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Depression: The Problem

Self-Therapy For People Who ENJOY Learning About Themselves

WHAT MAKES US DEPRESSED?

We get angry about twenty times a day.

If we believe our anger is bad or that it's scary to be angry, we keep it inside.

The unexpressed anger builds up.

It takes so much energy to keep it bottled up that we get tired from all that effort. And, since we are not using our energy to get what we want, we miss out on many things. The tiredness and the losses add up to make us feel hopeless, lethargic, irritable, and sad. This is depression.

We get depressed from saved up anger.

GUILT VS. RESPONSIBILITY

Guilty feelings are the building blocks of depression.

Guilt is what we feel when we know we've made a mistake and think we need forgiveness from someone else.

Responsibility is what we feel when we make a mistake, learn from the mistake, repair any damage as well as we can,   and forgive ourselves.

We feel guilt in the hope that someone else will get us off the hook. In other words, we feel guilt to avoid responsibility for our own mistakes. And we end up depressed.

SUBCONSCIOUS TRICKERY

We don't feel guilty to change our behavior. We feel guilty to avoid changing our behavior!

Think of an alcoholic who comes home drunk at 3 in the morning, apologizes profusely the next morning,   and says she hates herself.

She is subconsciously trying to show that she "feels bad enough" so her partner will believe she is sorry and forgive her.


 




(The partner would be wise to tell her to stop all the apologies and the self-hate and just say: "I need help to stop drinking!")

SELF-PUNISHMENT AND DEPRESSION

For many people depression is self-inflicted punishment. They actually say to themselves: "I will make myself feel bad to pay for what I've done."

HOW WE LEARN DEPRESSION

Think of a child whose parent just yelled at them: "You are bad!"

If the parent's guilt-tripping works, the child might cry in a brokenhearted sort of a way and sit quietly for a long time feeling bad about themselves.

The self-satisfied parent might say: "See, she feels so bad about herself that I know she won't do it again." But the child will do it again! Why?

Because the child hasn't learned a thing about her own behavior. When parents punish too severely (physically or psychologically), the child has no choice but to focus on the punishment and forget the behavior the parent said was the cause of the punishment.

When the parent eventually stops the shaming, the child will believe that feeling bad about herself is what saved her.

She has learned that in that family there are real advantages to being depressed.

Teaching a child the effects of their behavior is much more difficult than making them feel guilty. But it's the only way to get them to change.

[See and other articles in this series about parenting.]

OVERLAPPING ANGER

The key to avoiding depression is to welcome and express your anger.

But what if so many things make you angry that you don't have enough time to express it all? What if your new anger constantly "overlaps" with your old anger?

Most people who have overlapping anger are living lives that are filled with mistreatment. They are simply so badly treated that anyone would be depressed. They will be depressed until they stop taking all that mistreatment.

Other people have overlapping anger because they talk themselves into being angry when they are really feeling something else (sadness, or scare, or even joy). They need to learn how to handle the feelings they are avoiding - and since they are so afraid of this, they will probably need a therapist to help them.

OTHER ARTICLES

Depression: What To Do About It was written as a companion topic.

Since suppressed anger, guilt, and depression are such common problems, many articles in this series are related to these topics. Every article, regardless of the title, probably contains at least one idea you can use to overcome depression.

Enjoy Your Changes!

Everything here is designed to help you do just that!

next: Depression: What To Do About It

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2009, January 4). Depression: The Problem, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, November 2 from https://www.healthyplace.com/self-help/inter-dependence/depression-the-problem

Last Updated: April 27, 2016

Medically reviewed by Harry Croft, MD

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