Category Archives: Honesty

When Sadness Turns to Fire: Part 1 – Making Peace with Anger in Depression

Section 1 — Anger as a Hidden Face of Depression

Waking Into The Loop

I used to wake with a flood of feeling already moving through me. Anxiety. Frustration. A knot in my chest before the alarm finished its first ring. Most mornings I lay still, trying to will myself up while the same handful of thoughts circled. Not new thoughts. The same five to ten stories about past wrongs and past mistakes, replaying on loop. For months, this became my night routine too. Five to seven nights a week, two or three times a night, I jolted awake soaked in sweat, annoyed by the discomfort and the regularity, and confused about why my sleep was broken.

I did not know then that these were night terrors. I did not remember nightmares. I did not know the sweat on my skin was my body in a panic attack. I only knew that my sleep was shattered and that every morning started with rumination. I would revisit conversations where I had said the wrong thing, times I had acted on impulse, moments I had been treated unfairly, and I carried that heat into the day. Over time, my baseline shifted. I was quicker to get irritable and I stayed there longer. What looked like a short fuse was really a constant pilot light that never went out.

Naming And Normalizing The Anger

Getting diagnosed helped me name it. The anger I felt was not just bad temper. It was part of my depression. I learned something I wish I had known sooner, anger and marked irritability are common in depression, possibly approaching half of people with major depression. Knowing that earlier would have eased a lot of shame.

The Cycle And What Keeps It Going

Let’s look at how the cycle worked for me. Broken REM sleep left my body on alert, my mind primed to scan for threat. No wonder I woke up exhausted. Through a partial hospitalization program and an intensive outpatient program, I learned skills I had never been taught, and my medication began to work the way it is meant to work. I am practicing new habits now. I still have thoughts that pull me toward rumination, but I do not feed them for long, and they come less often. That change did not happen by accident. It happened because I learned what was happening to me and what I could do about it.

Why do so many of us feel a fire of anger beneath the sadness? For me, a higher baseline of irritability slid into frustration and then into powerlessness. Anxiety rode on top of that, and then frustration at the anxiety itself. The more often that cycle spun, the more likely I was to flip into hyperarousal, the body’s alarm stuck on high, then crash into hypoarousal, shut down and drained. Sometimes I dissociated. Often I was left with a mental tiredness that sleep alone could not fix.

These moments have roots. Rumination is not harmless thinking. It is fuel for depression. Depression nudged me toward three habits that felt like relief in the moment but kept the cycle going, rumination, isolation, and avoidance. Practice any habit enough and the brain gets better at it, including the ones that hurt. I had been reinforcing negative pathways every time I replayed an old story, pulled away from people, or dodged small tasks that felt too heavy. The cost showed up as more anxiety, lower self-esteem, and a shrinking sense of worth. None of that meant I was weak. It meant my brain and body were doing what brains and bodies do when survival mode runs the show.

What Helped And What Comes Next

The same systems that get stuck can be retrained. New pathways can be built. Skills from therapy helped me notice when my thoughts were spiraling and gave me simple steps to interrupt the loop. Medication steadied the floor so I had enough energy to practice. Community mattered just as much. In rooms where we practice honesty and mutual support, I could say, “I was angry when…,” and be met with understanding rather than shame. That is the heart of recovery for me, shared struggle, practical tools, and hope that grows in company, not in isolation.

Here is how this piece is organized. First, I will name the link between depression and anger in plain language. Then I will describe anger attacks, the sudden, panic-like surges many of us never knew had a name. From there we will look gently at the brain and the body as a map, so we know where the alarm lives and where the brake is. Finally, we will focus on treatment and day-to-day tools that lower the heat, shorten the rumination, and widen the space between spark and action.

If any part of my story sounds like yours then understand this, you are not broken. Your brain and body have been signaling distress. Learning that language is not about blame. It is about choice. With practice, the mornings can feel different. The nights can grow quieter. And anger can shift from a fire that burns you to a signal you can hear, respect, and respond to with care and skill.

