|






Mental Health
Recovery
Site Map
Home
About Me
Articles
Depression Quiz
Crisis Plan
Post-Crisis Plan
Depression Recovery Board
Newsletter
Publications
back to
depression community
send this page to a friend
|
|
 |
Getting Well From Depression
and Manic Depression
continued
Through this effort I discovered that, even
though I had been hospitalized at several major medical centers, no one had
bothered to give me a complete
thyroid
test. I found that I had severe hypothyroidism (hypothyroidism causes depression) which needed to be
treated. Once that treatment began, my mind really began to clear and my
progress was remarkable.
I got connected with the national movement of
psychiatric survivors. I began attending meetings and conferences with other
people whose journeys had been similar to mine. I felt validated and affirmed.
I began teaching in earnest the skills I was learning through my study to
others who could benefit like I was.
With the help of several excellent counselors,
co-counseling and numerous self help resources, I undertook the task of getting
to know myself and my symptoms in a successful attempt to discover early
warning signs of impending moodswings and, in effect, cut
them off at the pass. At first, I developed detailed daily charts to assist me
in this process. As I got to know myself better, I found that I didn't need to
use the charts anymore.
Now, as I notice early warning signs I
alleviate them with a variety of simple, safe, inexpensive or free, effective
self help techniques including stress reduction and relaxation techniques,
talking to a supporter, peer counseling, doing activities that I enjoy and that
I know make me feel better, exercise, improving my diet, and simplifying my
life.
I have discovered my
diet really affects
the way I feel. If I overload on junk food, sugar and caffeine, I soon find
myself feeling lousy. If I focus my diet on high complex carbohydrates (six
servings of grains and five servings of veggies a day) I feel great. I have
gotten in the habit of keeping a variety of easy to fix healthy foods on hand
so I won't succumb to the junk food trap when I don't feel like cooking.
I try to get outside for a walk every day. This
gives me two things-exercise which always makes me feel better, and light
through the eyes which I have found also helps. Light has been a big issue for
me. As the days get shorter and darker in the fall, my winter depression begins
to set in. I have virtually eliminated these
winter depressions by getting
outside for at least half and hour a day, and by supplementing my light for two
hours in the morning with a light
box.
I got rid of my electric blanket and
substituted a warm comforter after discovering the hazardous effects of being
wrapped up in an electromagnetic field all night. I noticed another positive
upswing in my overall wellness after making this change.
I finally realized that I create my thoughts
and I can change them. I have worked hard at changing old negative thought
patterns that increase depression to new, positive ones. I think I will always
be doing this work. For example, when my mother was depressed, she would often repeat, over and
over, thousands of times a day, "I want to die". When I got
depressed, I started doing the same thing. The more I said "I want to
die", the more suicidal I became. I finally realized that if I said
instead, "I choose to live" I felt much better and the suicidal
ideation decreased.
Another thought that plagued me was "I
have never accomplished anything". I decided to take a different approach.
I decided I had accomplished a great deal. For a while I became quite fanatical
about making long lists of things I had accomplished. Everything from getting
up in the morning and completing kindergarten to two masters degrees and
raising five kids was on the lists. After a while, I realized I didn't have to
make these lists anymore, that this
negative thought was no longer a factor in my life.
top |
continued | pages 1
2 3 4
5 | site map
home | depression
recovery board | send page to a
friend
HealthyPlace.com
Depression Center Links
home ~ site map
|
 |
|
advertisement |