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Good Mood
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Table of Contents
Ways to Overcome Depression
Conquering Depression, Enjoying Life
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Good Mood:
The New Psychology
of Overcoming Depression
Chapter 10
cont.
Which should Wanda choose to do? The decision
is like that of a business investor who must guess at the chances that the
investment will pay off. So there is a price for Wanda to "accept"
herself as she is. The price is foregoing the chance of changing her life.
Which is the better choice in this trade-off? That is a tough decision--and a
choice that is ignored in the usual self-help books. And this makes those
simplistic books, and their promises of quick and free miracles, unrealistic
and ultimately disappointing.
Whereas this book focuses mostly on changes in
how you think, this example focuses on changing the actual state of
affairs so as to produce a more Rosy Ratio. But the underlying principle is
exactly the same: reduce the negative self- comparisons.
Table 10-1
Column 1 Column 2 Column 3 Uninvited thought
Causal Event Self-Comparison "I never do anything Late for a I do fewer
things right right." meeting than do most people. Column 4 Column 5
Analysis Response Numerator: Are you usually late for meetings? Almost never.
Denominator: Do most other people do most things more "right" than
you do? Not really. Dimension: Is your timeliness at meetings an important
aspect of your life? Of course not. Column 6 Behavior you wish to change
Inappropriately generalizing from a single instance to your entire life. Biased
assessment of what other people are like, making you look bad. Focusing on a
dimension which a) you need not attribute importance to, and b) does not
reflect well upon you.Summary
This chapter begins the section of the book
that discusses ways to overcome depression and the sadness-creating mechanisms
that the earlier chapters discussed. The understanding of depression provided
by cognitive therapy and Self-Comparisons Analysis is an exciting advance over
the older ways of dealing with depression. But this new theory also shows that
there is more to understanding depression than a single magical button.
Instead, you must do some hard thinking about yourself. Whether you have the
help of a psychotherapeutic counselor, or fight your depression by yourself,
the battle takes effort and discipline.
Self-Comparisons Analysis teaches that your
negative self- comparisons, together with a sense of helplessness, cause your
sadness. Obviously, then, you will have to eliminate or reduce those negative
self-comparisons in order to banish depression and achieve a joyful life. But
with the possible exception of drug therapy or electroshock, every successful
anti-depression tactic requires that you know which depressing thoughts you are
thinking. Cognitive therapy also requires that you monitor your thinking in
order to prevent those self-comparisons from entering and remaining in your
mind. Writing down and analyzing your depressed thoughts is a very important
part of the cure.
The first step in every tactic is to observe
your thoughts closely when you are depressed, analyze which negative self-
comparisons you are making, and write them down if you can make yourself do so.
Later, when you have learned how to keep depression at bay, an important part
of your continuing exercise will be to identify each negative self-comparison
before it gets a firm foothold, and pitch it out of your mind.
You may have to straighten out some
misapprehensions or confusions that customarily depress you. You may need to
re- think your priorities. It may even help to search your memory for some
childhood experiences. Perhaps hardest of all, you may have to study how you
misuse language, and how you fall into linguistic traps.
One may seek the help of a counselor or choose
to tackle depression by yourself. Self-cure certainly is feasible. The simple
fact is that all of us, all the time, make and carry out decisions about how
our minds will act in the future. We decide to study a book, and we do so. We
focus our attention on doing this or that, and we do it. We are not beyond our
own control.
The help of a counselor clearly can be
valuable. But finding a counselor who meets your needs is not easy. Depression
is a profoundly philosophical disease. A person's most basic values enter into
depressive thinking. On the one hand, values can cause depression when they set
up over-demanding and inappropriate goals, and therefore a troublesome
denominator in a Rotten Mood Ratio. On the other hand, values can help overcome
depression. Helping you deal with such issues requires a depth of wisdom which
is not learned in school, and which is too seldom in any of us. But without
such wisdom, a therapist is useless or worse
Depression is also a philosophical matter when it
arises from disorder of logical thinking and misuse of linguistic
Self-comparisons Analysis makes clear that many
sorts of influences, perhaps in combination with each other, can produce
persistent sadness. From this it follows that many sorts of interventions may
be of help to a depression sufferer. That is, different causes--and there are
many different causes, as most psychiatrists have finally concluded, call for
different therapeutic interventions. Furthermore, there may be several sorts of
intervention that can help any particular depression. Yet all these
interventions may be traced to the "common pathway" of negative
self-comparisons.
Self-comparisons Analysis points a depression
sufferer toward whichever is the most promising tactic to banish the
depression. It focuses on understanding why you make negative self-comparisons,
and then develops ways of preventing the neg- comps, rather than focusing on
merely understanding and reliving the past, or on simply changing contemporary
habits. With this understanding you can choose how best to fight your own
depression and achieve happiness.
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