Section 2 — Understanding the Link Between Depression and Anger

When I finally put words to what was happening, I learned something that would have helped me years earlier. What I was feeling is not rare. Many people living with depression also report persistent irritability or anger, and in some large clinical samples it appears in roughly half of those in a depressive episode. Knowing that does not mean anyone is failing at recovery. It means we are noticing a common part of how depression can show up.

What anger means inside depression

Depression is not only quiet sadness. It can look like impatience, restlessness, a quick snap in the voice, or a low boil that never fully cools. Clinicians often call this irritability, a lowered tolerance and faster trigger for frustration. The DSM lists irritability clearly for children and teens, and many adults with depression report it too, so clinicians take it seriously in adults as well.

Anger can also be protective. Sometimes the brain reads hopelessness or shame as threat, so the body brings up anger as a shield. That does not make anger wrong. It makes it a signal, the nervous system’s way of saying, something feels unfair or unsafe.

Why sadness and anger feed each other

Think of a pressure cooker. Low mood and low energy keep a person quiet, so pressure builds. Then a small spark sets off a burst. Research on emotion dynamics shows that when the system is strained, feelings stick around longer, and reactions grow bigger than the moment. 

Add self-critical thoughts or perfectionism and the loop tightens. The anger turns inward, I am furious with myself, or outward, why can nobody understand, and both routes deepen guilt, withdrawal, and more depression. This is not a character flaw. It is an overloaded alarm system doing what overloaded systems do.

Common fuels for the burst

Poor or broken sleep, missed meals or blood sugar dips, pain or illness, alcohol or caffeine spikes, conflict that is not repaired, too many open tabs and no recovery time. On thin-energy days, any one of these can tip the system from quiet to hot in seconds.

How the body carries it

Here is a tiny map you can keep in your pocket.

Hyperarousal means the alarm is high, heart rate rises, breath shortens, hands feel warm, jaw tightens, thinking narrows, voice gets sharp.
Hypoarousal means the system crashes, energy tanks, limbs feel heavy, focus blurs, you go quiet, numb, avoidant.

Learning these body states helped me notice earlier and choose a different path sooner.

Try this now, 30 seconds
Feel your feet on the floor. Breathe out slowly for six counts. Name three colors you can see. Name two sounds you can hear. Touch one textured object. Your body learns safety from repetition.

Everyday life when the baseline is depleted

On a thin-energy day, small frictions hit like sparks on a dry fuse. A curt email. A dish left in the sink. Traffic that keeps you ten minutes late. A childcare pickup snafu. None of these are dramatic on their own, but when the baseline is already low, the reaction can feel bigger than the moment. That does not mean you are dramatic. It means the circuit is overloaded and your body is trying to protect you with the tools it has.

Sometimes these surges arrive as anger attacks, short bursts of overwhelming anger that seem to come out of nowhere. A small frustration, a sense of being trapped or misunderstood, or a sudden spike of shame can flip the body into “fight mode,” flooding you with adrenaline. You might feel heat in your face, tightness in your chest, trembling, a racing heart, or a kind of tunnel vision where it is hard to think clearly and all you want to do is shout, slam a door, or make the feeling stop. 

Often, the attack is followed by a crash, guilt, or exhaustion, which can feed the depression and self blame. Naming this pattern does not excuse harm, it gives us a map of what is happening inside so we can plan a safer route, learn earlier warning signs, and choose different actions next time.

Two quick snapshots, same loop

Outward route: A terse message lands, my chest tightens, my voice sharpens, I defend before I connect, afterward I feel guilty and drained.
Inward route: I forget a small task, shame floods in, I call myself names, I go quiet and avoidant, afterward I feel small and tired.

Different routes, same loop. Guilt rises, withdrawal grows, mood drops.

What this means for recovery

If you have felt this, you are not broken. Your brain and body are signaling distress. Recognizing that is the first step to loosening the link between sadness and anger. The same systems that get stuck can be retrained. Skills can interrupt rumination earlier. Medication can steady the floor so practice is possible. Community matters. Saying this out loud in rooms where honesty and mutual support are normal turns anger from a secret flaw into a signal we can work with, together. Understanding anger does not excuse harm. It gives us earlier choices to prevent it.

