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Yesterday I saw both my therapist and my doctor, and we all agreed this winter is dragging on and on and on. Dr. Smith told me that an unprecedented number of her patients had relapsed in late February. I keep on reminding myself that Daylight Savings is just a few days away … whether Phil the Groundhog admits that or not. Like many depressives, I’m feeling the pull of the Dark Side, so I thought I’d publish my most popular Beyond Blue post: the original 12 depression busters. I needed to read them again and figured you did too. You can get to the gallery version by clicking here.
My therapist helped me to build a personalized “toolbox”: a list of a dozen depression busters to direct me toward mental health, and an emergency lifeline in case I get lost along the way. I consult these 12 techniques when I panic, when I get pulled into addictive behaviors, and as armor in my ongoing war against negative thoughts. Here they are: twelve strategies to take us all to the promised land of recovery from depression.
1. Get Some Buddies
It works for Girl Scouts, depressives, and addicts of all kinds. I remember having to wake up my buddy to go pee in the middle of the night at Girl Scout camp. That was right before she rolled off her cot, out of the tent and down the hill, almost into the creek.
Our job as buddies is to help each other not roll out of the tent and into the stream, and to keep each other safe during midnight bathroom runs. My buddies are the six numbers programmed into my cell phone, the voices that remind me sometimes as many as five times a day: “It will get better.”
2. Read Away the Craving
Books can be buddies too! And when you are afraid of imposing on others like I am, they serve as wonderful reminders to stay on course. When I’m in a weak spot, especially with regard to addictive temptations, I place a book next to my addiction object: the Big Book (the Bible) goes next to the liquor cabinet; some 12-step pamphlet gets clipped to the freezer (home to frozen Kit Kats, Twix, and dark chocolate Hershey bars); and I’ll get out Melody Beattie before e-mailing an apology to someone who just screwed me over.
3. Be Accountable to Someone
In the professional world, what is the strongest motivator for peak performance? The annual review (or notification of the pink slip). Twelve-step groups use this method–called accountability–to keep people sober and on the recovery wagon. Everyone has a sponsor, a mentor to teach them the program, to guide them toward physical, mental, and spiritual health.
Today several people together serve as my emotional “sponsor,” keeping me accountable for my actions: Mike (my writing mentor), my therapist, my doctor, Fr. Dave, Deacon Moore, Eric, and my mom. Having these folks around to divulge my misdeeds to is like confession–it keeps the list of sins from getting too long.
4. Predict Your Weak Spots
When I quit smoking, it was helpful to identify the danger zones–those times I most enjoying firing up lung rockets: in the morning with my java, in the afternoon with my java, in the car (if you’ve been my passenger you know why), and in the evening with my java and a Twix bar.
I jotted these times down in my “dysfunction journal” with suggestions of activities to replace the smokes: In the morning I began eating eggs and grapefruit, which don’t blend well with cigs. I bought a tape to listen to in the car. An afternoon walk replaced the 3:00 smoke break. And I tried to read at night, which didn’t happen (eating chocolate is more soothing).
5. Distract Yourself
Any addict would benefit from a long list of “distractions,” activities than can take her mind off of a cig, a glass of Merlot, or a suicidal plot (during a severe depression). Some good ones: crossword puzzles, novels, Sudoku, e-mails, reading Beyond Blue (a must!); walking the dog (pets are wonderful “buddies” and can improve mental health), card games, movies, “American Idol” (as long as you don’t make fun of the contestants…bad for your depression, as it attracts bad karma); sports, de-cluttering the house (cleaning out a drawer, a file, or the garage…or just stuffing it with more stuff); crafts; gardening (even pulling weeds, which you can visualize as the marketing director that you hate working with); exercise; nature (just sitting by the water); and music (even Yanni works, but I’d go classical).
6. Sweat
Working out is technically an addiction for me (according to some lame article I read), and I guess I do have to be careful with it since I have a history of an eating disorder (who doesn’t?). But there is depression buster as effective for me than exercise. An aerobic workout not only provides an antidepressant effect, but you look pretty stupid lighting up after a run (trust me, I used to do it all the time and the stares weren’t friendly) or pounding a few beers before the gym. I don’t know if it’s the endorphins or what, but I just think–even pray–much better and feel better with sweat dripping down my face.
7. Start a Project
Here’s a valuable tip I learned in the psych ward–the fastest way to get out of your head is to put it in a new project–compiling a family album, knitting a blanket, coaching Little League, heading a civic association, planning an Earth Day festival, auditioning for the local theatre, taking a course at the community college.
I went to Michael’s (the arts and crafts store) and bought 20 different kinds of candles to place around the house, five picture boxes for all the loose photos I have bagged underneath the piano, and two dozen frames. Two years later, all of it is still there, bagged and stored in the garage.
However, I also signed up for a tennis class, because I’m thinking ahead and when the kids go off to college, Eric and I will need another pastime in addition to reading about our kids on Facebook.
