Self Help In Dealing With Depression
Depression- Self Help With Meditation
By Pradeep
Chadha
A young lady I had seen, suffered with Post-Natal
Depression. She was advised to take antidepressant medication
for an indefinite period of time by her psychiatrist. She
wanted to have another baby but was advised strongly against it
because of the medication and the possibility of having
depression again if she had another baby. She agreed to use
meditation as an important part of her treatment. After
finishing her treatment involving meditation, she became
pregnant. In time,she gave birth to a baby. For a short period,
lasting for less than a week, she was exhausted. While in
hospital she was again advised to see the psychiatrist for
medication. But because she had been meditating regularly, she
was able to come out of exhaustion quicker and is not depressed
anymore.
According to psychiatrists, depression is an illness that
has to be treated mainly with medications. In the current
industrialized society, crying or grieving is for the ‘weak’.
Quite a contrast from olden times when the folks had all the
time to cry and share emotions with family and friends. In the
name of being productive, in modern society, the emotional
expression is blocked because one has to ‘get on with life’.
This was and has been the attitude justified for the ‘stiff
upper lip’.
Depression can also be looked at a state or a ‘condition’
that could be temporary. The person suffering is unable to get
out of the trap of thinking about something in the past and is
unable to see much positive in the present. This is depression.
It is a state of the body and the mind. Sometimes the person
has gone through many traumas and has experienced many losses
and is angry with many people. Despite keeping themselves busy,
such people experience a low grade depressive state that they
cannot explain or understand. This happens because
‘understanding’ occurs at a conscious level. At the
subconscious or unconscious level, the body and the mind still
carry the burden of the unpleasant experiences. People who have
stiff upper lip will say- ‘I do not know why I am suffering.
But life has to go on’. This statement comes from the conscious
(understanding) part of the mind. Unfortunately, suffering is a
feeling and it is ‘unconscious’. How can you treat a ‘feeling’
with logic? It is not possible. It is not possible because
logic and feeling are two different parameters. You cannot
measure one against the other.
Meditation, like hypnosis, works at an unconscious level.
The interesting part is that meditation also affects our
conscious mind. So whatever unconscious changes are brought
about in the mind, they affect the logical and conscious part
of our mind too. This is the principal basis on which
meditation helps in a depressed state.
Many times people who are depressed about the past are also
anxious about the future. Anxiety is a state of arousal or
over-stimulation of the nervous system. It is this arousal
state that causes increased secretion of cortisol- a stress
hormone. So depressed people tend to have an increased stress
in their bodies and not less stress. They are slow because they
reach a state of physical and mental exhaustion Even from
common sense point of view, the treatment for exhaustion is
rest. In the case of the emotional and nervous exhaustion, rest
of the mind is the treatment of choice. How is our mind rested?
Not with sleep, but it rests with meditation.
Though in old literature, meditation and hypnosis have been
contraindicated in depression, I have used both, in helping
patients with depression. (For more information you can read
the article- Meditation Can Make You Emotionally Distressed
-with www.ezinearticles.com) Meditation and antidepressants
have opposite effects on the nervous system. The former
releases emotions locked up in the body, the latter block the
emotions in the body.
Meditation can be helpful in clearing up the emotional
distress that one is experiencing with depression. If you want
to use meditation as a drug, you can. Just like the dosage of a
drug is increased or decreased, depending on need, the time
spent on meditation can be increased or decreased and the
variable effects will be experienced.
In the first instance, as you start meditation, do not spend
more than five minutes doing it daily. Sick to five minutes of
meditation and do not do more than five minutes. Initially you
will feel better. This effect would last for a few days. Then
you will start to feel depressed or angry. If you can handle
the feeling that comes, carry on doing the meditation for five
minutes daily. If you cannot handle it, stop doing meditation
for two or three days. Within 48 to72 hours of you stopping the
meditation, you will feel better. As soon as that happens,
start doing the meditation again for five minutes daily. Again,
you may feel depressed or angry after a few days. Again stop
doing meditation for a few days till you start to feel better.
Again start meditation daily for five minutes daily.
As time goes on, your body will become used to relaxing with
five minutes of meditation. If you do not feel angry or low for
two weeks at a stretch as you continue meditation, it is time
to make further progress. Your body is now ready to relax more.
You can then increase the meditation to seven minutes a day.
The same steps, as above, have to be followed till you have two
weeks of ‘good period’. Then increase the meditation to ten
minutes a day.
Remember that the effects of meditation and medication are
in the opposite direction. Meditation relaxes by releasing
emotions, meditation numbs the emotions, so you feel nothing.
So if you come off medication quickly and start meditation to
cure yourself, you will go into depression fast. Coming off
antidepressant medication has the same effect on the body as
starting to meditate. The body tends to come back into its
original emotional state.
This method is good for people suffering with mild or
moderate depression. It cannot be done as self-help by someone
who wants to come off antidepressant medication. However, under
supervision, medication can be reduced without experiencing
depression ,using meditation.
Pradeep K Chadha is a psychiatrist
who specialises in helping patients
with meditation and imagery using
little or no medication. He is the
author of The Stress Barrier-Nature's
Way To Overcoming Stress published by
Blackhall Publishing, Dublin. He is
based in Dublin, Ireland.His website
address is :http://www.drpkchadha.com
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self help in dealing with depression Results
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... Test
Anxiety Time Management War and its
Aftermath Student Counseling Center
Self-Help:Dealing with Depression
Everyone has or will experience
feeling depressed in their lifetime.
It is ...
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Self Help For
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Welcome to the
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5 Beginning
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Recovering Your Mental Health: A Self
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Learn self
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