Prudie - // This is the thing, my perception of depression and others with little experience may be becquie off the mark. I do feel it's often a self-diagnosed illness when that's not the problem at all. Going out and exercising in the country for example is a recognised activity to help those with depression but standing in a pub with mates or in a restaurant and actually enjoying yourself is not surely.
If people can't face work that is probably a problem with work if life outside is still fine. That's not depression although it may be a related mental health issue such as anxiety. //
Forgive me for banging my personal drum, but this issue means a lot to me.
One of the major issues with Depression is the confusion over its meaning - which is why i always capitalise is to emphasise its status as a recogniseable condition, like cancer, and honestly about as serious.
When people hear the word 'depression', they think it's the same as being 'depressed' and it's not at all.
Being 'depressed' is part of the human condition, everyone feels it from time to time, and a change of scene, some exercise, a distraction like a film or music, can usually change it quite easily.
Depression is a deeply serious mental illness which pole-axes the sufferer and plunges them into a nightmare world where reality vanishes and the thought of continued existence in this state starts to make suicide look like a really attractive option.
It can be treated with medication sometimes in conjunction with therapy and support, but believe me, anyone who thinks that is like the occasional 'down' feeling of being depressed is way off the mark.
I firmly believe it should be re-named, to avoid the standard confusion I have outlined.
It should have a name that rings bells in the way that the word 'cancer' does - because it is every bit as traumatic and life-changing, but for now, I content myself with trying to adjust the thinking of people who happily, and amen to it, have no direct experience of this horrendous illness.
That's why, in my view, being diagnosed with Depression and then jaunting off on social media is foolish behaviour, and will only increase the disparity between society's perception of Depression, and the myriad other conditions that are stuck under its umbrella.
OK - rant over - thanks for reading.