Guest guest Posted May 26, 2001 Report Share Posted May 26, 2001 This is a subject that I've been thinking about lately. As of late, I know too many people who are on some sort of antidepressant and this raises many issues for me. I'd like to hear other opinions on this. Do you think antidepressants have an impact, great or small, on spiritual evolution? Many people who really aren't in a crisis situation take them just so they don't have to experience a blue mood every now & then. While the antidepressants do succeed in keeping one from feeling sad, is there a greater "spiritual" cost to taking these pill? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 26, 2001 Report Share Posted May 26, 2001 I certainly think so. I was put on antidepressants for Severe Inattentive ADD a couple of years ago. I didn't take them for very long. I found visualization difficult, my ability to concentrate on all senses at once was completely destroyed and my creativity was also hampered. While I found it much easier to quiet my thoughts I didn't "get anything" out of my meditation.<br><br>I'm not sure that your "average" individual would necessarily notice these changes though - it was only during meditation or creative practices that I really felt the difference. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 26, 2001 Report Share Posted May 26, 2001 Have not used antidepressants myself. Know many people who do and some have tried to convince me to get on them. Although I'm not always the most cheerful person and seem to be dealing with unceasing problems (isn't everyone?), my attitude to "depression" has often been "Who has time for it, there's so much to do." Lately I needed to take an interest my sister's problems. She has been chronically depressed for many years and has also been an alcoholic and had eating disorders. When this all came to a head with self-cutting, I started studying a lot of this stuff. (She's doing better, had some treatment, she and her husband have learned a lot and are going to AA meetings). Anyway I came to understand that a lot of people really are "chronically depressed", whatever that means, and that drug treatment seems to be helpful for many. I found a book called Undoing Depression with lots of insight.<br><br>But the reason I am replying to this is that I think there is an idea that is overlooked. That is that while brain chemistry can affect moods, emotions, etc., the reverse may be true also. So while scientists may study brain chemistry in depressed people and find how it differs from "normal" people and how they can change it with drugs, they may not be looking into what causes this and whether the depression can be causing the abnormal brain chemistry rather than the reverse.<br><br>Of course there may be "mental issues" that need to be addressed. But I think that a happy person probably has different brain chemistry than a depressed person just as a result of being happy.<br><br>I also found that Gabriel Cousens (author of Conscious Eating) has a new book exploring the connnection between diet and depression and how to use diet instead of drugs as a treatment. It is called Depression-Free for Life.<br><br>I would think that yoga practice would be helpful as well.<br><br>I recently put up a page on my website listing a few of the books I have come across in studying mental health:<br><a href=http://www.ionet.net/~tslade/mhbooks.htm target=new>http://www.ionet.net/~tslade/mhbooks.htm</a><br><br>One book I include there is The Art of Happiness by the Dalai Lama.<br><br>"Don't worry, be happy." Meher Baba<br><br>"Trip truly and freak freely." A friend from long ago Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 26, 2001 Report Share Posted May 26, 2001 clk0893: I think it depends on why they are taking the pill. As you say, many people just take antidepressants to avoid the natural sadness caused by unfortunate situations, and I think these people are doing themselves a disservice. But for someone who suffers from clinical depression it may be necessary, at least to initially pull them out of it. Clinical depression paralyzes the will and sucks all the life out of the sufferer, making it necessary for an outside agent to intervene, though it may be that talk therapy would be as effective as medication (my understanding is that a combination of the two works best for severe cases).<br><br>TLSlade: I think you're right about emotions and brain chemistry. In fact, cognitive therapists claim that patients who undergo cognitive therapy end up showing similar changes in brain chemistry as patients who undergo medication. I think the causal relationships flow in both directions.<br><br>I recently read a book about brainwave biofeedback, "A Symphony in the Brain" by Jim Robbins, which claimed that neurofeedback can help resolve many psychological disorders like ADD, depression, even epilepsy, with no side effects (you're actually training your brain to operate in a more healthy way on it's own). Another interesting book is "Plato not Prozac! Applying Philosophy to Everyday Problems" by Lou Marinoff. It's an introduction to philosophical counseling which uses philosophy to help people critically analyze and resolve their problems. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 26, 2001 Report Share Posted May 26, 2001 TL<br><br>Patanjali seems to agree with your ideas that mental states and brain chemistry are related and that mental states can cause abnormal brain chemistry as well as the other way around.<br><br>'Mental pain, depression, physical nervousness, and irregular breathing are the symptoms of a distracted state of mind.'<br> (Raja Yoga Sutras I. 31.)