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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
Chapter 8
cont.
William James put the matter
beautifully:
We have the paradox of a man shamed to
death because he is only the second pugilist or the second oarsman in the
world. That he is able to beat the whole population of the globe minus one is
nothing; he has 'pitted' himself to beat that one; and as long as he doesn't do
that nothing else counts. He is to his own regard as if he were not, indeed he
is not. Yonder puny fellow, however, whom every one can beat, suffers no
chagrin about it, for he has long ago abandoned the attempt to 'carry that
line,' as the merchants say, of self at all. With no attempt there can be no
failure; with no failure, no humiliation. So our self-feeling in this world
depends entirely on what we back ourselves to be and do.... To give up
pretensions is as blessed a relief as to get them gratified; and where
disappointment is incessant sand the struggle unending, this is what men will
always do. The history of evangelical theology, with its conviction of sin, its
self-despair, and its abandonment of salvation by works, is the deepest of
possible examples, but we meet others in every walk of life. There is the
strangest lightness about the heart when one's nothingness in a particular line
is once accepted in good faith. All is not bitter- ness in the lot of
the lover sent away by the final inexorable 'No.'...How pleasant is the day
when we give up striving to be young,--or slender! Thank God! we say,
those illusions are gone. Everything added to the Self is a burden as
well as a pride. A certain man who lost every penny during our civil war went
and actually rolled in the dust, saying he had not felt so free and happy since
he was born.(2)
The Grant Study followed the adaptation of men
to the vicissitudes of life for several decades after they began college, the
first group starting in the 1930s. Those who seemed to have adapted well to
their life circumstances frequently used a device the investigators called
"suppression --a mature mechanism that includes looking for silver
linings, minimizing acknowledged discomfort, keeping a stiff upper lip, and
deliberately postponing, but not avoiding, conscious impulse or
conflict" (3). This is from the same cut of cloth as the count-
your-blessings device.
Choosing "Empty Glass" Dimensions
Some people, however, are less flexible in
their choice of dimensions on which to compare themselves; they cannot choose
at will the best "line" for them to carry. For some people this is a
matter of basic values; they will not praise taillessness simply because it is
psychologically convenient to do so. Some people get stuck with dimensions that
cause them sadness because of destructive values implanted during childhood,
for example, the value that one should get maximum formal education, or that
one should not think bad thoughts. Other people purposely focus only on
dimensions which make them look bad in their self- comparisons; all of us have
met people who live exemplary lives in all apparent respects but flay
themselves with whips day and night because they think they don't do enough for
the community or for their aged parents or relatives.
Sometimes I find myself thinking that tonight's
dinner engagement, which I can find a way to break, probably will be a big drag
at which I'll undoubtedly make a fool of myself, instead of focusing on next
week's dinner engagement which will be lots of fun and where I will sound funny
and wise. Or, I will focus on next week's lunch that will undoubtedly be a bore
instead of today's lunch which will surely be delightful. With a little effort,
however, I can switch my mind to the better event of each pair. And if you do
that often enough, you build a habit of focusing on the full glass instead of
the empty one.
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