Good Mood:
The New Psychology
of Overcoming Depression
Chapter 1
cont.
Summary
The term "depression" means a
continued state of mind with these central characteristics: (1) You are sad or
"blue." (2) You have a low regard for yourself. In addition, (3) a
sense of being helpless and hopeless is an integral part of the depression
process.
This mechanism causes the sadness in
depression: Whenever you think about yourself in a judgmental fashion, your
thought takes the form of a comparison between a) the state you think you are
in (including your skills and capacities) and b) some other hypothetical
"benchmark" state of affairs. The benchmark situation may be the
state you think you ought to be in, or the state you formerly were in, or the
state you expected or hoped to be in, or the state you aspire to achieve, or
the state someone else told you you must achieve. This comparison between
actual and hypothetical states makes you feel bad if the state in which you
think you are in is less positive than the state you compare yourself to. And
the bad mood will become a sad mood rather than an angry or determined mood if
you also feel helpless to improve your actual state of affairs or to change
your benchmark.
If you understand and manipulate the mechanism
properly, you can get rid of the sadness. The depression mechanism does not by
itself produce or explain low self-regard. But if you operate the mechanism
appropriately, you are likely to get rid of the low self-regard, too, and at
the least you will not be preoccupied with it and ravaged by it.
We can write the comparison formally as a Mood
Ratio:
Mood=(Perceived__state__of__oneself)
(Hypothetical benchmark state) If the
numerator (perceived state of oneself) in the Mood Ratio is low compared to the
denominator (hypothetical benchmark state) --a situation which I'll call a
Rotten Ratio--your mood will be bad. If on the contrary the numerator is high
compared to the denominator--a state which I'll call a Rosy Ratio--your mood
will be good. If your Mood Ratio is Rotten and you feel helpless to change it,
you will feel sad. Eventually you will be depressed if a Rotten Ratio and a
helpless attitude continue to dominate your thinking. This precise formulation
constitutes a new theoretical understanding of depression.
The comparison you make at a given moment may
concern any one of many possible personal characteristics--your occupational
success, your personal relationships, your state of health, or your morality,
for just a few examples. Or you may compare yourself on several different
characteristics from time to time.
If the bulk of your self-comparison thoughts
are negative over a sustained period of time, and you feel helpless to change
them, you will be depressed.
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