Depression...
When It Strikes Nearby
by Douglas Bloch
Clinical
depression is an affliction of the mind, body, and spirit that affects over 17
million Americans. If you are the partner, parent, child, or friend of someone
who is undergoing a depressive episode, the pain of seeing a loved one in the
depths of clinical depression can be almost as torturous as being depressed
oneself. Your understanding of the illness and how you relate to the patient can
either support or deter his or her ability to get well. Here are some important
ways in which you can help the healing process.
1) If a friend
or family member’s activity and outlook on life starts to descend and stays down
not just a few days, but for weeks, depression may be the cause. The first way
you can be of support is to help the person to recognize that there is a
problem. This is especially crucial, since many people fail to realize that they
are depressed. Begin by encouraging your friend to share his or her feelings
with you. Contrary to myth, talking about depression makes things better, not
worse. Once it becomes clear that something is amiss, you can suggest that he or
she seek professional help. (This is critical since only one third of people
with mood disorders ever receive treatment.)
You can be of
further support by accompanying your friend to his initial doctor’s or
therapist’s appointment. In addition, explain that seeking help for depression
does not imply a lack of emotional strength or moral character. On the contrary,
it takes both courage and wisdom to know when one is in need of assistance.
2) Educate
yourself about the illness, whether it is depression, manic depression, anxiety,
etc. Learn about symptoms of the illness and how to tell when they are
improving. Your feedback to the psychiatrist or therapist about how your friend
is faring will help him or her to assess if a particular treatment is working.
3) Provide
emotional support. Remember, what a person suffering from depression needs most
is compassion and understanding. Exhortations to “snap out of it” or “pull
yourself up by your own bootstraps” are counterproductive. The best
communication is simply to ask, “How can I be of support?” or “How can I help?”
4) Provide
physical support. Often this means participating with your friend in low-stress
activities — taking walks, watching movies,
going out to eat — that will provide an uplifting focus. In other instances, you
can ease the depressed person’s burden by helping with the daily routines —
running errands, doing shopping, taking the kids out for pizza, cooking,
vacuuming the carpet, etc.
5) Monitor
possible suicidal gestures or threats. Statements such as “I wish I were dead”,
“The world would be better off without me”, or “I want out” must be taken
seriously. The belief that people who talk about suicide are only doing it for
the attention is wrong. If the person you care about is suicidal, make sure that
his or her primary care doctor is informed. Don’t be afraid to talk with the
person about his or her suicidal feelings. Meanwhile, hold on to the possibility
that your loved one will get better, even if he or she does not believe it.
6) Don’t try to
talk the depressed person out of his feelings, even if they are irrational.
Suppose the depressive says, “My life is a failure”, “Life is not worth living”,
or “All is hopeless”. Telling him he is wrong, or arguing with him, will only
add to his demoralized state. Instead, you might want to say, “I’m sorry that
you are feeling so bad. What might we do right now to help you feel better?”
7) Maintain a
healthy detachment. You may become frustrated when your well-meaning advice and
emotional reassurance are met with resistance. Do not take your loved one’s
pessimism personally — it is a symptom of the illness. When the light you shine
is sucked into the black hole of depression, you may become angry or disgusted.
Direct your frustration at the illness, not the person. People who suffer
from depression complain that their families’ resentment over their condition
often leads to neglect or outright hostility.
8) If prayer is
something you believe in, then pray for your friend’s healing. Turn his or her
welfare over to the care of a Higher Power. In addition, you may wish to place
his or her name on any prayer lists that you can locate (see
my book for a listing of prayer ministries). Prayer goes directly to a
person’s unconscious where it will not meet the negative thinking so commonly
found in depression. To respect the person’s confidentiality, it is best to pray
privately. Moreover, if you put a loved one’s name on a prayer list, use first
name only.
9) Establish
communication with other people in the person’s support network — e.g., family
members, friends, physicians, therapists, social workers, clergy, etc. By
talking to other caregivers, you will obtain additional information and
perspective about the depressed person. If possible, arrange for all of the
caregivers to meet together in one room for a brainstorming/support session. In
this way, you will be working as part of a team — and not in isolation.
10) Take good
care of yourself and your needs. It is easy to get immersed in your friend’s
care and lose your own sense of self. You may also experience “contagious
depression” — i.e., taking on the other person’s depressive symptoms. Here are
some ideas on how to “inoculate” yourself so that you can stay centered enough
to truly help.
• Take good
care of your body. Make sure that you are getting adequate food and rest.
• Find a safe
place to process your feelings. In the role of being a caregiver, you may
feel powerless, helpless, worried and scared (when you hear talk of suicide), or
resentful and frustrated (at your inability to heal the pain). Discharge your
frustrations with a trained therapist or a friend; you will be less likely to
dump your negative mood (anger, fear or sadness) on the person who is suffering.
Remember, it is okay to have negative thoughts as long as you don’t act on them.
• Maintain
your routine as much as possible. Although you may need to adjust your work
schedule or other routines to accommodate helping a depressed person, keep your
life as regular as possible. Don’t become so involved that you lose touch with
friends and social support.
• Learn to
set limits, especially when you are feeling overwhelmed by the depressed
person’s pain and tales of woe. To avoid burning out or experiencing hostility
towards the depressed person, encourage him or her to seek professional help.
Your role is that of a friend or family member, not a therapist or a medical
doctor.
• Take breaks.
When you start to feel emotionally or physically drained, ask other friends and
support people to relieve you. Then do things to nurture yourself.
• Continue to
pursue activities that bring you pleasure. Having fun will replenish you so
that you can keep on giving.
• Give
yourself credit for all that you are doing — and realize that you cannot do
everything. No matter how much you love another person, you cannot take
responsibility for his or her life. Try to distinguish between what you can
control (your own responses) and what you cannot (the course of the illness). To
this end, you may wish to meditate on AA’s “Serenity Prayer”.
• Attend
support group meetings for families who are dealing with mental illness. The
local chapters of the following organizations can provide you with times and
locations of such groups:
National
Alliance for the Mentally Ill, (800) 950-NAMI;
National Depressive and Manic Depressive Association, (800) 82-NDMDA; Depression
and Related Affective Disorders Association, (410) 955-4647.
11) Finally,
encourage the person you are caring for to create a support system such as the
one that I outline in my book, or help him or her to do so. It takes a whole
village to see someone through a dark night of the soul. You cannot transform
the illness of depression by yourself, but you can be an integral part of the
healing process.
This
article is excerpted from the author's book When Going Through Hell....
Don’t Stop!: A Survivor’s Guide to Overcoming Anxiety and Clinical Depression.
Send $14.95 plus $3.00 postage to Pallas Communications, 4226 NE 23rd Ave.,
Portland, OR 97211 or call (503) 284-2848.
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About The Author
Douglas
Bloch, M.A., is an author, teacher, and counselor who writes and speaks on the
topics of psychology, healing, and spirituality. He is the author of ten books,
including the inspirational self-help trilogy
Words That Heal: Affirmations and Meditations for Daily Living;
Listening to Your Inner Voice; and
I Am With You Always, as well as the parenting book,
Positive Self-Talk for Children. Author's email is
dbloch@teleport.com.