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Teen depression and types of depression

February 22, 2016 By Kay Walker

There are six common types of major depression and they are listed with symptoms below. It’s important to familiarize yourself with the different types so you can understand if your teen is dealing with one of them.

It’s also important you understand that teen depression has some distinctive features, here they are:

Teen depression symptoms

In additional to the regular symptoms of depression, a teen with depression may exhibit:

  • Irritability
  • Self harm
  • Negative emotions expressed in art
  • Skipping school or bad grades
  • Lack of socialization with other teens or lack of drive to be social
  • Abusing substances
  • Complaining about physical symptoms like headaches or stomach ache
  • Highly sensitive to criticism

Types of major depression

Major depressive disorder, also referred to as unipolar depression

  • Interferes with ability to function
  • Affects all areas of life – relationships, work, sleep eating
  • Episodes may occur several times in a person’s life
  • Slowed movements, speech and thinking, speak less, some stop speaking
  • Have recurring thoughts about their own death – range from thinking about it to seriously considering

Manic-depressive disorders, more commonly known as bipolar disorder

  • Serious mental illness involving episodes of depression that alternate with mania. Mania is feelings or greatness and elation, sudden energy, and feeling uncontrollable power. Sometimes depression and mania occur simultaneously shifting from one to the other rapidly.

Dysthymic disorder

  • Milder form of depression that lasts longer.
  • Feeling of melancholy
  • Unable to get really excited about life
  • Can still function but feel gloomy

Seasonal Affective disorder

  • Often brought on in the winter months, though it can occur as a reverse
  • Could be a result of disruption of circadian rhythm or lack of Vitamin D
  • Full spectrum lights can help
  • Less that 2% of people in Florida have SAD, while 10% of people in New Hampshire do

Psychotic depression

  • 15% of depressed people experience delusions or hallucinations
  • Often need to be hospitalized to prevent themselves from suicide

Postpartum depression

  • 4 weeks – year after a woman gives birth
  • Most women experience baby blues, postpartum is far more severe
  • May involve delusions or hurting themselves or their newborn
  • Many women feel a great amount of guilt
  • 10% of new mothers

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: depression, types

Video 1 of 3: How to create a personal depression recovery action plan

February 19, 2016 By Andy Walker

In Video 1 of 3 you’ll learn about the three variables that lead to depression and how a person can get depression from a breakdown in one, two or all three of the variables. The video is intended to help you understand depression in a new and simple way. It will also help you start to identify which variables are out of sync for you and what’s at the source of your symptoms. Knowing this is the first step in identifying the steps you need to take to get better as soon as possible.
Follow along with the video by using your Depression Recovery Map. Don’t have a copy yet? Download it here.

Watch VIDEO 2 Now >>

Filed Under: Video Tagged With: action, create, depression, personal, recovery, video

How to resolve an upset with someone you love

January 17, 2016 By Kay Walker

How to easily resolve an upset with someone you love
Steps on how to easily resolve an upset with someone you love

 

Learn how to easily resolve an upset with someone you love. Here are the steps to reconciliation after a disagreement or misunderstanding that has resulted in anger or broken an otherwise loving or lose relationship with family or a good friend.

NOTE: While this exercise was written for is for depression fighters and their caregivers, it can work for anyone.

1) First, take responsibility for not “getting” them, even if you think you have. They don’t think you have, so you haven’t in their eyes. Let them be right.
 
2) Listen to what they have to say about the situation and look at where you can improve how you are supporting them. Ask them where you’ve failed to do this. And where you have succeeded. Have a frank conversation.
 
3) Repeat what they ask for back to them. Use their words so they know they have been heard. (This is critical.) If they say: “I need you to stop nagging me.” Say “Ok I understand – I need to stop nagging you. And I will.”  Not: “I will stop bugging you to get off the couch.” Use the exact words they use. Only then will they know they have been heard by you. 
 
