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I'm just engaging in the same blinkered thinking that you are fond of adoptingSo, basically, every single person on this planet is weak of mind?
I actually agree with that.
Choose Life.
its pointless
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This x a million. There is no meaning to life people. You live, you die. Fill the in between in with whatever.In the end I think life ultimately is pointless
That's true of a lot of stuff. Most of the time you can't get a doctor's certificate for a cold without them throwing antibiotics at you. It's unfortunately the nature of modern medicine and malpractice that overdiagnosis is preferable to underdiagnosis.
People who are misdiagnosed as depressed tend not to kill themselves though.
You usually need to be depressed in order to have the required mindset to want to kill yourself, do you not?Is that right? Where do you glean that bit of information from?
You usually need to be depressed in order to have the required mindset to want to kill yourself, do you not?
People with an incurable and intolerable illness and who have no current history of depression fall into this categoryYou usually need to be depressed in order to have the required mindset to want to kill yourself, do you not?
People who commit suicide have zero sympathy from me, can't handle their problems so they throw all their burden on the loved ones left behind. Rot.
You usually need to be depressed in order to have the required mindset to want to kill yourself, do you not?
not necessarily, but depression and anxiety do go hand in hand with suicide, particularly for those who never develop the coping skills to learn how to manage it.
The loss of a loved one ie.. Romeo & Juliet, wouldn't fall under the category of depression, and likewise for a crime lord shooting himself in the head before the cops bust the door down and send him to prison for life.
And as already mentioned above by Campbell, drugs, alcohol and other illicit stuff can put people in an unstable mindset that wouldn't be related to suicidal depression, but it should be noted at the same time that the misuse of drugs/alcohol can lead to an onset of depression. Marijuana in particular can cause schizophrenia.
When you sit down all day and think about it thoroughly, yes it may feel that way, but you've been put on this earth for a reason, and therefore should embrace life. It gets ******* tough at times, I understand, but if you learn to escape from that 'depressing comfort zone' and gradually train yourself back into that positive mindframe, you'll start to feel a lot better with time. Making good lifestyle choices will speed up the process.
Keep yourself busy and distracted, you won't have time to think in such a negative way. Trust me.
What most people don't realise is when certain types of depression hit you, it can be because your brain stops producing the required amount of serotonin that would normally make you feel happy and content.
You are partially correct, positive thinking, changing your attitude and perception is an important step forward, but if you have a chemical imbalance and your body stops producing the right serotonin levels then your going to fall into deep depression. This is why anti-depressants are prescribed, they hit the serotonin inhibitors, ie SSRI, SNRI, MAOI or TCAs; and help bring the levels back to normal.
So, medication (psychiatry) + positive thinking (psychology) can be used to overcome most types of depression, but there are some extreme manic cases like Borderline Personality Disorder, Bipolar Disorder and Schizophrenia which are on whole different level of complexity.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serotonin
Great post.
I was desperate for help in February, and was prescribed Fluvoxamine, an anti-depressant. Been taking a fairly large dose on a daily basis ever since. Being depressed was such a hard thing to accept for me, but once I did, I got into the strategies I talked about in my last post. Along with those and taking Fluvoxamine, I've been seeing gradual results, and on this day feel content. Sure, it's not an immediate recovery. I have days occasionally where I feel like giving up on life, and find it tough to get out of my bed. But those days are becoming much less common, and I'm going to make sure I fix up my mental health, as I have a life to live.
Yep, I hear you, it's a journey of self-improvement and developing your coping skill set so you can manage it and intervene before an onset occurs. The bolded part is particularly important because only you can take the steps required to get better and 'wanting' to get better is critical, no one else can do it for you, your friends, family, professionals can only help as guides and support pillars.
I'm currently on Effexor 225mg (Venlafaxine) an SNRI and Seroquel 50mg for nights with a stash of diaz to help with any during the day anxiety. Fluvoxamine is an SSRI and in the same class as Zoloft which I was originally on and it was working really well. Unfortunately I ruined it's efficacy earlier this year by intoxicating myself with alcohol too many times, something I wasn't aware alcohol could do at that point, so I had to change over to a different med.
I think id rather be dead than have your mindset.
Your first paragraph was great talking about improving yourself. Then you throw all that out by admitting you are a drug addict.
Those pills may appear to make you feel better but they will never fix your problems mate. Youve been sucked in to the "mental health industry".
Good luck with that.