Good Mood: The New Psychology
of Overcoming Depression
CHAPTER 14
CHANGE YOUR DIMENSIONS
Consider some dimension of your life on which you frequently compare
yourself negatively. Let's say that you have not found a way to improve your
numerator - your perceived actual state of affairs. And you are not prepared
to sweeten the denominator - the benchmark state to which you compare yourself.
This leaves you with a Mood Ratio which causes you to suffer sadness and
depression. The best strategy may be to replace that entire Rotten Ratio with
another one - that is, to turn away from that entire dimension of comparison. There are two related sets of tactics for changing the dimension: a) changing
your priorities about the various aspects of your life, and b) focusing your
attention on the good things in your life rather than the bad things. Both of
these sets of tactics are staples of folk wisdom. And they both call upon our
capacity to direct our attention toward some dimensions of our lives and away
from others.
COUNTING YOUR BLESSINGS
The device of "counting your blessings" can be used to change
your denominator, by changing the benchmark comparison that you make, as
discussed in Chapter 13. Much the same device is
used to shift to a more positive dimension for self- comparison. Instead of
brooding on lack of job success, you make yourself remember your family's good
health. When you lose your money in the stock market, you try to keep in mind
your wonderful children. Literature and folklore are full of stories of people whose brushes with
catastrophe turned their lives around by making them realize how well off they
were. And others have come to the same conclusion by simply reflecting on this
aspect of their lives, and they have overcome depression in that fashion. But
counting your blessings is not always enough by itself, as discussed in Chapter
13 on sweetening your denominator. And a great deal of effort often is
required to keep the blessings at the center of your attention - sometimes so
much effort that the cost seems greater than the benefit.
Counting your blessings can be like a curse when someone else tells you how
well off you really are, and that you have no cause to be depressed. Unless
you are able to accept the advice to count your blessings - and usually you
are not - then the suggestion that you do so simply makes you more miserable,
because it seems to show how little the other person understands your
situation and your feelings. The specifics of the blessings to be counted must
come from you.
SHIFTING YOUR PRIORITIES
Re-arranging your priorities is a second device for changing Mood Ratio
dimensions. A frequent and important example is the person whose actual
occupational achievements do not measure up to the person's aspirations, yet
is unwilling to scale down his or her aspirations so as to keep the
denominator from dominating the numerator. The person may then prevent
negative self- comparisons by focusing attention on another related ratio--
perhaps the person's courage in persisting against obstacles, or the person's
success in helping co-workers achieve important successes in their work.
Bert F. is a poet who has struggled for years to win readers and respect
for his poetry, with only occasional small success and never a really big
success. Whether it is his ideas or his unconventionally simple style that
keep him from succeeding, he does not know. He continues to believe that his
poetry is fine and exciting work, but the overwhelming lack of interest in his
work on the part of critics finally wore him down and left him depressed.
After months of deep sadness, however, he decided that he could at least give
himself high marks for courage and fortitude. And now when his mind turns to
the failure of his poems, he consciously directs his mind to his courage. This
lifts his spirits. There are also many physically-disabled persons who
struggle to learn and work against tough odds, and who keep up their spirits
with much the same device.
The non-depressive healthy-minded person usually is quite flexible about
choosing dimensions on which to compare himself or herself -- often, more
flexible than friends and associates would like. The man who doesn't support
his family because he seldom has a job tells himself and his family that he is
a good father because he spends so much of his time with his children. And the
university professor who does no research takes pride in his teaching, and
insists that teaching is more important than research for the purpose of
deciding salaries; the professor who does lots of good research but teaches
badly argues exactly the opposite. But depressive personalities usually do not
use this escape hatch. You can go beyond changing the dimensions you focus on, and actually shift
your life goals. Instead of aiming for financial success, you may decide to
concentrate on the number of people you help get a start in life. Instead of
aiming for popularity, you may aim at moral purity.
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