journal: severe depression, anorexia
Friday, March 5th, 2010{question}
im suffering very badly, if i die…you can remember me from this
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im suffering very badly, if i die…you can remember me from this
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Part of video series produced by the Health Research Foundation, Doris Rapp MD and Green Health Media.
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www.winbipolardisabilitybenefits.com Severe bipolar disease type 2 or bipolar ii disorder & can’t work? Claim your bipolar syndrome Social Security disability benefits. Free tips to save $$.
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In this video, I discuss a new study published in JAMA that calls into question the degree to which antidepressants are more effective than placebos for people with mild to severe depression. To read our coverage of this topic on PBB, go to www.psychotherapybrownbag.com To read the coverage of this article in the New York Times, check out www.nytimes.com www.nytimes.com www.nytimes.com
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The article that I read in this video can be found at psychcentral.com
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I am in my 30’s and have suffered from tourette syndrome, OCD[ severe] and chronic severe depression since my early teen years. I want to reach out to others who are suffering and show what i deal with and we can help each other, I love you all and your not alone
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Severe depression can be coped with by first exploring what thoughts and fantasies you have about your life. Discover how to cope with severe depression with advice from a psychologist in this free video on depression. Expert: Robert B. Hernandez Contact: www.discoveringmyself.com Bio: Robert B. Hernandez, psyd, received his doctorate in clinical psychology in 2001. Filmmaker: Paul Muller
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Does anyone ever feel that their mental problems are not as bad as they think they are? The reason I am asking is that I suffer from depression and mild anxiety. I am on medication for both and I was seeing a traditional therapist but after 2 years of seeing her have felt that it’s time to move on to cognitive therapy. So now I am seeing a cognitive therapist and I just started. I wonder if sometimes I think that we think that we have more of a mental problem than we really think we do. I hope no one thinks I am discrediting mental disorders. I am not trying to do that at all, I’m just wondering if anyone has ever felt this way.
Oh I am not trying to make it sound as if I am downplaying my depression. I have it, I am aware that it is most likely something that I am going to be living with for the rest of my life. It is better to know that I have this now than to have kept on going through life thinking that nothing was wrong. I guess what I was trying to say was that sometimes I wonder how I can be diagnosed with moderate depression when there are times where I have had severe cases of staying in bed all day and crying. Even after talking to my therapist and psychiatrist about it, they still think I am a moderate case and nothing too severe. SO I was just wondering if sometimes we make our own depression worse than what it is. It’s a good thing I’m going to cognitive therapy, I heard that this type of therapy helps you become more aware of why you react to things the way you do and why you feel the way you do and how to change it.
Thanks everyone for your insight.
Product view DescriptionPhilip Barker severe depression is that it is possible to reach deeply wounded back and desperate person, and together they take their first step towards security, growth and independence as a logical and rational program to regain control of thought and activity. The message of the book is that depression is not personal, but that the patient has and therefore can solve this most debilitating experience prolonged. . . More>>
Product view DescriptionPhilip Barker severe depression is that it is possible to reach deeply wounded back and desperate person, and together they take their first step towards security, growth and independence as a logical and rational program to regain control of thought and activity. The message of the book is that depression is not personal, but that the patient has and therefore can solve this most debilitating experience prolonged. . . More>>
Product Description’My journey through life has led me through a single, but the incident seven years. It was a terrible nightmare of torture and detention. I am one of the lucky ones who have survived and recovered. I hope that through my story, I will give you some ideas in this kind of suffering and hope that the stigma attached to mental illness, thereby reducing. “The extraordinary and moving story of a doctor and mother of four children who lived seven years… More>>
Product Description’My journey through life has led me through a single, but the incident seven years. It was a terrible nightmare of torture and detention. I am one of the lucky ones who have survived and recovered. I hope that through my story, I will give you some ideas in this kind of suffering and hope that the stigma attached to mental illness, thereby reducing. “The extraordinary and moving story of a doctor and mother of four children who lived seven years… More>>
Life After Darkness: A Doctor’s Journey Through Severe Depression
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Hyperinflation baked in the cake latimesblogs.latimes.com Deflation????????? www.forbes.com Printing Press revved up and ready to go www.nytimes.com Asia will eventually drop the dollar with the rest of the world finance.yahoo.com Foreigners slash US investments www.ft.com Game Over, System malfunction www.pensiontsunami.com UN PANEL SAYS, DUMP DOLLAR www.reuters.com
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In this video, Harold Cameron, Chief of Helping People, and Consumer Advocate shares his personal story of how he overcame severe debilitating depression and has become a happier and more positive person.
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This mental exercise is meant to disconnect you from old guilt you laid on yourself after the death of a person or animal you were very attached to. Every person I work with having depression I do this type of disconnect therapy. They often say afterwards, “I feel lighter.” It takes about 10 seconds of actual disconnect therapy.
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