This document discusses the growing global epidemic of mental illness, specifically depression. It notes that according to the World Health Organization, depression is now the most widespread illness globally. Depression affects over 800,000 people who commit suicide each year from symptoms of anxiety and depression. The document explores what depression is, how it differs from feeling sad, and some of its common symptoms. It hypothesizes about why rates of depression seem to be growing, such as disconnection from meaning and purpose, and an over reliance on cultural narratives that no longer satisfy us. The conclusion emphasizes that depression is a medical condition like any other illness and reducing its stigma can help more people seek and receive effective treatment.
This document discusses the growing global epidemic of mental illness, specifically depression. It notes that according to the World Health Organization, depression is now the most widespread illness globally. Depression affects over 800,000 people who commit suicide each year from symptoms of anxiety and depression. The document explores what depression is, how it differs from feeling sad, and some of its common symptoms. It hypothesizes about why rates of depression seem to be growing, such as disconnection from meaning and purpose, and an over reliance on cultural narratives that no longer satisfy us. The conclusion emphasizes that depression is a medical condition like any other illness and reducing its stigma can help more people seek and receive effective treatment.
This document discusses the growing global epidemic of mental illness, specifically depression. It notes that according to the World Health Organization, depression is now the most widespread illness globally. Depression affects over 800,000 people who commit suicide each year from symptoms of anxiety and depression. The document explores what depression is, how it differs from feeling sad, and some of its common symptoms. It hypothesizes about why rates of depression seem to be growing, such as disconnection from meaning and purpose, and an over reliance on cultural narratives that no longer satisfy us. The conclusion emphasizes that depression is a medical condition like any other illness and reducing its stigma can help more people seek and receive effective treatment.
This document discusses the growing global epidemic of mental illness, specifically depression. It notes that according to the World Health Organization, depression is now the most widespread illness globally. Depression affects over 800,000 people who commit suicide each year from symptoms of anxiety and depression. The document explores what depression is, how it differs from feeling sad, and some of its common symptoms. It hypothesizes about why rates of depression seem to be growing, such as disconnection from meaning and purpose, and an over reliance on cultural narratives that no longer satisfy us. The conclusion emphasizes that depression is a medical condition like any other illness and reducing its stigma can help more people seek and receive effective treatment.
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SOUL
SICKNESS A massive global epidemic
ew Year, New Me! We’ve all heard this before,
N sometimes from our own mouths.
The New Year causes us to reflect on the past and start thinking about how we can improve ourselves during the next 12 months. More often than not, this turns into a resolution to quit smoking, lose 10 pounds, etc. Health is a popular resolution topic, and I love that so many people have their sights set on improving theirs. All too often though, we forget that our health is multifaceted. Good physical health is a must, but what about our mental and social well-being? Actually it’s all about achieving balance, if you did, then you’ll be able to experience an extraordinary life. Mental and physical health are two interconnected factors that determine your overall well-being and the quality of life you lead. A person who is not mentally healthy will never have good physical health and vice versa.
Unfortunately, People care so
much about their physical health that they forget about their mental health and if we compared both of them we will find out that mental illness is more harder to diagnose and even harder to cure.
According to the World Health Organization,
‘‘Depression is now the world's most widespread illness”. The United Nations Also has said that ‘‘800,000 people a year now are committing suicide across the globe, with many of these people also suffering from symptoms of anxiety and depression”. That is a larger number than the amount of people who’ve died from armed conflict and natural disasters combined.
But what is depression?
Because it's a mental illness, it can be a lot harder to understand than, say, high cholesterol. One major source of confusion is the difference between having depression and just feeling depressed. Almost everyone feels down from time to time. Getting a bad grade, losing a job, having an argument, even a rainy day can bring on feelings of sadness. Sometimes there's no trigger at all. It just pops up out of the blue. Then circumstances change, and those sad feelings disappear. Clinical depression is different. It's a medical disorder, and it won't go away just because you want it to. It lingers for at least two consecutive weeks, and significantly interferes with one's ability to work, play, or love. Depression can have a lot of different symptoms: a low mood, loss of interest in things you'd normally enjoy, changes in appetite, feeling worthless or excessively guilty, sleeping either too much or too little, poor concentration, restlessness or slowness, loss of energy, or recurrent thoughts of suicide. If you have at least five of those symptoms, according to psychiatric guidelines, you qualify for a diagnosis of depression.
And the question is why are we so sad?
Maybe half a century ago people did not talk about depression but now in our modern society even though collectively we have more than we’ve ever dreamed possible we remain perpetually dissatisfied. Living in urban centers drowning in consumption in an over capitalist bloated system that can no longer satiate us, made us lose connection with something greater than ourselves which is the universe.
Perhaps our cultural narratives, of who and what we are
have hit their limit; they’re no longer serving us. Maybe we need some fundamental explanation of who we are and what we are meant to do. religion used to provide this narrative, provide this existential blanket, Blanketing us from the void, But increasing sophistication, increasing scientific awareness and knowledge, and increasing intelligence, has actually made us more anxious.
Lastly, Depression is a medical condition, just like asthma or
diabetes. It's not a weakness or a personality trait, Also open conversations about mental illness help erode stigma and make it easier for people to ask for help. And the more patients seek treatment, the more scientists will learn about depression and mental illnesses in general, and the better the treatments will get.