<br><br>'The mind become clear through the cultivation of friendliness, kindness, contentment, and indifference towards happiness, vice and virtue.' (RY Sutras I. 33.)<br><br>'When negative or harmful thoughts disturb the mind, they can be overcome by constantly pondering over their opposites.<br>' Negative thoughts and emotions, such as violence, whether committed, abetted or caused through greed, anger or delusion, and whether present in mild, medium or great intensity, result in endless pain and ignorance. Thus there is the necessity for pondering over the opposites' (RY Sutras II.33-34)<br><br>'Through the constant replacement of disturbing thought waves by ones of control, the mind is transformed and gains mastery of itself.' (RY Sutras III. 9.)<br><br>' By this (i.e. what has been said in the previous sutras) changes in the form, time and condition of the elements and sense organs are explained. (RY Sutras III.13)<br><br>'The cause of various transformations is the different natural laws.' (RY Sutras III. 15.)<br> <br>The idea of AA is to gain perspective on the events of one's life, the emotions arising from those events, and to gain an awareness of one's spiritual identity. These processes entail seeing things with a different, increasingly more open attitude which will have the result of restoring brain chemistry, quietening the mind and revealing the divinity within.<br><br>Omprem Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 26, 2001 Report Share Posted May 26, 2001 "Plato not Prozac! "<br><br>I like the title "Pranayama not Prozac!" Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2001 Report Share Posted May 27, 2001 It is a fact that antidepressants play a significant role in helping people battle depression, obsessive compulstive disorder, or attention deficit disorder. And mental health professionals advise medication in conjunction with therapy (usually cognitive). That said, I personally feel if antidepressants helps that person function, feel and think better then it assists that person's growth. There is a growing minority of doctors and therapists that take use more traditional forms of mental health treatment in conjunction with vippasana type meditation. Some of these include Dr. Jeffrey Schwart of UCLA (author of "Brain Lock"). He uses mindfulness meditation as part of his successful OCD treatment. I should note that Dr. Schwartz likens the use of medication as water wings, that is, medication helps out the cognitive aspect of therapy. Another mental health professional using mindfulness meditation is Tara Bennett-Goleman (author of "Emotional Alchemy). Both Dr. Schwartz and Ms. Goleman have years of study and practice in mindfulness meditation and buddhist philosophy. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2001 Report Share Posted May 27, 2001 I forgot to add another book, Shadow Syndrome, by Dr. Jeff Ratey. He provides some excellent insight into that area where spirituality, mental health, and medication meet. Really great reading. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2001 Report Share Posted May 28, 2001 Slade and the others:<br>1. Chronic Depression (in it's several manifestations and patterns) is a disease with severe physical symptoms as well as those of altered mood. It is also a degenerative condition since it's symptoms cause the illness to worsen over time.<br><br>2. It is INSULTING to imply that a person who suffers from chronic depression has caused the physical illness themselves by just being sad or in a bad mood all the time.<br><br>3. It is even more INSULTING to tell a person who suffers from chronic depression to "Don't worry, be happy!" or to "Trip truly and freak freely." Other common suggestions - "Take a walk on the beach!Do something that makes you happy!Don't be so sad!Try to see the good things in life." If you have ever suffered from the disease, you would know how moronic and ignorant these and other like statements sound.<br><br>4. Depressed people are not depressed by choice, they are sick people who need treatment - just like if someone has a disease like, say, Juvenile Diabetes - not their fault, not caused by liking sugar too much, responds to treatment. Chemical imbalance or the propensity for chemical imbalance is physiological and genetic, not caused by a bad personality as most crap literature on the subject matter implies.<br><br>5. Depressed people are often confused by their moods and do not understand that they have a disease that is treatable and often self-medicate. Hence, many drug addicts, alchoholics and chronic overeaters (sugar addicts) learn after getting clean, sober or abstinent that they have actually been suffering from a debilitating and degenerative disease called Chronic Depression all along and it actually responds to treatament. Many depressed people spend years and years feeling guilty and ashamed of their feelings because they think they are doing something wrong and should be able to make themselves happy.<br><br>6. WHO CARES if they have a chemical imbalance before or after they get depressed? What is the point in researching this issue? The fact is that people with Chronic Clinical Depression generally and almost always suffer from brain chemistry imbalances that get worse over time without treatment.