R
Reallyreallyreally
Experienced
- Jan 13, 2020
- 205
I want to know if you agree or disagree with me and why. I truly apologize if anyone feels patronized or invalidated by this. If you find yourself really upset let me know and I'll delete the post. If you don't want to say so below, PM is ok. Now on to the post:
People say depression is genetic, a chemical imbalance in a faulty brain. I don't think this is necessarily true. If a depressed person is raising a child, they're going to pass on their attitudes, ways of responding and relating to people and situations, manner in which emotions are expressed and received, and nutritional habits, all of which have a direct effect on mental health. I'm sure genes can make a person more susceptible but I truly don't think that most cases of depression are like other mental disorders, like bipolar or schizophrenia. If this were the case therapy wouldn't be necessary much of the time and certainly meds would be sufficient on their own, and there wouldn't be so many cases of meds facilitating therapy so well that they can both be discontinued in cases where adequate mental health care can be accessed. Even the aforementioned mental illnesses often don't surface if the individual isn't served an extra large helping of chronic stress. I know there are exceptions but if we all had truly validating, supportive environments both inside and outside the home from the start that fostered confidence and self esteem, how many of us would be here? Quite a few less I think.
That said, I do believe a brain can be trained to become depressed, hence the increased effectiveness of therapy when used in conjunction with meds. But I also believe brains can be trained back in the other direction if *all* the right factors are present. Obviously that doesn't happen for many people. We're all here so clearly we all needed more than what is organically present in our lives IRL.
This belief is why I bother, why I stay at a job I'm poorly suited for, spending my resources on therapy rather than hitting the road with a camper and a nest egg.
EDIT: Thinking about it from the other side, maybe it is genetic and is no different from bipolar or schizophrenia in how they can lie dormant if they're never triggered to emerge. But it seems like nobody would be able to discontinue meds if that were true. Perhaps both are true and they exist side by side.
People say depression is genetic, a chemical imbalance in a faulty brain. I don't think this is necessarily true. If a depressed person is raising a child, they're going to pass on their attitudes, ways of responding and relating to people and situations, manner in which emotions are expressed and received, and nutritional habits, all of which have a direct effect on mental health. I'm sure genes can make a person more susceptible but I truly don't think that most cases of depression are like other mental disorders, like bipolar or schizophrenia. If this were the case therapy wouldn't be necessary much of the time and certainly meds would be sufficient on their own, and there wouldn't be so many cases of meds facilitating therapy so well that they can both be discontinued in cases where adequate mental health care can be accessed. Even the aforementioned mental illnesses often don't surface if the individual isn't served an extra large helping of chronic stress. I know there are exceptions but if we all had truly validating, supportive environments both inside and outside the home from the start that fostered confidence and self esteem, how many of us would be here? Quite a few less I think.
That said, I do believe a brain can be trained to become depressed, hence the increased effectiveness of therapy when used in conjunction with meds. But I also believe brains can be trained back in the other direction if *all* the right factors are present. Obviously that doesn't happen for many people. We're all here so clearly we all needed more than what is organically present in our lives IRL.
This belief is why I bother, why I stay at a job I'm poorly suited for, spending my resources on therapy rather than hitting the road with a camper and a nest egg.
EDIT: Thinking about it from the other side, maybe it is genetic and is no different from bipolar or schizophrenia in how they can lie dormant if they're never triggered to emerge. But it seems like nobody would be able to discontinue meds if that were true. Perhaps both are true and they exist side by side.
Last edited: