MrLoony wrote:
The thing is this: If you hold on to the past, let if affect your present and your future, then your life will always suffer for it. In order to have the best life you can, right now and in the future, the past must hold no power over you. Live for the present. If nothing else, live for the future. The past is dead; it is not for the living.
The question didn't ask how I was currently coping, so I didn't explain. I abandoned attachments to blaming myself for most of these problems once I realized that I had neurological differences that helped set me up for failure. Instead of realizing I had them and thus accounting for them, I simply tried to brute force my way through them. I don't really blame myself for that at this point.
My depression, while still an issue, is much less of one than it had been before that point.
Edit: I want to add that generally speaking, depression is not a simple mechanism that can be resolved easily by adopting particular perspectives. It is not something you can turn on and off at will or with specific beliefs and attitudes. It is a chronic long-term condition that has a severe impact on quality of life, and itself promotes cognitive distortions that makes it difficult to view things in any way but a negative light. When my depression is in full bore, you can explain to me all day that I shouldn't logically feel that way and my attitudes about particular events in my past are themselves illogical, but the fact is that I don't really care and I will probably tune you out.
Now why that one particular idea changed my depression for the better? I don't know. My guess is that I had tied up so much of my self-concept in being a failure who sabotages myself for no reason, that finally having a reason and being able to see it really didn't have anything to do with my motivations (transparent or hidden to me) took out some of the underpinnings for said depression. But this is not something that I would have believed from anyone else.
You cannot solve mental illness with logic. You might be able to help if you understand the logic that defines a particular person's mental illness(es) and help them work through that, but there is no "one size fits all" solution.
Last edited by Verdandi on 16 Jan 2011, 5:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.