My. Tesco Android Signal Is Poor
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Col...I Have been suffering from depression for the last year of my life, and recently got out of it..and the answer to your first Q...i dont know if i can answer that...sure we get tired and hate life, and hate everything that used to amuse us and make us laugh..Like Vinny100 said,"once you get use to your new job the pressure will lift." And he/she is right..i used to hate everything, well in my case it was because of school, and now that im out of school, my life is different..and ive learned to do what makes 'ME' happy...i would always do whatever i could to make other people happy..totally disregarding myself. Col, also dont be afraid to talk to other people about your problems, because there are soo many people out there who care about you, and would take the time to listen to your problems. Thats another thing that got me out of my depression... I thought i could handle it myself, then it got really bad...then one day i just started being open with it..and then i realized that i had so many people who cared about me...and now im happy! :)...and you can be to...and Col you can amout to anything u want to...if you have high goals, you can reach them, anyone can! So i hope this helps you out! I know i can ramble on about nothing from time to time...but i really do hope everything is ok with you, because i know how it feels, and i also know how it feel to be happy...and happy is where i want u to be! :) X X keep us posted on how things work out Col.. X X
ps..the people on AB are also great friends! :)
Hi Col, I'm sorry you're feeling depressed. It's hard to answer when you are "clinically depressed" - I agree that you should see your GP, and/or see a therapist.
I have on and off been depressed, and I will tell you a little about my experience. Usually I am a fairly happy, positive person. After my son was born, I just was not happy at all. I kept thinking I would be happier if only X would happen (X being any number of things - I had more free time, my son would sleep more, I would go back to work, I would be able to not work, etc). But then X would happen, and I wouldn't be any happier. I would cry for no reason, and not know why I was crying. I had a hard time enjoying and appreciating my son because I thought what I wanted was time to myself, and he (as every infant is) was so demanding of my time. I had my husband take over more and more of the baby-care, but didn't feel any less overwhelmed.
After an entire year (during which people would tell me they thought I was depressed and I would deny it) I finally realized that I had post-partum depression. I don't really know why I denied it before - probably it was because having depression meant not adjusting well, not doing something perfectly, and I am a big old perfectionist. What made me realize it was realizing that I was manufacturing reasons for being unhappy - and that I didn't know the real reasons.
I started seeing a therapist. It really helped pull me out of it, just to have someone to talk to who had experience with other people with depression. I highly recommend talk therapy, but like Andy said, anti-depressants may be in order too. You talk about being "intelligent enough" etc... don't think about it that way. Depression has a very physical, hormonal aspect that sometimes can't be reasoned away.