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Living with Depression
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If You Know Someone
Who's Depressed
How To Help Someone Who's
Depressed
I've gotten lots of questions
from friends and family of
depression patients, as to how to handle it. This page assumes that the
depressed person has been diagnosed and is in treatment. If not, see my
General Information page.
Main Problems for Friends and
Family
Let me start by saying that I, for one,
appreciate your wishing to understand
someone else's depression. I commend you for taking an interest in a very
difficult subject and for wishing to help. In an indirect way, you're a victim
of depression too because this illness impinges on everyone around the people
who have it.
Pardon my bluntness, but there are a few things
you really need to know, before you get too far into this subject.
You cannot cure someone else's
clinical depression. It is not just sadness which can
be waved off with a few kind words. It goes far deeper than that. If you are
going into this with the heroic notion that you can somehow "fix" it
for your friend, spouse or relative, then you need to disavow it immediately.
Operating on this assumption will only frustrate you and does no one any good.
There are ups and downs in
depression recovery.
It is neither swift, nor steady. Your friend or relative is going to go on the
decline, now and then. Don't think it's because you are failing them or they
are not trying hard enough. The "roller-coaster" effect is just a
part and parcel of depression.
Please don't tell a depression patient that
"you understand." Unless you, yourself, have experienced clinical
depression, you don't. And your friend, spouse or relative knows it. It's not a
bad thing; since understanding depression means having it. I'd rather that no
one, anywhere, understood it. The point here is to be honest with your friend
or relative and don't profess things that aren't so. Sincerity will help him or
her a great deal; it will engender trust, which every depression patient has a
problem with, at one time or another.
No one wants to make your life miserable by
being depressed. Try not to view someone else's depression as your own
affliction. Rather, be grateful that you don't have clinical depression and try
to realize what the other person is going through. Don't take the things your
friend, spouse or relative says/does, personally. They aren't meant that way.
Recovery from depression is not just a
matter of taking anti-depressant
medication and going to therapy.
Both the depression and recovery from it can totally change a person's life.
Treatment involves a lot of fundamental changes in a person. At times, you'll
wonder if it's the same person you've known for so long. Believe me, it is--the
depression probably hid the "real person" from your view, up to the
point that he or she was diagnosed and began treatment.
At times, it may seem that the person is
actually pushing you away. This is very likely true. Most depression patients
believe that they unduly affect those around them and will do anything to
prevent that from happening. Thus, they isolate themselves from others. This
kind of self-sabotage is actually a symptom of the illness itself. Don't let it
overcome your relationship. Try to understand that this is often involuntary
and irrational, and act accordingly.
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