Mini-FAQ

Isn’t anger just my personality
Depression lowers emotional margin and makes anger more frequent. As mood improves and skills grow, the heat often lowers too.

Can meds make irritability worse or better
Some people feel relief with the right medication, some feel jittery on certain doses. If irritability rises, tell your prescriber so the plan can be adjusted.

What if I mostly feel numb, not angry
Numb can be the shut-down side of the same system. Grounding and gentle activation skills help widen that narrow window.

Reflective prompts

  • When does my anger most often show up, mornings, late afternoons, after conflict, after poor sleep?
  • What helps me catch the first 1 percent of heat, a phrase, a breath, a body cue, a pause I can practice?

References for Section 2

  • Judd LL, Schettler PJ, Coryell W, et al. (2013). Overt Irritability or Anger in Unipolar Major Depressive Episodes. JAMA Psychiatry, 70(11), 1171–1180. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapsychiatry/fullarticle/1737169

  • Fava M, Rosenbaum JF, Pava JA, et al. (1998). Anger attacks in depression. European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, 248(5), 231–239. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9809215/

  • Perlis RH, Smoller JW, Fava M, et al. (2004). The prevalence and clinical correlates of anger attacks in unipolar versus bipolar depression. Journal of Affective Disorders, 79(1–3), 291–295. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15023510/

  • Perlis RH, Fraguas R, Fava M, et al. (2005). Prevalence and clinical correlates of irritability in major depressive disorder, a preliminary report from STAR*D. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 66(2), 159–166. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15705000/

  • Fava M, Tossani E, Sonino N. (2018). Irritability in major depressive disorder, prevalence and clinical implications. CNS Spectrums, 23(5), 378–384. https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/cns-spectrums/article/irritability-in-major-depressive-disorder-prevalence-and-clinical-implications/4B7D0B5B03F2D1AD16F01E0F6C6B6D39

  • Stringaris A, Vidal-Ribas P, Brotman MA, Leibenluft E. (2013). Irritability in youth and adult depression, a common phenotype. American Journal of Psychiatry, 170(10), 1041–1052. https://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.ajp.2013.12070939

  • Kuppens P, Sheeber L, Yap MBH, et al. (2012). Emotional inertia prospectively predicts the onset of depressive disorder in adolescence. Emotion, 12(2), 283–289. https://ppw.kuleuven.be/okp/_pdf/Kuppens2012EIPPT.pdf

  • Bylsma LM, Taylor-Clift A, Rottenberg J. (2011). Emotional reactivity to daily events in major and minor depression. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 120(1), 155–167. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21319928/

  • Beck AT. (1976). Cognitive Therapy and the Emotional Disorders. Basic Books. https://archive.org/details/cognitivetherapy0000beck

  • Tangney JP, Dearing RL. (2002). Shame and Guilt. The Guilford Press. https://guilford.com/books/Shame-and-Guilt/Tangney-Dearing/9781572307598

Section 3 — Anger Attacks: When Emotion Breaks Through

Sometimes that signal does not whisper, it shouts. The sadness and tension that have been quietly building suddenly burst out as heat, a raised voice, or tears. It can feel like being taken over for a minute, then the wave passes, and you are left spent.

Naming the experience

Here is how it often starts. Your chest heats up, your heart pounds, your hands clench before your mind catches up. Words feel sharp and fast. A minute later the edge drops, and in its place comes a heavy let-down, guilt, exhaustion, maybe shame. Psychiatrists eventually gave this pattern a name, anger attacks, because they often behave more like panic than ordinary anger.

Plain-language definition.
An anger attack is a sudden surge of anger or rage, usually peaking within minutes, often bigger than the situation, and paired with strong body sensations like pounding heartbeat, heat, sweating, shaking, short breath, or lightheadedness. It may end with tears, guilt, or exhaustion. Some people have them a few times a year, others more often. These are stress-system symptoms, not proof that you are bad or violent. Naming it helps you separate the person from the pattern.

In the early 1990s, clinicians began noticing that many people with major depression described panic-like episodes of rage. They documented the pattern and studied it. Across several samples, roughly one third to one half of adults with major depression reported these episodes. Similar findings appeared in different countries and settings. The point is not to inflate numbers, the point is relief. If you recognize this in yourself, you are not alone and you are not broken.

