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  Home –› Fitness & Health –› Depression & Despondence
   
 

Depression: Hiding Behind the Facade

   

Author: Samantha Weaver

When suffering with severe clinical depression throughout my youth I became accustomed to hiding my feelings, my sadness and ultimately myself from the world. I built up a faade to protect myself from being hurt anymore, and at the time, I had no idea that I was not doing myself any favours by reacting this way.

The facade (or face) that I hid behind was one which to any onlooker made me look as though I was actually high on life. Anyone trying to understand me would have presumed I was a normal everyday person. I laughed, I smiled, I joked and I generally made it appear that I was OK. Fact was this was far from the reality of the situation.

If I sat and questioned now, as a recovered patient why I did this I would honestly answer that my reason for doing so was because it was the only way I knew how to survive. Pretending everything was OK in my family was something that I was expected to do by my parents. In turn, this promoted other detrimental behavioural issues, my faade being one of them.

As humans, we naturally have a built in mechanism whereby our response is that of one where we respond with flight or fight. My mechanism for coping was one which meant I was on edge constantly, waiting for someone to pounce; in turn this made me defensive and aggressive, especially towards anyone who may have criticised me and this was because I didnt want them to tell me something I didnt know about myself.

I didnt want anyone guessing what was wrong, telling me what was wrong or acting superior in knowledge towards me. I figured only I knew me therefore I knew best and as such I would deal with my issues in my own time and my own way. All the time adding layers to the faade I was hiding behind.

Eventually, when I went thought counselling and therapy and then hospitalisation and I was faced with the question, who am I? I wasnt able to answer it. I had built up a pretend person and was living a pretend life in pretend circumstances with pretend outcomes.

Finding out who I really was became a massive part of the healing process that I underwent to become depression free. As such, I would suggest to anyone suffering with depression patient to patient, stop with the faade, it is OK to get help, advice and support, you do not have to pretend to be OK if you really are not, there are people who understand and who are there to help. Without these people, I know I wouldnt be who I am today.

Author Bio:

Samantha Weaver

Author of Saving Samantha: A Young Woman's Escape from Childhood Hell. Biography due for rlease Apr 2006.

I suffered with severe clinical depression in my early childhood and after years of pain, have thankfully now recovered.

I have made it a mission of mine to try to help others, who may also be suffering this debilitating condition, to get the help and support they need. Even if my contribution is merely inspiration, I hope to make a difference and give something back.

I work in Medical Information and have also recently enrolled with the Institute of Counsellors

Visit my personal website to find out more.

You can also reach this article by using: clinical depression, symptoms of depression, treatments for depression, treating depression
 
 
 

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