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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 14
cont.
"A very lovely, and sometimes even practical, thought. But didn't you
tell me that you tried to help him and he refused even to acknowledge that he
had disturbances? And didn't you say that he strongly opposed your going for
any kind of therapy during your marriage, let alone his going for help,
too?" "Yes, he did. The mere mention of the word psychologist or
marriage counselor sent him into a fit of temper. He'd never think of going of
even letting me go for help." "The main thing you could have done, then, would have involved playing
psychotherapist to him, and in your state, you'd hardly have proved effective
at that. Why beat yourself down? You made a mistake in marrying. You did your
best to do something to rectify it after marriage. You got blocked, mainly by
your husband, but partly by your own feelings of severe upset, on both counts.
So you finally got out of the marriage, as almost any reasonably sane person
would have done. Now what crime have you committed? Why do you insist on
blaming yourself? You think, erroneously, your unhappy situation makes you
miserable. But does the situation--or what you keep telling yourself about
this situation?" "I begin to see your point. Although my marital situation never has felt good, you seem to say that I don't have to give
myself such a hard time about it. Quite a point of view you have there!" "Yes, I like it myself--and often use it in my own life. But now if we
can only help you to make it your point of view, not because I hold it but
because you figure out that it really will work better for you, not even a
poor marriage and an as yet difficult divorce situation will faze you. In
fact, if I can really help you to adopt this viewpoint, I can't imagine
anything that will ever bother you too much." "You really mean that,
don't you?" "Mean it, hell--I believe it!" And so, to some extent, did this young divorcee, after another few months
of rational-emotive therapy. Whereas she previously kept telling herself how
far from ideally and how horribly she behaved for not achieving this ideal,
she now began to substitute problem-solving, internalized sentences for her
old self-beatings. In one of her last conferences with me, she said: "You
know, I looked into the mirror yesterday morning and said to myself,
'Geraldine, you behave like a happy, fairly bright, increasingly mature,
growingly efficient kid. I keep getting mighty fond of you.' And then I
laughed with real joy."
"Fine," I said. "But don't lead yourself up the path of
rating you, Geraldine, highly because you act so much better. For then you
will have to rate yourself lowly, once again, if and when you act worse. Try
to stick to: 'I like behaving so much better' rather than 'I like me for doing
this good behavior!" "Yes, I see what you mean," she replied.
"I feel glad you warned me about that. Rating myself I unfortunately do
most easily. But I'll fight it!" This client discovered that her feelings
did not derive from her unsuccessful marriage or her divorce but from her
evaluations of herself in regard to these "failures." When she
changed the kinds of thoughts (or internalized sentences) she fed herself, her
emotions changed from depression and despair to sorrow and regret--and these
appropriate negative feelings helped motivate her to change the conditions
of her life. Not all clients, like Geraldine, see so quickly that they cause
their own depressed feelings about divorce and decide to accept themselves.
Some- times they may require months or years of therapy before they come to
this decision. But persistence, on their and their therapist's part, certainly
helps!"2 In summary, shifting the dimensions on which you evaluate yourself can be a
potent weapon against depression. And even if it is not enough by itself, it
is a valuable complement to other tactics. Practical Steps For Keeping Joyful Dimensions in Your MindNow that you know what to do, you need to know how to do it. And as anyone
knows who has tried to count blessings when feeling low, it is not easy to
keep your mind from drifting away from a rosy dimension to a rotten dimension.
Practical tips should therefore be welcome. Let's review how the "I never
do anything right" woman in Chapter 10 changed her dimensions. Upon
reflection and argument with herself, she recognized that timeliness at
meetings is not the most important dimension of her life, or even an important
dimension, because she almost never goes to meetings. And in general she does
things well. So instead she decided to focus on the dimension of her overall
work performance, for which her firm had given her special awards in two of
the last three years. Table 14-1 | Uninvited thought | Activating Event | Self-Comparison | Analysis | Response
| | "I never do anything right" | Late for a meeting | I do fewer things right than do most people | Dimension: Is your timliness at meetings an important aspect of your life? | Of course not | | | | Even if this meeting was important, am I a rotten person for missing part of it? | By no means! |
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