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Good Mood
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Ways to Overcome Depression
Conquering Depression, Enjoying Life
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Good Mood:
The New Psychology
of Overcoming Depression
Introduction
Note to editor: all references which are
now in parentheses, in the form of a name and a data, should be numbered
as footnotes and placed at the end of the book with the other footnotes,
chapter by chapter. The references might best be grouped as a bibliography-reading
list, with the footnotes referring to them by name and date.
Are you sad? Do you have a low opinion of
yourself? Does a sense of helplessness and hopelessness weigh you down? Do you
feel this way for days or weeks at a time? Those are the elements of
depression.
If this is how you are feeling, you surely want
to regain a pleasant outlook on life. You also need to prevent depression
returning later. Happily, there now are aids to attain those goals. (But
fighting depression takes effort. And there are certain benefits of being
depressed which you may be reluctant to give up.)
Nowadays, a depression sufferer usually can get
relief with active cognitive psychotherapy, or with tested anti-depressant
medications, or with both. The U. S. Public Health Service summarizes as
follows: "Eighty percent of people with serious depression can be treated
successfully. Medication or psychological therapies, or combinations of both
usually relieve symptoms in weeks."1 Both kinds of treatment have been
shown in controlled experimental research to benefit a large proportion of
depression sufferers, within a few months or even weeks. Drugs, however,
control the depression, whereas psychological therapy can cure it. (For
information about the scientific results, see Appendix B and the books cited in
the reference list.) All this is good news indeed for depression
sufferers.
Only a quarter century ago, medical and
psychological science had little to offer depressed people. Traditional
Freudian-based therapy put you on a couch or in an easy chair, and started you
talking at random. You and your therapist hoped that in the course of two to
five expensive hour-long sessions a week, continuing for many months or years,
you would come across sensitive incidents in your past. Those
"insights" were expected to relieve you of the pain the incidents
induced. But the success rate was not high, nor was psychoanalysis proven
effective by scientific tests.
Traditional therapy was founded upon the
crucial assumption that people are irresistibly disturbed by their past
experiences, and cannot change their emotional life by changing their
current patterns of thinking. Recent scientific research has shown, however,
that this assumption is false. People can indeed overcome depression by
changing their current thought patterns. That is, though you may have
been disturbed by events in your past, you now (in Albert Ellis's
phrase) disturb yourself by your current mental habits.
Modern cognitive therapy -- which fully
coincides with the wisdom of the ages on this point -- begins with the
assumption that we have considerable control over our own thinking. We can
choose what we will think about, even though following through on the choice
requires effort and is not always fully successful. We can select our goals,
even though the goals are not infinitely flexible. We can decide how much we
will agonize over particular events, though our minds are not as obedient as we
would like them to be. We can learn better ways to understand the data of our
objective situations, just as students learn to gather and analyze data
scientifically, rather than being forced to accept the biased assessments we
have tended to make until now.
This book teaches you a newly-sharpened version
of cognitive psychotherapy that has a more comprehensive theoretical base and
wider curative outlook than earlier versions. You may use it by yourself to
overcome depression, or you may use it in conjunction with a therapist. Most
sufferers can benefit from the assistance of a wise counselor, though finding
such a helpful person is not easy.
{In?} There is still more good news:
Psychiatrist Kenneth Colby, famous for his artificial-intelligence computer
simulation of paranoia, has developed a computer-based system of psychotherapy
for depression based on the key ideas of this book. You "speak" to
the computer, and the computer speaks back on the screen, which helps you help
yourself. A disk to run the program on an IBM-PC computer is included with this
book. It can be a help and a comfort to many readers.
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