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-   -   Depression (https://www.puaforums.co.uk/psychology-sociology/5255-depression.html)

Medusa 04-07-2011 01:52 PM

Stress cause depression
 
I think it is the illness of NewAge. Before we didn't have so many antidepressants, we didn't use the word stress so much. With 80's I have started to hear more and more. We don't spend much time with our loved ones, we don't show feelings because we think we will be judged. This let us in our own little world and we and up being lonely even with lots of people around us. Did you ever felt that you don't belong where you are now? Or did you ever thought while at a party what am I doing here? With population growing we feel more and more isolated. I agree with Midas Touch we are "one". But how can we change to feel lonely?:confused:

RLAJay 04-07-2011 02:33 PM

Just because you never heard about something as much did not mean it did not exist.

Rose tinted glasses syndrome looking at the past in full effect here. Are you suggesting that people weren't repressed in the past? It's the very topic of almost every period drama you can read... If you're talking more recently, you don't think stiff upper lip Britain and the repression of emotion was a theme of both world wars?

Blanca 04-07-2011 02:52 PM

Christ I'd forgotten about this thread.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mad_Fer_It (Post 40948)
Can you elaborate on this? Give an example perhaps?

An example of the paradox of choice. Take my current situation as an example. I have a choice - either I stay in the UK and get a proper job, or I move abroad and have a bit of an adventure. I have a choice, and am completely free to make that choice because there are no mitigating external factors, ie no external influences. In other words, I could just as easily make one choice as the other. I am aware of this.

I am also aware that each choice will harbour consequences, some good, some bad. However, since neither choice is demonstrably better or worse than the other (because such terminology is undefinable), there is no point me choosing one over the other. Whichever I choose will make me equally happy, or unhappy, or will have absolutely no impact on my state of being. I will still be me, I will still exist and I will still be faced with further choice. Therefore, because there is no point in choosing, I do not choose and this results in inaction. In realising I am completely free to do as I please, I make choice impossible.

Compare and contrast with most people. Most people do not have a choice in what they do because they do what is expected of them; what external factors and influences dictate that they should. They do not feel free, and thus make choices that they do not feel are choices, more expectations. But in this, they are free - free to make choices expected of them, and therefore do actually make the choice to persue something. Someone I know from uni, for instance, went straight into working in insurance when he graduated (thanks in no small part to Daddy). He didn't realise it, but he had a world of choice in what he wanted to do, but chose (due to external factors) to go into insurance. Thus he made a choice (without realising it) and took an action. I, presented with all the choice in the world, simply cannot make my mind up.

Guest 04-07-2011 02:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Blanca (Post 50561)
Christ I'd forgotten about this thread.



An example of the paradox of choice. Take my current situation as an example. I have a choice - either I stay in the UK and get a proper job, or I move abroad and have a bit of an adventure. I have a choice, and am completely free to make that choice because there are no mitigating external factors, ie no external influences. In other words, I could just as easily make one choice as the other. I am aware of this.

I am also aware that each choice will harbour consequences, some good, some bad. However, since neither choice is demonstrably better or worse than the other (because such terminology is undefinable), there is no point me choosing one over the other. Whichever I choose will make me equally happy, or unhappy, or will have absolutely no impact on my state of being. I will still be me, I will still exist and I will still be faced with further choice. Therefore, because there is no point in choosing, I do not choose and this results in inaction. In realising I am completely free to do as I please, I make choice impossible.

Compare and contrast with most people. Most people do not have a choice in what they do because they do what is expected of them; what external factors and influences dictate that they should. They do not feel free, and thus make choices that they do not feel are choices, more expectations. But in this, they are free - free to make choices expected of them, and therefore do actually make the choice to persue something. Someone I know from uni, for instance, went straight into working in insurance when he graduated (thanks in no small part to Daddy). He didn't realise it, but he had a world of choice in what he wanted to do, but chose (due to external factors) to go into insurance. Thus he made a choice (without realising it) and took an action. I, presented with all the choice in the world, simply cannot make my mind up.

You could always flip a coin

RLAJay 04-07-2011 03:57 PM


Refl3x 05-07-2011 10:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Blanca (Post 50561)
Therefore, because there is no point in choosing, I do not choose and this results in inaction..

to me this line of thinking sounds like you are rationalising why you are in a depressive state -- a depressed state has no action only inaction


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