Jennywocky
Creepy Clown Chick
Trust me, I'm not in a drepression, I would know.
I don't think I said you were. *confused*
Good for you.I've beeb very sad, crying for hours straight, but stopped. Went to school fought the people who fought me, and I fought how I felt. The point is that I fought, and I'm not saying I never thought "My god, why can't I just die?" But giving up or killing my self did never cross my mind
Like I said, it's based on a multiplicity of factors and cannot be reduced just to "being tough until things get better." I really try to grasp who someone is and what their situation is (and context) before I assess how appropriate their behavior is to that circumstance.
There are also all ages of people who get depressed for a variety of reasons. I am careful to differentiate between "teenage angst," depression of young adult's loss of a job, an elderly person's declining health or loss of a spouse, etc. Lots of different reasons to get depressed, and even age and maturity level factors into things. Basic responses might have some similarities, but some problems clear themselves up and others won't... some losses are bigger or more pervasive than others.
Uh... no, you didn't stick with "how you felt depression."EDIT: Also I know judging them won't fix anything, but I feel, as this being a forum, that when people say something that should expect someone saying something else (as long as it's on topic) And at the point I felt like expressing how I felt depression =)
You talked about how you felt about OTHER people who experienced depression and handled it differently than you did.
If you had just talked about you and how you felt, I don't think anyone would have felt the need to comment on it.
Personally, it's fine that you said what you said; you just have to be prepared for others to respond in kind, out of fairness. Tit for tat, and all that... you open the can of worms, then you have to deal with it. That's all.
I have been close to depression, I think I have.. But I still find it weak, staying home because "everything is too tough" I do find that a weakness.
No, you gotta get out and fight.
I think the thing here though to remember is that some people need to stay at home for awhile to gather their strength and resources and sense of direction.
I'd be annoyed if someone sits at home for three years after losing a job and doesn't do squat to find one... or quits after a week.
I'm a lot more forgiving and encouraging if someone wipes out for a month into depression, then buckles down, gets their head together, and starts plodding forward.
You gotta flex for where people are.
Observe, analyze/assess, then pick a response that best benefits that person rather than just satisfies oneself.
Pain has to be endured to get to the other side.EDIT: By the way. I never said LIFE was something to be fought through.. But Pain is something to be fought.
I'm really good at handling pain and still moving ahead.
But I had to learn some forgiveness when I dealt with one of my kids; I realized pain was a far bigger deal to him than to me. It frustrated me, but he needed more space, time, and encouragement because pain terrified him. (He's an ESFP. Pain is a big deal to those types, they always like to be positive.)
Again, blanket responses/criticisms do not work. These situations are individual and unique.