4) Tell them you want to work with them as a team – together, to get them well. Ask for their buy in. If this isn’t a depressed person, find out what they are struggling with and offer to be a teammate on that.
 
5) Tell them you’ll do whatever it takes to get them well. Ask for a commitment from them to get well, and do what it takes.
 
6) Finally, tell them you are out to become an expert in depression (or their problem issue) because knowledge is your secret weapon in this fight. You can’t win unless you know the enemy extremely well.  

Filed Under: Life and Relationships Tagged With: conflict resolution, depression, DZhomepage, family, how-to, upset

Depression Self Help: 9 steps you can take today

November 2, 2015 By Andy Walker

depression self help
Depression Self Help: 9 steps you can take today

If you think you may be suffering from depression then there is a series of action you need to take to feel better and prevent yourself from getting worse. Go easy on yourself and engage in self care. Get sleep. Eat well. Take a bath. Look after yourself. Many cases of depression come from people becoming overworked or ignoring their well being. Start caring for yourself so you an be well.

  1. Go see the doctor. Get a firm diagnosis and determine what the cause is. Is it related to another condition? Is it because of a neurochemical issue (usually genetic) or a lifestyle issue. Are you suffering because of you life circumstance? Or are you bipolar?
  2. If needed get a second opinion.
  3. Start your medication, if prescribed.
  4. Share what you are deal with with your boss. And take sick leave if needed. You will likely need a doctors note.
  5. Review your exercise and nutrition routines. Even a brisk walk each day is going to help. Healthy healthy brain foods such as green vegetables, low fat proteins, and health grains. See a dietician if you feed you need help.
  6. Ask a friend or family member to be your health advocate. People who are support with everyday chores and who have companionship and even some one to go to the doctor with improve faster than those that don’t.
  7. Seek alternative ways to feel happier. There are exercises and therapies you can use to improve your mood. See them out. There are some recommended exercises here.
  8. Buy and read the book Feel Better Now and take the included 7 days to feel better online course. INFO HERE
  9. Ask an Expert on this site for free if you have questions

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: depression, self help

How do I stop negative thoughts?

July 24, 2015 By Kay Walker

Trying to explain major depression to someone who has never truly experienced is close to impossible. I liken it to a woman explaining to a man what it feels like to give birth.  Or, for a woman to think about what it’s like to give birth before they actually do it.  It’s very difficult to describe the physical experience without going through it firsthand.How do I stop negative thoughts

When an individual is struggling with a major depression they have negative thoughts that they can’t turn off. The thoughts never stop and the affect how that person experiences the world. So in relation they’ll take actions to deal with the thoughts by trying to escape them or trying to feel pleasure. Common actions are: Sleeping, substance abuse, self-harm, overeating.

To someone who has never experienced depression you may see these actions as laziness or reckless behavior. They are simply coping mechanisms, and quite often they are used to help the person get through their day and try to push away the pervasive negative thoughts.

This article will help you understand what’s going on inside the body of a depressed person and how it affects their thoughts and their life experience.

How do I stop negative thoughts?

Why is it difficult to think positively when a person is dealing with depression?

Major depression is caused by a brain chemical imbalance, so at the physiological level it is impossible for an individual who is suffering to think positively. That is, until they treat the brain chemical issue.

It’s easy to understand this if you think about how your body functions. Your brain is your control center, which allows you to produce thoughts, to experience the world, and to interact with the world using your motor skills. When a system in your brain malfunctions (there are a number of reasons why this happens), then it can alter the way you perceive the world.

There are a number of key brain regions and neurochemicals that are connected to mood. A person with major depression has a malfunction in the communication pathways that allow them to experience pleasure. External input from your senses is still processed, but the functions for positive mood are essentially “turned off”. Therefore a person with depression can only experience their environment as negative.

There is no specific formula that leads to major depression because there are many different causes:

Brain regions. There are brain regions connected to mood that when damaged or impacted by disease, accidents or hormonal changes, can malfunction. Common regions that can malfunction include: Amygdala, Thalamus, Ventromedial cortex, Hippocampus

Brain chemicals. There are brain chemicals connected to mood that can be affected by poor health choices related to diet, drug use, hormonal shifts, disease and damage to the physical brain. Common ones are: Serotonin, Dopamine, Norepinephrine, Acetylcholine, Glutamate, Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA).

Genetics. Scientists suspect that genetics may play a role in mood. There have been many research studies, although this link is not well understood.

Neuroplasticity. The way you learn to think about situations and deal with emotions also plays a role in mood. Through a process known as neuroplasticity, your brain’s anatomy alters. It creates and prunes communication pathways as you experience the world. Brain patterns are reinforced as you repeat behaviors. That includes negative behavior patterns. As these are reinforced, they become automatic, and can result in depression.

What you can do to interrupt negative thinking:

  1. Be aware. Understand that thoughts are not reality. Life is experienced through perception, which is made up of what we learn and believe. It’s subjective. So what seems true or real for one person is not for another. Understanding that your thoughts are not a reflection of reality, can give you the ability to disrupt negative thinking and choose not to respond to them. Lack of awareness of your thoughts can result in automatic actions. So if you think you are a “loser” and believe that you are one, then you will act like one. If you are aware of this thought however, you can acknowledge the thought as just a thought, then take different actions.
  1. Diversion. When negative thoughts cycle around in your head sometimes the best thing to do is to divert those thoughts by distracting yourself. Here are some activities:
  • Visual art activities that are very basic, such as painting ceramics, creating an abstract painting
  • Gardening
  • Using an guided audio meditation or visualization exercise to help you relax
  • Listening to music through earphones
  • Watching television or a movie
  • Spending time with or talking to someone you love
  • Spending time with animals
  • Physical activities
  1. Learn how to use affirmations. These are positive statements that you say to yourself in your head or out loud that help you separate what is real from what is not. Even using the affirmation “these negative thoughts are not real, they don’t mean anything” can stop you from being affected by the negative thoughts.

Why learning objective thinking skills is important:

When a depressed person get treated for the brain chemical issue that’s causing a depressed mood, one of the best things they can do is learn positive thinking skills. These skills are not commonly taught in formal education, so most people never learn how to deal with challenging situations in proactive ways.

A popular treatment used by psychologists and therapists today is called Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT). A key tenet of CBT teaches patients that thoughts are made up of two components. Reality: What actually happened. And unreality: what we think about what happened. The latter is generated by our beliefs and what we learned in the past. Because of this thoughts can become “warped” so that you start to believe things that aren’t true.

An easy way to learn to look at situations clearly is to separate facts from feelings in any complex situations you are dealing with. Here’s an example.

A young boy gets attacked and bitten by the neighbor’s dog, name Duke. Each time thereafter when he sees a dog his thoughts are: “I need to stay away from that dog. It might bite me”. His way of protecting himself from dogs is to avoid them. Overtime, the more dogs he avoids, the more he becomes afraid and reinforces the thought “dogs are dangerous”.

If he were to separate the facts here’s what it would look like:

  • When I was young, I was bitten by the neighbor’s dog.
  • The neighbor never trained the dog, so the dog likely did not learn good behaviors
  • The neighbors did not take safe measures to tie up their dog
  • There are many dogs in the world. Different sizes and types. Some are well trained and some aren’t

Based on the facts the thought “dogs are dangerous” makes no sense in reality. The truth is one dog was dangerous: the neighbor’s dog Duke. So other dogs may be very kind and loving. Going through that thought process would allow the boy in the example to eventually learn to enjoy dogs.

When you learn to think objectively what actually happens is neither negative or positive. There is what is, in reality, and what you choose to belief about it. So, if you learn to think positively about a situation you can learn to take proactive behaviors that will help you build a better life.

 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: bad thinking patterns, brain patterns, depression, How do I stop negative thoughts, negative thinking, Negative thinking and depression, negative thoughts

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