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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
Relationship of Self-Comparison
Analysis To Other Theory
Albert Ellis's
Rational-Emotive Therapy
cont.
Ellis operates primarily upon the
benchmark state, urging that the depressive not consider goals and
"ought" states as strongly binding "must"s. He teaches
people not to "musturbate" - - that is, to free oneself of
unnecessary must's and ought's. Again this is fine advice which helps a
depressive adjust his/her benchmark state, and the person's relationship to it,
in such fashion that one makes fewer and less-painful negative self-
comparisons. Coming to recognize that I did not have to accept the particular
goals and standards that I had previously accepted was the first of the key
events in my own victory over depression. But as with Beck's (and below,
Seligman's) therapeutic advice, Ellis's focuses on only one aspect of the
depression structure. As a system, therefore, his doctrine therefore restricts
the options available to the therapist and patient, omitting some other avenues
which may be just what a particular person needs.
Interpersonal
Therapy
Klerman, Weissman, et. al. focus
on the neg-comps that flow from interactions between the depressive and others
as a result of conflict and criticism. There can be no doubt that bad
relationships with other people damage a person's actual inter- personal
situation and and exacerbate other difficulties in the person's life. And it
therefore is undeniable that teaching a person better ways of relating to
others will improve a person's real situation and therefore the person's state
of mind. But the fact that people living alone often suffer depression makes
clear that not all depression flows from inter-personal relationships,
and therefore to focus only on inter-personal relationships to the
exclusion of other cognitive and behavioral elements is too limited.
Learned Helplessness
Seligman focuses on ways to reduce
the helplessness that almost all depression sufferers report, an element which
combines with neg-comps to produce sadness. And he expresses what other writers
say less explicitly about their own core ideas, that the theoretical element he
concentrates on is the main issue in depression. Talking about the many kinds
of depression classified by another writer, he says: "I will suggest that,
at the core, there is something unitary that all these depressions share"
(p. 78).
I agree that the sense of
helplessness is centrally involved in all depressions. But Seligman leaves the
impression that helplessness is the only invariable element, which I
believe is not the case; negative self-comparisons are at least as omni-
present. His therapeutic focus on reducing the sense of helplessness points him
away from adaptations of other parts of the system. (This may follow from his
experimental work with animals, which do not have the capacity to make such
adjustments in perceptions, judgments, goals, values, and so on, which are
central to human depression and which people can and do alter. That is, people
disturb themselves, as Ellis puts it, whereas animals do not.)
Self-comparisons Analysis and the
procedure it implies include learning not to feel helpless. But this
approach focuses on the helpless attitude in conjunction with the
neg-comps that are the direct cause of the sadness of depression, rather than
only on the helpless attitude, as Seligman does. Again, Self- comparisons
Analysis reconciles and integrates another important element of depression into
an over-arching theory.
Other Approaches
Viktor Frankl's Logotherapy offers
two modes of help. One mode is a philosophical attempt to help a person find
meaning in his or her life which will give the person a reason to live, and to
live with the pain of sadness and depression; this has much in common with
Values Treatment as discussed in Chapter 18, and is discussed there. Another
mode is the tactic Frankl calls "paradoxical intention". The
therapist offers the patient a radically different perspective on the patient's
situation, either the numerator or the denominator of the Mood Ratio, using
absurdity and humor; this is discussed in Chapter 10. Frankl has successfully
trained others in the use of his techniques, and he reviews studies showing
success. Both patients and therapists can surely find his tools useful in a
variety of thought contexts.
Substitutions and Combinations of
Methods
Even a simple procedure like that
of Coue' could achieve good results with some sufferers by operating on just
one aspect of the process in an uncomplicated fashion. Such a single view of a
depressive's thinking is just the opposite of the complex view of the process
in my explanatory diagram in Appendix A, which looks like spaghetti. But
complexity offers opportunities for many kinds of interventions and adjustments
that are obscured from the sufferer and from the therapist by a focus on a
single procedure.
Self-comparisons Analysis makes
clear that many sorts of influences, perhaps in combination with each other,
can produce persistent sadness. From this it follows that many sorts of
interventions may be of help to a depression sufferer. That is, different
causes--and there are many different causes--call for different
therapeutic interventions. Furthermore, there may be several sorts of
intervention that can help any particular depression.
In short, different strokes for
different folks. In contrast, however, each of the various schools of
psychological therapy--psychoanalytic, behavioral, religious, and so on--does
its own thing no matter what the cause of the person's depression, on the
implicit assumption that all depressions are caused in the same way.
Furthermore, each school of thought insists that its way is the only true
therapy despite the wise remark of Greist and Jefferson quoted earlier that
because "depression is almost certainly caused by different factors, there
is no single best treatment for depression" (1984, p. 72). As a practical
matter, the depression sufferer faces a baffling disarray of treatments, and
the choice is too often made simply on the basis of chance.
Self-comparisons Analysis points a
depression sufferer toward the most promising tactic to banish the particular
person's depression. It focuses first on understanding why a person makes
negative self-comparisons. Then it develops ways of preventing the neg-comps,
rather than focusing on merely understanding and reliving the past, or on
simply changing contemporary habits. With this understanding one can choose how
best to fight the depression and achieve happiness.
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