What it feels like in real life

You drop a glass. It shatters. Something inside you seems to snap too. Heat floods your face. Your heart slams. A shout leaves your mouth before you decide to say anything. Then, almost as quickly, you are crying and apologizing, drained, confused about where that came from. Later you tell yourself a harsh story about it. That harsh story keeps the cycle going.

How anger attacks differ from regular anger

  • Sudden onset, they rise fast, sometimes with no clear trigger you can name.
  • Big body charge, heart, breath, heat, and shaking mark the episode.
  • Aftermath, regret, shame, and fatigue often follow.
  • Mismatch, the reaction feels larger than the moment.

What it is, and what it is not

  • Anger attack: fast rise, big body charge, mismatch with the moment, drop into fatigue or tears.
  • Ordinary anger: builds with a clear cause, proportionate, leaves you functional.
  • Panic attack: fear and doom are central, anger may be absent, breath and heart race.
  • Overwhelm in ADHD or autism: sensory or task overload can look similar, pacing and shutdown are common. If you relate to this, note it for your clinician.

Safety first
If you ever fear you might harm yourself or someone else, seek help now, call local emergency services or a crisis line. If attacks include blackouts, weapons, or injuries, get urgent medical support. Understanding the pattern is step one, safety is step zero.

How the body carries it

Here is a tiny map you can keep in your pocket.
Hyperarousal means the alarm is high, heart rate rises, breath shortens, hands feel warm, jaw tightens, thinking narrows, voice gets sharp.
Hypoarousal means the system crashes, energy tanks, limbs feel heavy, focus blurs, you go quiet, numb, avoidant.

Learning these body states helped me notice earlier and choose a different path sooner.

After an anger attack, a short reset

A 10-minute playbook

  1. Ground, feet on floor, long exhale, sip water.
  2. Note the facts, what just happened, keep it one or two lines.
  3. Repair quickly, if someone was affected, “I got overwhelmed, I am sorry, I am taking space to settle and will check back.”
  4. Lower inputs, quiet space, dim phone, light snack if hungry.
  5. Prevent rumination, set a 20-minute timer, when it rings, do one small neutral task, laundry, dishes, a short walk.
  6. Log it, see the one-line tracker below.

One-line tracker
Date, time, last three inputs, how it felt first in the body, how it ended, one thing that helped.
Example, Tue 6 pm, poor sleep, skipped lunch, tense email, heat in chest, cried then heavy, water and a walk helped.

A simple repair script
“I got overwhelmed earlier and had what I now know is an anger attack. I am sorry for how it came out. I am learning to catch these sooner. Here is what I will try next time, take a pause, breathe, name it, step away for ten minutes. Thank you for giving me a moment to reset.”

A note on history and culture

Many of us were taught that anger is unacceptable, or that only certain people are allowed to show it. Gender, culture, family rules, and safety histories shape how anger appears and how we judge ourselves for it. If your anger shows up as irritability, tears, or numbness, it still counts. You deserve language and support, not shame.

What helps over time

Skills that widen your emotional margin, sleep repair, regular meals, limits on alcohol and stimulants, movement, and therapy that targets body cues and thinking patterns can all reduce attacks. Antidepressants can help for many, especially when anxiety is present, though some medicines or doses can raise jitteriness for a few people, always talk with your prescriber about what you notice.

Now that we can name the episode, the next step is understanding the loop that drives it, brain alarm, body charge, narrowed thinking, crash. When we see where the pedals are, alarm and brake, we can practice pressing the right one sooner. Part 2 maps that loop in simple terms, and pairs each step with small skills you can try the same day.

Where we go next

If you have read this far, we have already done something important, we have named the pattern. Depression can carry irritability and anger, anger attacks can be real, panic like surges, and the shame afterward can deepen the illness if we treat it as proof of being broken. Naming is not an excuse, it is a map, and maps let us choose safer routes. In Part 2 we will look at what is happening in the brain and body during these episodes, the alarm and the brake, and then we will walk through the treatments and day to day practices that make the gap between spark and action wider, and repair more possible.