<br><br>7. Antidepressants DO NOT KEEP A PERSON FROM FEELING SAD. SADNESS is NOT DEPRESSION. It is true that anti depressants are used by people who may not have reached a depressive crisis and only have low-grade feelings of melancholy and hopelessness, but maybe they need it. Maybe they ask for the medication because they need it. Maybe they don't. This doesn't discount the fact that most antidepressant medication is very effective in the treatment of a serious, LIFE THREATENING DISEASE. Also, it is only one of many, many forms of treatment for depression. If a person is taking medication for depression and it limits their normal range of emotions, then they probably should not be taking it and might not even need it. There are many medications and treatments to choose from.<br><br>8. Finally, it has been discovered that such chemical imbalances can be healed over time, maybe not fully, but at least partially. Balance can be restored to the lymphatic system and metabolism. But medication is important if treatment is warranted - just like JV Diabetes.<br><br>FBL Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2001 Report Share Posted May 28, 2001 Also,<br><br>Most people recovering from depression need couseling to help cope with the lifetime of misconceptions and ignorance they have been confronted with. The books and therapists people have mentioned here are mostly pretty good. Any kind of talk therapy helps people learn not to feel guilty and ashamed for having depression -emotional habits developed over years of not being treated for the disease and assuming that there is "something wrong with them." Talk therapy for people with depression is really helpful to learn ways to cope with the general ignorance about the disease that pervades our society. It also helps the person deal with some of the more moronic and insulting attitudes people have about the disease of Depression that can be hurtful and cause a general sense of mistrust and lonliness.<br><br>Depression is a life-threatening illness and should be taken seriously. Yoga will not cure depression. Yoga will help treat the symptoms as will a properly prescribed medication and a good diet.<br><br>FBL Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2001 Report Share Posted May 28, 2001 FBL<br><br>I can see that the subject of chronic depression is important to you. So I am not trying to antagonize you or minimize the severity and potential life-threatening nature of chronic depression when I say that Yoga can be instrumental in helping that disease as well as its symptoms. Yoga (including pranayama, appropriate diet, and meditation) is effective against a long list of diseases that western medicine does not yet have a good handle on: migraine and other headaches, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, allergies, asthma, as well as depression.<br><br>Also. some of these conditions, including chronic depression, MAY be the result of an episode of kundalini rising inadvertently. So this is a possibility that should be investigated (and one doesn't have to be involved in spiritual activities for this to happen). If this is the case, then the suggestions about breathing, walking along the beach and such are goods ones in that they help to ground the person and stop the kundalini episode. These suggestions would also help to eliminate any stress factors that are contributing to these diseases.<br><br>Yours in respectful and peaceful coexistence<br><br>Omprem Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2001 Report Share Posted May 28, 2001 you did not get her message. She clearly stated it HELPS with the SYMPTOMS. Which also implies it does NOT solve the original problem (unless many factors in a persons life came together - diet habits and much more for a complete almost miraculous rehaul). Most people could think they're cured, because a)things are so much better than before by comparison b)and they may NOT KNOW WHAT IS DEPRESSION FREE.<br><br>If yoga completely cured everything you read in the yoga journal that it does, none of us on this board would have problems- extra weight, back problems, etcetera, nevermind the mental disorders flying around (sic). The point is it helps. So does a better diet. Regular sleep. Positive thinking, which in its turn also is an insult to a depressed person because how do you GET THERE from depression. But if you COULD MUSTER a positive mindset you would feel better- who wouldn't?<br><br>The problem with depression is the the person feels to hopeless to start or stick with anything - and that could include yoga. Then yoga cannot help them. And if they did stay with it the relief may be for as long as the dopamine or whatever etc remains in the brain.<br><br>Ultimately all the things you say CAN help - whatever it takes to MOVE THE ENERGY. But those who have the propensity for this paralizing depression that causes blocked energy will keep coming back to the same challenge. As opposed to those who do yoga for its own sake. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2001 Report Share Posted May 28, 2001 A thought about causes vs. symptoms: people who have suffered from clinical depression tend to be vulnerable to recurring depression even if they have successfully recovered with the help of antidepressants and therapy. So even if such a person is not in a state of depression at a given moment (brain chemistry is relatively but precariously balanced), a negative life situation/change in diet or exercise regimen/change of season, etc may be sufficient to trigger another bout of clinical depression (brain chemistry becomes imbalanced, cycle resumes). For someone who struggles with recurring intermitant depression preventative strategies like cognitive therapy and physical exercise can have tremendous value in preventing symptoms from potentially avalanching into causes of recurring clinical depression (which isn't to say they're a guarantee, depression can recur for many different reasons). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 29, 2001 Report Share Posted May 29, 2001 Hello FBL,<br><br>Thanks for your post. I am new to the subject of depression and have lots to learn. You make many important points. This was the kind of stuff that I learned from Richard O'Connor's book Undoing Depression. My sister's two brothers, her sister, and her husband were all pretty ignorant on these issues. My other sister once made the comment "What does she have to be depressed about, lots of people have real problems." And her husband was anti-Prozac, thinking she needed to get off of it. The book helped us all to better understanding. The misunderstanding that the depressed encounter is certainly a significant issue. I did not mean to sound insensitive. Not sure why I included my little "quotations" but not meant to be directed towards the chronically depressed.<br><br>I agree with most of what you are saying except that I wouldn't say "what's the point of researching it" about anything. Until we know everything (which we never will), we don't really know anything. <br><br>One interesting thing I learned was that psychiatrists mainly prescribe drugs while the psychologists are the talkers. (I know that may be an over-simplification). I have a friend whose father is a psychologist. He has talked with him a lot about this stuff and he said that the talking therapy can be kind of like a surgeon operating on a tumor, but with words. Going in and trying to find out where the "mental tumors" are and extracting them. fascinating stuff. There are lots of parallels between physical and mental health, but since the mental realm is invisible it is more overlooked and harder to understand. <br><br>Also, I meant to comment back in our Sarno discussion that I liked your comment that people's backs are a lot stronger than they realize, with the bones extending several inches into the body.<br><br>Anyway, sorry for any moronic-ness. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 29, 2001 Report Share Posted May 29, 2001 Slade - <br>First I would lke to point out that I do NOT think you are a moron, just in case you garnered that conclusion from my posting. My impression is that you far from being a moron. People who make comments like your sister make me sad (an emotion) and clearly do not have the least understanding of the disease that is depression (not an emotion.)<br><br>One can investigate which state causes which state - but it is always going to come down to the chicken and the egg. (see Mark Epstein's "Going to Pieces Without Falling Apart" pop psychology for the millenium) What is most important is to find out how to treat the person in the here and now - deal directly with the problem at hand. The rest is for pondering. Some folks believe that it isn't even important to search into the past to uncover "causes" and past traumas because you can do just as well if not better dealing with the present. Looking backwards for patterns is OK though, very helpful.<br><br>Talk and no-talk therapy - I like to refer to it as "showing up therapy" because who made the rule that you have to talk anyway? - it's really great for everybody to do and if I could afford it, I would go through my life employing an entire team of psychiatrists (who can prescribe medication and diagnose mental illness) and psychologists (who get paid to keep their mouths shut and listen to my problems) to help me out.<br><br>Regarding someone's post about chronic lingering sadness... There are types of clinical depression typified by such a state and one type is called chronic low-grade depression. One way that psychiatrists help people discover patterns in their mood is to rate depression on a scale pf one to ten, one being 'a sense of contentment and wellness' and ten being 'severely depressed'. Some people have a kind of depression that is always around a "two" level but maybe takes big dips into the netherlands of nine and ten for periods of time. Even on medication, this person is still always at or around a two - that being their "threshold" level. What yoga can do is raise the threshold level so the person can operate at a "one" eventually. In general yoga will even out mood swings and raise everyone's threshold. Also, it is important to remember that yoga and T'ai Ch'i and other such practices have a cumulative effect and such results are going to appear sometimes quickly and sometimes slowly.<br><br>One last thing Slade - the spine thing - most people have the impression that the vertabrae, especially in their necks, are very small. When people are asked to draw what their spine looks like, it is amazing how small they believe the bones to be relative to the size of their bodies. The vertabrae in your neck start at the skin in the back and go as far forward - even further really - as where your jaw bone turns in front of your earlobe. If you press your fingers in the sides of your neck at the right angle, you can actually feel where the spine goes. You can feel the edges of the spine along the back, but really, the meat of it goes up the center of the body. I think that is way cool and people are always so shocked when they find this out. They get so much more confidence in their movement.<br><br>FBL Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 3, 2001 Report Share Posted June 3, 2001 jmeras98, thanks for recommending Shadow Syndromes, I'm reading it now and you're right, it is very good.<br><br>And FBL, thanks for sharing your knowledge and insight on the subject. I especially like the way you decribe how yoga can affect one's threshold.<br><br>Spunky Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.