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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 7
And the Finger of the Day
The hand of the past pushes a depressive toward
depression. But it is usually the jab of a present event that triggers the pain
- say, loss of your job, or being jilted by your lover. It is that contemporary
happening that darkly dominates your thoughts when you are depressed. To get
undepressed you must reconstitute your current mode of thinking so you can get
rid of the black thoughts. Again - yes, the past causes you to be what you are
now. But the main avenue out of your present predicament is by reconstructing
the present rather than dealing with the past.
A crucial issue is whether you interpret
contemporary events accurately, or instead distort them in such manner as to
make them seem more negative than they "really" are. We are here
talking only of negatively-perceived current events. Positively-
perceived current events which are persistently misperceived as even more
positive than they "really" are constitute part of the manic phase of
a manic depressive cycle. (By the way, most depressives do not have extended
manic periods after their depression becomes chronic.)
Usually there is little question about whether
a current event has a negative or positive valence for a person. Almost all of
us, almost all the time, agree about whether such events as loss of a job,
death of a loved one, damage to health, financial distress, success in sports
or education, are positive or negative. Sometimes, of course, a person's
reaction is unexpected: You may conclude that loss of wealth or a job or a
competition really is beneficial, by relieving you of a hidden burden or
opening up new perspectives or changing your view of life. But such unusual
cases are not our topic.
In many cases the knowledge of your fate
reaches you along with knowledge of how others have done. And in fact, such
outcomes as an examination score or a competitive sports outcome only have
meaning relative to the performance of other people.
What Should Be Your Standards For
Self-Comparisons?
The choice of whom to compare yourself with is
one of the important ways that you structure your view of your life. Some
choices lead to frequent negative comparisons and consequent unhappiness. A
psychologically "normal" seven-year-old boy will compare his
performance in shooting a basketball to other seven- year-olds, or to his own
performance yesterday. If he is psychologically normal but physically not
talented, he will compare his performance today only to his performance of
yesterday, or to other boys who are not good at basketball. But some
seven-year-olds like Billy H., insist on comparing their performances to their
eleven-year-old brothers; inevitably they compare poorly. Such children will
bring unnecessary sadness and despondency upon themselves unless they change
their standards of comparison.
Whose performance should you compare yourself
to? People of the same age? Those with similar training? People with similar
physical attributes? With similar skills? There is no general answer,
obviously. We can say, however, that the "normal" person chooses a
standard for comparison in such manner that the standard does not cause very
much sadness. A sensible fifty- year-old jogger learns to compare his time for
the mile to others' times in his age and skill class, not to the world record
or even to the best fifty-year-old runner in the club. (If the standard is so
low that it provides no challenge, the normal person will move to a higher
standard that offers some uncertainty and excitement and pleasure in
achievement.) The normal person lowers too-high standards in the same manner
that a baby learns to hold on when starting to walk; the pain of doing
otherwise is an effective teacher. But some people do not adjust their
standards in a sensible flexible fashion, and hence they open themselves to
depression. To understand why this is so for a particular person, we must refer
to his psychological history.
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