References for Section 3

DBT Grounding Techniques – Part 4 Interpersonal Effectiveness

Part 4: Interpersonal Effectiveness – Communicating with Clarity and Confidence

Relationships can be one of the biggest sources of both support and stress. When emotions run high, it’s easy to fall into patterns of people-pleasing, avoidance, or conflict—especially when struggling with anxiety or depression. Interpersonal Effectiveness teaches you how to communicate your needs clearly, set healthy boundaries, and maintain relationships without sacrificing your well-being.

By practicing these skills, you can navigate tough conversations with more confidence and build stronger, more balanced connections. Let’s explore some grounding techniques to help you stay present and intentional in your interactions.

Interpersonal effectiveness helps you navigate relationships in a way that balances your own needs with the needs of others. It focuses on building and maintaining healthy connections, while staying true to your values and boundaries. Below are grounding practices that help manage emotional intensity during interactions and promote balanced, effective communication.

1. DEAR MAN: A Framework for Effective Communication

DEAR MAN is a structured approach to expressing your needs clearly and calmly while maintaining relationships and reducing anxiety.

How to Practice:

  1. Describe
    • Start by stating the situation objectively, without emotion or judgment.
    • Example: “When you borrowed my book and didn’t return it on time…”
  2. Express
    • Share your feelings using “I” statements.
    • Example: “I felt frustrated because I needed it for my class.”
  3. Assert
    • Clearly state what you need or want.
    • Example: “I need you to return borrowed items by the agreed time.”
  4. Reinforce
    • Highlight the benefits of meeting your request.
    • Example: “This way, we can avoid misunderstandings in the future.”
  5. Mindful
    • Stay focused on your goal during the conversation, even if emotions arise.
    • Use phrases like “I understand your point, but…” to stay on track.
  6. Appear Confident
    • Speak with a steady voice, make eye contact, and avoid apologizing excessively.
  7. Negotiate
    • Be willing to find a middle ground if needed.
    • Example: “If Tuesday isn’t possible, can you let me know in advance?”

2. FAST: Upholding Self-Respect in Interactions

FAST is a tool to maintain your self-respect and integrity while engaging with others. It’s particularly useful for setting boundaries or navigating difficult conversations.

How to Practice:

  1. Fair
    • Be fair to yourself and the other person. Avoid self-blame or being overly harsh.
    • Example: “I understand you had a busy week, but I still need to address this.”
  2. Apologies
    • Avoid apologizing unnecessarily or for things beyond your control.
    • Example: Instead of saying, “I’m sorry for bringing this up,” say, “I’d like to discuss something important.”
  3. Stick to Values
    • Stay true to your core values, even if it feels uncomfortable.
    • Example: If honesty is important to you, say what needs to be said respectfully.
  4. Truthful
    • Be honest and avoid exaggerating or sugarcoating.
    • Example: Instead of saying, “You always do this,” say, “This has happened a few times, and it’s affecting me.”

3. Radical Acceptance: Letting Go of the Struggle

Radical acceptance is a practice of acknowledging and accepting situations as they are, without trying to fight reality. This can provide grounding in interpersonal conflicts or when emotions feel overwhelming.

How to Practice:

  1. Acknowledge the Situation:
    • Identify what is happening without judgment.
    • Example: “This person has different priorities than I do right now.”
  2. Accept the Reality:
    • Say to yourself, “It is what it is. I can’t change this situation, but I can choose how I respond.”
  3. Release the Struggle:
    • Let go of the desire for things to be different. This doesn’t mean you condone the situation, but you stop resisting it emotionally.
    • Example: Instead of fixating on someone’s behavior, shift your focus to how you’ll manage your feelings.
  4. Practice Self-Compassion:
    • Remind yourself that acceptance takes time and effort. Be kind to yourself if it feels difficult.

Combining Practices

These techniques can be used individually or together for more complex situations:

  1. Use DEAR MAN to effectively express your needs during a tough conversation.
  2. Apply FAST to maintain your self-respect and boundaries, ensuring you stay true to yourself.
  3. Practice Radical Acceptance if the situation cannot be resolved or changed, helping you ground yourself and let go of unnecessary emotional tension.

