Diagnosing And Treating Clinical Depression
Clinical depression is simply depression that has been diagnosed by a health care professional. It has the following symptoms: - Feelings of sadness, hopelessness, or pessimism that persist beyond a normal length of time. - Lowered self-esteem and a habit of self-depreciation; feelings of worthlessness and the belief that “I can’t do anything right.” - A decrease or loss of ability to enjoy daily life. - Reduced energy and vitality. This is a very noticeable symptom. A person exhibiting this symptom oversleeps a lot, and may not even bother to get out of bed some days; they are sick far beyond the norm, and are always too tired to do anything. - Slowness of thought or action. - Loss of appetite or binge eating; possibly other eating disturbances. - Disturbed sleep or insomnia. A person who thinks they may have clinical depression should see a therapist at the earliest opportunity, no matter how difficult it may seem to be. The hardest thing to do when you suffer from clinical depression is to get yourself to actually take action. But it’s also the most important thing you can do for yourself; without getting to treatment, your depression will take much longer to improve, if it ever does. Your therapist will prescribe treatments for your depression, and a psychiatrist may be able to prescribe medications to change your brain chemistry directly. But there are some simple things you can do for yourself to help pull out of depression. Get moving. Exercise has been proven to generate endorphins; getting out and exercising has physiological consequences that lead to improved mood and alleviation in clinical depression. In other words, if you can get yourself to exercise for ten or twenty minutes each day, even if it’s just a walk around the block, you will find that your clinical depression symptoms are eased. Get out and socialize. When you’re depressed, you don’t want to see anyone – but if you do get out and try to have an active social life, you will find your clinical depression lifting. Interacting with other people has effects on our brain chemistry that still aren’t understood. Get some sun. Sunlight generates vitamin D and builds serotonin in the body; the sensation that you get sluggish and depressed in the winter is actually a proven scientific fact. Eat healthier and quit smoking. If you’re getting proper nutrition to your body and taking care of it, it’s going to function better. Sugar and fatty foods taste great, but they make your body sluggish, which is exactly what you’re trying to avoid. Since nicotine is a stimulant, it is likely that at first it will cause some withdrawal symptoms; however, once you have managed to kick smoking, your blood flow will improve and your body chemistry will work better. Clinical depression can be improved by improving your overall health. Smile, even if you don’t feel like it. Smiling has physiological consequences we don’t understand at all; smiling actually causes