8. Keep a Record
One definition of suffering is doing the same thing over and over again, each time expecting different results. It’s so easy to see this pattern in others: “Katherine, for God’s sake, Barbie doesn’t fit down in the drain (it’s not a water slide)” or the alcoholic who swears she will be able to control her drinking once she finds the right job. But I can be so blind to my own attempts at disguising self-destructive behavior in a web of lies and rationalizations.
That’s why, when I’m in enough pain, I write everything down–so I can read for myself exactly how I felt after I had lunch with the person who likes to beat me up as a hobby, or after eight weeks of a Marlboro binge, or after two weeks on a Hershey-Starbucks diet. Maybe it’s the journalist in me, but the case for breaking a certain addiction, or stopping a behavior contributing to depression, is much stronger once you can read the evidence provided from the past.
9. Be the Expert
The quickest way you learn material is by being forced to teach it. I adamantly believe that you have to fake it ’til you make it. And I always feel less depressed after I have helped someone who is struggling with sadness. It’s the twelfth step of the twelve-step program, and a cornerstone of recovery. Give and you shall receive. The best thing I can do for my brain is to find a person in greater pain than myself and to offer her my hand. If she takes it, I’m inspired to stand strong, so I can pull her out of her funk. And in that process, I am often pulled out of mine.
10. Grab Your Security Item
Everyone needs a blankie. Okay, not everyone. Mentally ill recovering addicts like myself need a blankie, a security object to hold when they get scared or turned around. Mine is a medal of St. Therese that I carry in my purse or in pocket. I’m a bit of a scrupulous, superstitious Catholic (I fit the religious OCD profile), but my medal (and St. Therese herself) give me consolation, so she’s staying in my pocket or purse. She reminds me that the most important things are sometimes invisible to the eye: like faith, hope, and love. When I doubt all goodness in the world–and accuse God of a bad creation job–I simply close my eyes and squeeze the medal.
11. Get on Your Knees
Some holy folks would put this first, not second to last, and it would be followed by instructions on how to pray the rosary or say the Stations of the Cross. But I think that the true addict or depressive need only utter a variation of these two simple prayers: “Help!” and “Take the bloody thing from me, now!”
12. Do Nothing
If you do nada, that means you’re not getting worse, and that is perfectly acceptable most days. After all, tomorrow is another day.
To read more Beyond Blue, go to http://blog.beliefnet.com/beyond_blue, and to get to Group Beyond Blue, a support group at Beliefnet Community, click here.
To subscribe to “Beyond Blue” click here.
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posted March 5, 2009 at 5:03 pm
“The best thing I can do for my brain is to find a person in greater pain than myself and to offer her my hand.”
This always works for me.
I don’t have any emergency people to call, but reading devotional material, Bible verses that encourage, etc. helps us get out of ourselves.
I’ve been following several children on CaringBridge.org. It has given me perspective and made me extra Thankful for the Blessings we do have. Of course, my prayer list is getting longer, but it’s the best Gift we can give anyone.
You continue to inspire me and I think you are exceptionally brave to put yourself and your story on the internet.
posted March 5, 2009 at 7:17 pm
Therese, some form of regular exercise is a positive addiction, in moderation, of course. A long time ago I read a book called “Positive Addictions” by William Glasser, if I remember correctly. It seems that people who don’t do their regular workout get cranky, just like people who drop a bad addiction, but obviously the result of better health with exercise is a plus, in the end.
posted March 5, 2009 at 9:57 pm
Therse thanks for the reminder.i think we all need someone to give us a boost every now and then.
posted March 6, 2009 at 7:58 am
I’d like to mention how good it feels to tell someone how much they mean to you when you are feeling down. At times, I find myself driven to let someone know they have changed my life or how much what they do means to me.
The way it plays out for me is that I will get the strongest urge to write to someone very special just to let them know I am thinking about them. It can hit me out of the blue. sometimes, I find, from the reply, that that message came at the critical time.
Now, I keep myself open to those times and act on them. When I do that, I feel a lot better myself because I let someone know they matter to mean and the rest of world.
posted March 6, 2009 at 9:46 am
For me, it seems like this Winter has been e-n-d-l-e-s-s. I just couldn’t seem to MOVE!
My continuous pattern 5 days a week for the last 3 months has been:
Go to work. Sit at my desk.
Go home. Lay in my bed.
The only rare reprieve has come on a sunny Saturday or Sunday. I can get outside. I can BREATHE fresh air. That’s what makes all the difference for me: Light and being able to breathe fresh air.
Thank GOD Day Light Savings Time starts tomorrow.
Deb
posted March 8, 2009 at 5:28 pm
Thanks for posting this! My biggest overcomer for depression blues is to walk, walk and walk even more!
posted March 9, 2009 at 8:50 am
Does any one take L-Tryptophan. It is a natural vitiman that you can get in the health store. I started taking 1 500 mg along with my 7mg of anti-depressent and so far i feel a big difference.
posted March 12, 2009 at 1:55 pm
I enjoy laying in bed all day until Judge Judy is over and then cooking dinner. After that, I crawl back into bed until I am sleepy enough to nod off and wait until another assult on the senses I call life. Wish I had the courage to end it all but as long as there’s Mother Angelica, I doubt I ever will. Please, summer can’t come fast enough.