Quiet Stranger said:
I know this is a serious topic so I'm gonna try to sound not too...I can't think of the word.
Anyways, I'm doing a research paper on depression and right now (In my research draft for the paper) I'm trying to describe depression itself. I'm not that great when it comes to describing something so I was wondering if anyone here knows a lot about depression or has had it (I have had it but it's been so long) It'd really help me and I can't get any help from anyone I know right now.
For me it was feeling that every effort you made to make other people happy resulted in rejection. A constant fog of self-doubt, constantly trying to grasp the light at the end of the tunnel, but falling further away with every action.
It's not that I wanted to be sad, or wasn't aware of how depressed I was - it just felt as though there was nothing in my life to get happy over, if that makes sense. So instead of the usual spectrum of "Happiness ---- Content/Neutral ---- Unhappy", while depressed it was just "Neutral ---- Unhappy" and oscillating between the two, falling deeper into unhappiness after life got worse.
Getting back to normality was a monstrous act, but it involved moving more towards "Neutral" until I was "Neutral" most of the time. Then, slowly, things started making me happy again. It's been about 7 years since I was depressed, and 5 years since I was mostly "Neutral." These days I call myself a passive optimist, since I'm "Content" most of the time and fill my life with a lot of laughter. I still get sad now and then, but it's quick dip and then back into Neutral or Happiness these days. Lovin' it.
If I were to sum up what "Depression" feels like, at least my experience described above (which isn't the same as the 5-Stages of Grief, which I also went through a few years back and involves a Depression component) in a single paragraph it would be:
It was like being on drugs while being in a dark dream that I knew was a dream, but couldn't control it. Your actions just
happen, like a dream, with that same erratic passage of time and "frosted glass" worldview. Like being prepped for surgery, right after they start the anesthetic - even though you might want to do something, the drugs prevent you from focusing on the most basic tasks, even talking or moving. It takes so much willpower and physical effort to do simple things. Then every time something goes wrong - even tiny things - the knowledge of something going wrong makes the dream-world just a little bit darker. All you want to do is get out; sleep, watch your favorite shows, play games, anything to try and make a bubble where you don't have to face a thousand tiny failures on a daily basis. You're not even happy sleeping or watching movies all day, but it brings you to 'Neutral' - and 'Neutral' is a lot better than 'Unhappy' in that state. You're aware there will be consequences, but thanks to an odd sense of time you start thinking there's always a little bit more time to stay inside your bubble.
If it comes crashing down, you have a crisis - after which things will change for the better or for the worse. Reality might never come crashing down, though, and you just continue the best you can while feeling like every action is lifting a heavy weight.