Crosstalk: What is it and Why we don’t do it at Meetings

Come to Depressed Anonymous meetings and you will hear “there is no crosstalk at this meeting but members can comment directly to speakers in the chat.” The online dictionary says: Crosstalk is giving advice, criticizing or making comments about what others have already shared; questioning or interrupting the person speaking or talking while someone is sharing. Another definition which is exceedingly compelling is crosstalk is described as “casual conversation.”

What do we talk about at Depressed Anonymous meetings? There is quite a broad spectrum through the challenges and positivity, deep heartfelt experiences/feelings. We “tell on ourselves” revealing things that we would rather not be known of us yet, that is a power in dissolving shame and fear. Simple listening becomes a blessing of insights and enlightenment, simply by hearing each other. We talk “program talk” and that is not casual conversation. We learn to live one-day-at-a-time. It is not easy though it has been called “simple.” To turn the page on negativity, low energy, despair, hopelessness and choose gratitude, action and positivity is definitely not easy. Yet we are rewarded with the prospect of continuing future growth, freedom from depression. Oh, it may most certainly not be every day and moment but we hear and learn, learning as children do by repeating for our own selves what we hear has worked for our companions. We get a boost, a glimmer: “What a relief, I can get better.” After all, we come here to get better, to learn and practice the tools and develop skills to get better. Then we get to reveal the true person we really are and shed the mistaken identity falsely projected onto the screen of our minds by Depression. And the one price of admission: the desire to stop saddening ourselves. The sharing we hear may be baffling, intense, stressful. There may be heartbreak, trauma. But here we divide our sorrows and when we share our victories and gains, we double our joys. Because we are witnessed and witnessing with open hearts, with loving attention and care. That is the DA Difference, to meet each other with open hearts, loving attention and care. We see each other improving, we see ourselves with time and patience and practice, improving. We hear “I haven’t been depressed since coming to DA…” “I come to meetings, work the steps, I got a sponsor… I am getting better too.”

These are not casual conversations. No No! these are sacred words of truth, hope, light, love spoken then integrated in mind-heart-spirit. Individually and collectively, we improve. Sooner and later, we improve.

This sharing is not casual conversation. We mute ourselves when not speaking and even though we may heartily agree with what is being said, there is no “yes,” “Ah-ha,” “mmm.” There is no murmuring, no background noise because to glimpse and catch Higher Power’s idea for ourselves, well, these are flashes of silent-robed listening, devoted conscious attention.

We are hearing brilliant and commonplace miracles, they may be cloaked in tedium. Spirit is expressing through each one. With that comes great hope, great empathy, great informing of heart-mind-soul. There is IGNITION. Aeronautically speaking, “We have liftoff, Houston.” With each other, our meetings, our Twelve Steps, we spark the will to live as our true selves. We receive Grace, we Surrender, we take the Action and our stories of the miracles of living 24-four-hour days each day arise. Get ready: Hope is stoked, The Lights are On. We shine for ourselves, we shine for each other.

Doreen K, in Boston, MA January 2025

Happy New Year!

We are on the cusp of starting a New Year here in the Eastern time zone. Some parts of the world are already into the new year.

The month of January is named after Janus the Roman god who presided over beginnings. Today is the start of something new. Be hopeful for the new year even if this past year has been challenging. The dark clouds of the past eventually clear and a new day begins.

Looking closely each day is a new beginning – a microscopic reincarnation. We begin anew each day. Start the new day with hope and wonder. Approach the new day with awe and wonder what God1 has in store for you. Let go of your expectations as to what the day will bring. You may be surprised what comes your way but try not to be upset by it.

Yours in recovery, Bill R

Note
1 – I use the term God because that is my understanding of my higher power. Please substitute the term that is useful and comforting for you. I am not trying to force my belief upon you.

The Real Deal

One of my favorite TV shows is the Antique Roadshow. Every piece of furniture, painting, pottery, etc., brought to the show, has its own unique history. Each piece is appraised as to its present value by professional art dealers. That is the basis of the show, to help people discover how much that old letter, old painting or anything else that they bring to the show. seeking its worth. They can discover if their painting is an original, the real deal, or just a copy, or even a forgery. It is rare that an original masterpiece is ever discovered. Even so, there are times when a very valuable piece is discovered. People who come to show their articles, know that they can at least find out if they have something of value.

