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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 5
cont.
Childhood punishment for failure may also make
you fear failure so much that the threat of failure panics you to the point
that you do not think clearly. This may cause you to reach wrong conclusions
because you misinterpret relevant information, which can lead to neg-comps and
sadness. As one salesman put it, "Every time I was a minute late for an
appointment I'd be scared that the customer would think I am irresponsible and
lazy, which would make me so nervous that I couldn't sell effectively. And I
also immediately reminded myself that I never manage to do anything
right."(3) This was a fellow whose mother set very high standards of
reliability for him even as a four-year-old child, and chided him when he
failed to meet those standards.
Childhood-Formed Expectations About Adult
Accomplishment
Experiences in childhood and adolescence
influence your expectations about professional and personal
accomplishments.
Each violinist in any [symphony orchestra's]
second chair started out as a prodigy in velvet knickers who expected one day
to solo exquisitely amid flowers flung by dazzled devotees. The 45-year-old
violinist with spectacles on his nose and a bald spot in the middle of his hair
is the most disappointed man on earth.(4)
Sometimes changes in one's capacities trigger
the depression. A thirty-nine-year-old amateur athlete's present expectations
were formed both by his relative excellence as a youth and by his absolute
excellence as an adult. And when age curbed his performance and he compared his
performance with those expectations, he began to feel sad and depressed.
The "normal" person revises his
expectations so that they fit his possible accomplishment reasonably well. The
middle-aged violinist may reassess his abilities and arrive at a more realistic
assessment of the future. The aging athlete chooses to play in an over-forty
tennis league. But some adults do not respond to a gap between expectations and
performance by revising their expectations. This may result from heavy parental
emphasis on certain expectations such as "Of course you'll win a Nobel
prize if you work hard." Such a person carries expectations beyond actual
possibilities, and depression ensues.
An interesting but troublesome set of
expectations that many of us form as children concerns "happiness."
As young people we get the idea that we can hope for (and even expect) a life
of care-free ecstatic bliss, a perennial walking on air, as seen in movies and
magazine articles about celebrities. Then, when in our youth or young adulthood
we do not attain golden bliss--and at the same time we think that other people
have attained it--we feel let-down and suffer depression. We must learn
that continued bliss is not an attainable goal for anyone, and instead aim at
the best that one can realistically expect from life as a human being.
Persistent Criticism by Parents
If your parents continually tell you that your
acts are clumsy, foolish, or naughty, you are likely to draw the general
conclusion that you are clumsy, foolish, or naughty. Hence as an adult you may
have the habit of making negative self- comparisons. For example, a social act
that may or may not be clumsy immediately evokes the inner response,
"I'm an idiot," or "I'm a klutz." This habit acts like a
prejudiced judge who always finds the person guilty, and hence produces
frequent negative self-comparisons and consequent prevailing sadness.
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