- Beyond Blue Forums
- Mental health conditions
- Depression
- It's like looking from the outside in and it is no...
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Mark Topic as New
- Mark Topic as Read
- Pin this Topic for Current User
- Follow
- Printer Friendly Page
It's like looking from the outside in and it is not you
- Mark as New
- Follow Post
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Post
- Mark as New
- Follow Post
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Post
Dear Nellie
Hello and glad to have you on board. I have just read this thread. Your description of yourself and your symptoms are so classically depression. I imagine everyone has been nodding their heads as they read your posts. Been there, done that, got the T shirt. Don't mean to be flippant, I'm actually trying to reassure you. You are normal, just going through a bad time. Yes, some folk appear to manage better than you when they have problems. It could also be that they are hiding behind a mask, just like you, and inside they are deeply unhappy and wondering how you cope so well.
The reality is that we all react in different ways. Sounds trite to say this I know, but it's true. So stop beating yourself up over something you did not inflict on yourself, scares the living daylights out of you and which other people do not understand.
We all know and understand how and why you feel as you do. We are the experts so believe in us. We are in the same boat and we will help you to learn to row. My word, what a lot of cliches I have used. Not usually my style but never mind. I hope you get the picture.
When your psych asked if you knew why you were feeling that way I'm sure she did not expect a literal answer. As you say, that's her job. I would think she was asking if you could think of anything of significance that had happened in your life recently. Sometimes we can pinpoint some happening that has made us upset. It's usually not the whole story but it's a start. If you cannot think of anything it is still OK.
You need to feel comfortable with the psych and talking in a more general manner can start the process. I would be more concerned if she started doing CBT the minute you walked into the room.
Please try to remind yourself that there is nothing wrong with you in a bad sense. You are unwell and have an illness, just like having the 'flu. Unfortunately it takes longer to get well when you are depressed. And it does take time. That has been my big problem. A huge lack of patience. Baby steps, my daughter tells me, and although I want to run, baby steps it has to be. You run the risk of missing some vital steps in the wellness process by rushing ahead. So just like a baby learning to walk, try hard but expect to fall over. Then pick yourself up and go again.
Imagine us all on the sidelines cheering you on and saying "There's a clever girl". And then we give you a huge virtual hug.
Keep posting as I would love to know how you go on.
LING
- Mark as New
- Follow Post
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Post
- Mark as New
- Follow Post
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Post
dear Nellie, this post is good and you know why because it's pretty well what happens to the majority of us, so we can call this chapter 2, because chapter 1 was all the anxiety building up to make an appointment.
I want to thank LING for her excellent reply back to you.
Let's try and sort out how you feel, we all go to our first session to see a strange person, but remember this person is trained and qualified to help us, why, because we are deeply depressed, and do we know why, normally no, however it could be by the loss of someone very close or related to us, so when they ask you 'what's concerning you, well first of all you're stunned and your mind feels as though it's being broken up into a million small pieces, so you become perplexed, but don't worry because the psych will know that this may happen, it's happened so many times over his/her time in counselling, so they just plod away asking you questions
So your trying to think of one reason, but is it only one, because one problem leads to another and then they all jump on board and you ask why, well can I give you an example which is an allegory.
If someone can't work out how to tie their shoes laces, they fall over and with that they their then tear their pants and then cut their head, but have a fear of stitches, so the same process happens with our depression.
I know that it's difficult not to think about what is making us depressed, but when you get stuck on one problem means that you can't expand your mind as to what else is troubling you.L Geoff. x
- Mark as New
- Follow Post
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Post
Dear Nellie
I used to feel exactly the same way about CBT. I was going to a psychiatrist then and he had sheets of paper with all sorts of headings and I had not a clue what I was supposed to do or say. He was hopeless at explanations.
Times passes and many years later I find myself back in the depression and receiving the services of a psychologist. He suggested CBT and I freaked. Not again! All that anguish because I could not understand the process, didn't believe it would work, whatever 'it' was. So I would not do it. Fortunately for me the psych persevered and I agreed to try.
Well, what a difference. The simplest of explanations and no worksheets with incomprehensible headings and an analogy that made sense. Suddenly I understood what it was about and how to do it.
So let me give you his explanation. I have given this to others who have found it useful. Imagine a huge plain filled with grasses. Herds of animals graze patches of grass and each herd sticks to its own area. Every night your herd wanders along the path it has trodden down to get to the water. And every night the lions lie in wait for the herd because they know the path the herd will take.
Now imagine your brain as the grassland and your thoughts as the herd. You wander down the same old path, thinking the same negative thoughts and every night the thought lions are waiting to pounce, to rip and tear at you.
To fool them you must take a different path. This is what CBT is about, learning to change your usual or 'normal' thoughts. e.g. if I do this then the end result will be xyz. If I change the way I think the end result could be different. If I work out what I want the end result to be I need to change my usual pattern of thinking and go down a different path, even if it means trampling a new path through the untrodden grass. What other ways of thinking about a particular event can I imagine? Your psych should be able to help you here.
The lions no longer have their prey, you start to manage without the scars and find a more realistic way to live your life.
I do hope this makes sense to you. It will take time and effort, but as they say in the ads, it will happen.
Let us know how you go.
LING
- Mark as New
- Follow Post
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Post
LING has brought up a really good point there, and that is that she went to one psychologist she didn't click with, then went to someone different who made all the difference in treatment even though they were using the same approach.
By all means persevere with your psych for a while, but if you feel like you just aren't making progress it may be that you need someone different. It's not that there's anything fundamentally wrong with either you or her that is not making it work - she is after all just a person, and sometimes we simply don't connect well with some people. Sounds like you're in a fairly small place so I don't know if there are many alternatives - maybe going to the next big town might be needed? I don't know, but please don't assume that if things don't progress that it's your fault. There are always alternatives, just like with antidepressants. Often we have to try a few different ones before finding one that works for us.
- Mark as New
- Follow Post
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Post
- Mark as New
- Follow Post
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Post
- Mark as New
- Follow Post
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Post
- Mark as New
- Follow Post
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Post
Dear Nellie
Welcome back to the forum. I am sorry your psychologist did not work out. It was most unkind of her to suggest you had not been working hard enough. No matter how much or how little you had accomplished you were trying hard and had in fact accomplished something. That is a monumental effort when you consider where you were coming from. It probably good you stopped seeing her.
Have found another psychologist yet? All psychs are not alike and as someone mentioned above, often it is just a personality clash or lack of communication. Please consider going to someone else and trying again. CBT may or may not be the thing that helps you. But there are other ways of helping you along and a good psych will try all sorts of approaches. One size does not fit all.
Being in tears at the start of a holiday is not a good start. I do hope your mood lifts before you go. Do you often feel this way before going on holiday? I am never good at leaving my home for more than one or two days. I get panicky being somewhere new so it takes great effort to go and make myself stay. I do adjust, especially if I am with someone I know. But it's not usually a good look.
So don't try to analyse this. Take a few deep breaths and think of something pleasant.
I hope to hear from you when you return.
Regards
Mary
- Mark as New
- Follow Post
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Post