your mood, and so on. Recognize your increased ability...but
know your limitations. Both knowledge of useful psychology
and self-confidence are important. Feeling in control of life
is an important part of enjoying life.
Atonement. Figure out a way to make up to others or to society
for the things you have done wrong (see discussion of guilt
above).
Develop marital contracts. Develop marital contracts that
provide each partner with a reward for changing in ways requested
by the mate. See method #16 in chapter 11.
Seek support. Self-Help or Support Groups, Marriage Enrichment
Programs, Parents Without Partners, Integrity Groups, Singles
Groups, Emotions Anonymous, The Compassionate Friends (for
bereaved parents), Neurotics Anonymous, Recovery, Inc., Theos
Foundation (for widows), Widowed Persons, encounter groups,
group therapy, church groups, or local groups of people in
similar circumstances. Use the phone book and/or Mental Health
Center to find the appropriate group for you (see discussion
in chapter 5).
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