So the way out of the nightmare is laid before us: reduce pain and increase resources. Somewhere below is something you can do for yourself, for those you love and for those whom you have been commanded to love, if you believe in that sort of thing. These lists are from Conroy, pp. 300-302. My remarks are in brackets.
Suicide Prevention for All of Us
So the way out of the nightmare is laid before us: reduce pain and increase resources. Somewhere below is something you can do for yourself, for those you love and for those whom you have been commanded to love, if you believe in that sort of thing. These lists are from Conroy, pp. 300-302. My remarks are in brackets.
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suicide attempts,
suicide prevention,
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Out of the Nightmare: Recovery from Depression and Suicidal Pain

David L. Conroy had me at the opening sentence. I read it first at Metanoia.org and knew it came from somebody who had been there. I recommend the website for help and insight from the insider's perspective. If you are thinking about suicide, read this first.
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OMG!!! That's What They Said!

But the information she gave me and that I found on the prescription information sheet wasn't very much information at all, not the kind that would have helped me when I was taking the antidepressants that made me crazy. I knew this because I had read them, and they didn't help me. I will write more about this some other time.
The Language Of Doctors And Scientists
Fact of the Month -- Suicide

Today's post introduces the "Fact of the Month" feature. And today's fact comes from David L. Conroy, Out of the Nightmare, who gets his information from the Statistical Abstract, 1989.
Statistics -- More Suicides Than Homocides
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy -- aka Cake or Death
Books on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
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panic,
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Depression and the Shackles of Shame
Depression Diagnostic Criteria
· Lasting sad, anxious, or empty mood
· Loss of interest or pleasure in activities once enjoyed, including sex
· Feelings of hopelessness or pessimism
· Feelings of guilt, worthlessness, or helplessness
· Decreased energy, a feeling of fatigue or of being “slowed down”
· Difficulty concentrating, remembering, making decisions
· Restlessness or irritability
· Sleeping too much, or can’t sleep
· Change in appetite and/or unintended weight loss or gain
· Chronic pain or other persistent bodily symptoms without physical cause
· Thoughts of death or suicide, or suicide attempts.
If you have five of the above, including one of the first two, for more than two weeks, and without appropriate reason (like, your mother died) then that's depression. You've got the Grim at the bottom of your teacup.
Guilt
I have done enough intake interviews that I recognize the differential diagnostic tree when it's coming at me. I used to get nervous when they asked about guilt. No, I don't actually feel guilt, except appropriate guilt for recent misbehavior, not the horrible self-judgment for imagined offenses. I don't feel guilty for my depression. I am not the offender but the offended.
Shame
No, what I feel about my depression, and events that are related, is shame. And what I really feel shame about is feeling shame.
Thank You For Being My Friends

Now, tell me. How steep is the hill? Really steep? Sort of steep? Not so steep?
Friends And The Perception Of Difficulty
Labels:
depression,
friends,
major depressive disorder,
recovery,
relapse,
remission,
side effects,
thanks
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