In ancient Rome, there were many sculptors, who sculpted pieces of artistic beauty. At times, when a sculptor’s chisel took too much granite off his work of art, he would cover his mistake with wax. So, if an artist wanted to sell his piece of art, it had to be noted that the piece was sincere, that is, without wax. No covering up mistakes.

So when I say that I am sincere, I am telling you that I am telling the truth. I am telling you that there is no coverup in what I am saying. (sine cera in Latin = without wax). In other words, it’s the real deal.

In our recovery program, Depressed Anonymous, we thrive by being sincere. We learn that it is when we admitted that we were powerless over depression and that our lives had become unmanageable, that we began to thrive and freed ourselves from the prison of depression.

Please come and join us in this Depressed Anonymous Fellowship. It is here where we can share our past mistakes and shortcomings – and our strengths – no more wax jobs – and find peace abd strength with folks just like ourselves.

DEPRESSED ANONYMOUS
Our website at DepressedAnonymous.org, will provide you with all necessary information, directing you to our online daily ZOOM meetings. We offer two meetings a day. You are always welcome!

HUGH S., for the DA Fellowship

Savor Life

“If I had my life to live over I’d like to make more mistakes next time. I would relax. I would limber up. I would eat more ice cream and
less bans. I would perhaps have more actual troubles, but I would have fewer imaginary ones. I would climb more mountains and swim more rivers.

I would have perhaps more actual troubles, but I’d have fewer imaginary ones.

You see, I’m one of those people who live sensibly and sanely, hour after hour, day after day. Oh, I’ve had my moments, and if I had to do it over again, I’d have more of them. In fact, I would try to have nothing else. Just one day after another, instead of living so many years ahead of each day. I’ve been one of those persons who never goes anywhere without a thermometer, a hot water bottle, a raincoat and a parachute. If I had to do it again, I would travel lighter than I have.

If I had my life to live over, I would start barefoot earlier in the Spring and stay that way later in the Fall. I would go to more dances. I would ride more merry-go-rounds. I would pick more daisies.”

Editor’s note:
The author, Nadine, wrote this at the age of 85. She died in a Louisville, Kentucky, nursing home, at the age of 88.

Copyright (C) THE ANTIDEPRESSANT TABLET VOLUME 4 NUMBER 3 SPRING 1993

My mind has a mind of its own

One of our family’s favorite camping areas, is a small park that provides many positive experiences for those who love the outdoors. In fact, just the name of the park, brings to mind the days of the past. The park’s name, Buffalo Trace, let us know that thousands of buffalo roamed through this area, years ago, following a beaten path, that led to the open plains of the Dakotas. Even today, there is a physical trace of the path that once saw the presence of these large and majestic animals, crossing the continent of the United States.

Just like the physical trace of those many buffalo, moving along their annual travels, our human brain also creates familiar mind paths. All living beings are creatures of habit.

For example, because of a construction detour, I was forced to take a different route home from work. Guess what happens? My mind’s GPS is confused, everything looks different. Our mental map has changed. This new route to get home, has now been turned into a labyrinth, making a familiar way to return home, now becomes a major problem.

I like to think of our mind as the executor of various tasks, mental, emotional and physical, motivating us to accomplish the need at hand. But, if the human mind, continues to bombard us with those negative thoughts telling us how worthless and hopeless we are, over time, it becomes a veritable impossibility to make a change. Our continued negative thinking, has created a pattern of thinking about ourselves, which holds no hope for change. It is like our mind has created a neurological rut, where the mind has no choice but to stay the course. That is, to stay in the rut, to stay depressed, as there is no way out.

For any of us, to even think of changing one’s mind and behavior, can in itself, be frightening. The motivation and energy needed to change is no longer available. To change our hopeless thinking has reduced us to feel like a robot, losing our autonomy and all formerly meaningful relationships. A false belief has been created in our mind that there is no way out. We begin spiraling downward into that abyss of darkness and annihilation.

