Mental Health The need to rest

Flickering

Bluelighter
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Let us presuppose that the prevalence of mental health issues in our society is so strong because our attitude towards them is abysmal. It isn't that we fail to address them, it's that we actively make them worse, and indeed create the problems to begin with.

An enormous part of this failing must come from our tendency to only recognise a problem if we can detect it physically. This culture is catching up very slowly with the idea that a person can be afflicted by mental health issues. It is astounding how many people think that depression is not real, or that it's something you can snap out of. But even those who don't will almost universally focus not on the problem in and of itself, but on the effect it has on a person's life, i.e. their productivity to society.

This is why we prefer to medicate rather than to treat. Like giving someone amphetamines when they catch a cold; it has nothing to do with curing the illness, in fact it will likely prolong it. But if we have suppressed the symptoms, then you can get through the workday.

The instant you remove this economic bottom line, you will see with unmistakable clarity how detrimental such an attitude must be to the individuals suffering from various forms of affliction.

My problem is depression, and it stems from multiple traumatic events in my youth, so here is a thought experiment I learned from LSD. I have found very useful. I hope that you will too.

I stop seeing myself as an adult, and suppose that I'm simply a child. (I find twelve or thirteen is a good age to relate to, because the memory of that age is not too abstract.) What this does is it immediately removes any need to blame myself for the problem, or to tell myself that I ought to be tougher, and just get on with it, and look at all these people with worse issues than I. The image becomes on of vulnerability, and it is a real image, and it evokes compassion towards myself - not through pity, but out of understanding. The focus is no longer on how I'm going to get on with my life, which is the frame we're used to seeing mental health problems through. Instead I get a much simpler picture. This is the problem. This is how I feel. This is why. We can see that children are not separate from their bodies and emotions. Well neither are adults. And neither am I.

The next step is detachment. Suppose this is not me. Suppose it's somebody else. Pretend for a moment that I am a mental health professional, a psychologist or a doctor. Now what am I going to recommend for this patient? How would I talk to this kid, and what would he say?

He would say: "I don't enjoy anything, I don't want to play, I don't want to work, I'm too tired."

I woulds say, "So then what do you want to do?"

It isn't a trick question. The answer is almost always the same: I want to do nothing.

So then, rest.

It's just as you would treat any other debilitating disease. You would not tell someone with a virus to soldier on into the workforce until it went away, you would tell them to get some bed rest for a few days or a few weeks, to not expend energy and to let the body correct is own biorhythms. So someone please tell me why is it that this is exactly what we're doing for depression, and other mental health problems?

I was supposed to do so much stuff today, but instead I stayed in bed and let my problems swallow me. I didn't feel happy. But I didn't feel stressed either. I thought of all the people who say they can't get out of bed in the morning and, well, isn't your body trying to tell you something? And it occurred to me, as I thought about how it felt to be happy all those years ago, and how that compares to this. Wait a minute. I'm sick.

Perhaps this problem has gone on for years and years - for what stretch of time in that period have you listened to what your body wanted, and just done nothing? I don't mean sit around watching YouTube videos and playing videogames or whatever. I mean dormancy. Sleep, and otherwise lying down expending no energy. If you had the luxury for even a few days, did you find that your thoughts turned from suicidal ideation, to what is really beneath it: the desire to rest, and be free of the enormous strain that is being placed upon your mind?

But there are practicalities. I need to work so that I can eat and have a bed I can sleep in at all. If this is your obstacle, and it's certainly mine, then you need to see society with its medicines and its paradigms not as your friend, but as your enemy. You need to frame this problem so you can figure out a way around it. You need to be aware of it, otherwise it's going to keep smothering you. Stress is poison to a person suffering from depression, or PTSD, or whatever. Chances are you're already enduring increased cortisol levels from prior moments of trauma, abuse, neglect or just prolonged periods of severe anxiety. Neuroscience shows us that a person's interest in things decreases as their level of stress increases. If your condition is already causing you very high levels of stress, adding to that is going to make you want to kill yourself. It's just cause and effect.

If, in full knowledge of these things, you would not tell a twelve-year-old to man up and get on with the day, you should not be telling yourself that either. If you are, it's because you're seeing it from society's point of view, not your own.

I don't mean to say that rest is the only thing a person needs. But considering it's almost completely overlooked in mental health, I at least want to bring it to people's attention.
 
I think you are being a victim, you seem very lucid, your not always meant to be "happy" but life is what you decide to make of it, you need to go forward because we dont just do nothing. . the universe wants you to be in motion, its bigger than yourself, so take some responsibility for your life and try to have a good attitude!
 
I don't think I've ever met anyone who believed they were supposed to always be happy. But people who think they're supposed to be miserable all the time are just as rare, and yet depression is basically being miserable all the time.

The language you're using is actually precisely what I'm talking about - people who take a break are 'being victims' and it's a good thing to 'take responsibility' and 'have a good attitude'. These are platitudes.

It's an oversimplification to say that the universe is always in motion therefore you should be too. We spend a third of our lives asleep. We pause what we're doing - or at least we ought to - when we catch the flu.

The only reason we think mental health ought to be any different is because our busy, busy lives just find that nonsense too damn troublesome.

I appreciate the feedback though, and apologise if I sound harsh.
 
Flickering I could relate so much to everything you said. I have always needed my alone,do-nothing-space-out time as much as I've needed air, food and water. All emotions rise up in that kind of time. Creativity is born of that kind of time. Self-knowledge comes out of that kind of time. I think our driven culture sees it as laziness or wastefulness but it is just being still.
 
Rest is nearly impossible to come by in a society like this. I feel like all i do is work, and the days i am not working are spent resting or accomplishing tasks i needed to get done but could not because i was too busy already working. Being around other people and stress is incredibly draining. My alone time is also very precious to me, and too much work makes life very dull.

I see no end to it any time soon however because as it has already been stated society will not allow us to rest. We must remain productive at all times other wise we are wasting time. As though time is what makes are life meaningful. I would love to rest whenever im feeling sad or anxious, which is a lot of the time. I take lamictal and ativan in order to get on with my life as you put it, but this is not only not an answer but a lifetime addiction to the medication.

I heard meditation helps but it has not been easy for me to be consistent with it.
 
Hey I feel the same way ! as these guys, I'm just saying that when I HAVE to rest is usually cause I'm so depressed I feel sorry for myself and I forget that its bigger than just what I want... if I try to make a list of all the things I am so VERY GRATEFUL for , its a great way to start the day
 
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