What we are describing here is a metaphor for all addictions, be that of a mind altering drug or a process addiction where the mind follows a thinking pattern, which fills our mind with painful thoughts, that we are hopeless, unacceptable to ourselves and others. We are initially unaware that this negative and self-bashing addictive form of thinking and feeling, is potentially a life threatening trap. This mind of our own, which now has become our misguided fellow traveler, tells us there is no hope and that we are powerless! We take this as a truth. We now feel like the hole in the doughnut. Empty, alone, and living as a prisoner of one’s own mind.

So, our mind does have a mind of its own, and when it veers off the path of sanity, of honesty and a willingness to want to change, we discover sadly that we have been led to a place where thriving is not a personal option. The good news for us is that my mind can choose a road that provides freedom and restoration. In time, and with help, I have come to the absolute truth, that our minds do have a mind of their own. I am grateful that I have made the right choice–a choice that says, “I Came to believe that a power, (an eternal MIND) greater than ourselves, that could restore us to sanity.”

“Hope is the oxygen for the soul.”

Hugh S., for the fellowship.

Please join with us at our daily program of recovery at: depressdanon.com. You will be happy that you made the right choice!

Addicted to sadness?

At a recent meeting we were reading from the Depressed Anonymous literature and the topic of being addicted to sadness came up. There were several people in the meeting who bristled at the idea of sadness being an addiction. Is depression really an addiction to sadness?

Instead of answering that question directly I think it would be helpful to list some common characteristics of any addiction.

  1. It’s an unhealthy coping mechanism for life’s ills.
  2. It worked for a while but now it no longer works.
  3. It has made your life unmanageable.
  4. It is a disease that tells you that you don’t have a disease.
  5. You lie about how often you do this drug/behavior.
  6. You think about it most, if not all, of the time.
  7. You have continuously done this drug/behavior even though it has done great harm to you and loved ones.
  8. It may have caused you to be fired from a job.
  9. It may have caused you to be admitted to a hospital/mental institution.
  10. It may have caused you to be arrested.
  11. It may have caused financial harm in your life.

Any addiction, whether it is alcohol, drugs, gambling, depression doesn’t have to meet all of these characteristics. Like the Jeff Foxworthy “You might be a redneck if…” jokes you might be addicted to sadness if say 5 or more of those characteristics are true.

Something doesn’t need to exactly match the medical definition of chemical dependence or physical dependence to be described as an addiction. Let go of your current belief on what is and is not an addiction. Look at the characteristics above and rate your depression against them. The magic number may not be 5. It could be 4 or 6 or whatever makes sense to you. Try it on for size. You may be able to let go of your skepticism.

Yours in recovery, Bill R

How do I deal with anger in my life?

DECISION 8: I WILL BE MORE ACCEPTING OF ANOTHER’S ANGER AND NOT ALWAYS TAKE IT PERSONALLY.

When you are both the focus and the cause of the person’s anger, you will need to find responses other than cutting yourself off from the person, by doing that, sharply reinforces your barrier of loneliness.

D.Rowe tells us that we find the cause of the anger and discuss the matter. For whatever reason for the anger, it might be best to write a letter the person. Or, Possibly, a friendly visit between the two of you will help solve the problem.

Making an apology when we see ourselves trapped, weak, worthless and hopeless, by making an apology to the person who caused the anger, seems frightening and humiliating.

Making amends, an apology to those we have injured us, seems gracious and creative, allowing a relationship to be strengthened and resumed.

In some families, there was no teasing, absolutely not. Maybe outside the family it might be allowed. Everything in the family was 100% serious. If a family member was teased, then this could result in a sulk and long term silence.

But in school, children might be teased, but never knowing how to tease back. We want to distinguish between friendly and malicious teasing. We could put bullying at the top of the list as one of the most harmful ways of malicious teasing. When I make an effort to get along with other people, distinguishing between friendly or imaginary teasing, this makes our relationship stronger, the other builds barriers.


TOMORROW DECISION 9: I WILL IMPROVE MY SKILL IN DISTINGUISHING BETWEEN REAL AND IMAGINARY ENEMIES.