A holistic guide to understanding and treating depression examines how common symptoms of depression can enhance human understanding of self-identity, explains how to use depression as a transformative experience, and offers a range of alternative therapies to treat the problem. 15,000 first printing.
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<b>Jonathan Zeuss</b>, M.D., completed medical school in Australia, with residencies in conventional medicine and psychiatry, and has studied herbalism, nutrition, Asian medicine, and homeopathy. Currently he is a physician in the Department of Psychiatry at Good Samaritan Regional Medical Center in Phoenix. He is the author of <i>The Natural Prozac Program: How to Use St. John's Wort, the Antidepressant Herb.</i>
Wisdom of Depression: A Guide to Understanding and Curing Depression Using Natural Medicine,</b> holistic physician Dr. Jonathan Zuess explains how the activation of symptoms such as insomnia, preoccupation with one's problems, soul-searching, and the desire to be alone are natural reactions to our harried lives. The initial stage of depression is designed to enhance our ability to focus inward and find solutions to difficult emotional challenges; in many ways our bodies and minds are forcing us to create a contemplative environment much like the vision quest of native cultures or the monastic quiet of a Western retreat. <br><br>However, if this process goes on for too long, we can become "stuck," mired in an unproductive, even painful cycle. The gentle, alternative therapies in this informative and practical book help restart the healing work of depression, instead of simply cutting it short. As an example, the herb St. John's wort enhances the dreaming cycle--an intensive problem
Chapter 1
HEALING TRANSFORMATIONS
What the caterpillar calls the end of the world, the master calls a butterfly.
--Richard Bach
The secret of life is in the shadows and not in the open sun; to see anything at all, you must look deeply into the shadow of a living thing.
--Ute Saying
It is the paradoxical secret of transformation itself, since it is in fact in and through the shadow that lead is transformed to gold.
--Carl Jung
Depression is a quest for vision; its essence is transformation. Depression wells up and encompasses us for a time in a state of painful, dream-saturated formlessness, but its true purpose is to provide the opportunity for healing insight, renewal, and reintegration.
Though we may not have recognized it, almost all of us have gone through this process, either partially or fully, several times in our lives. Most of us can think back to difficult times when we've lost a lot of sleep, felt irritable, and our appetite changed. Depression is one of the basic responses of human beings, produced when we encounter a difficult emotional challenge. As I'll show you, it is a natural and healthy response, and is actually specifically designed to help us deal with problems. It only becomes an illness if something goes badly wrong with it.
Consider the story of Andrea, a young woman who had come to a crisis point in her path. As you'll see, because she respected and worked with the wisdom of her depressed response, it healed and enhanced her life as it was designed to do.
Andrea's Story
Andrea could not understand why she was feeling depressed--everything was going so well for her. A financially successful real estate agent in her late thirties, she had what most people would consider to be a very comfortable life. She was married to a caring and supportive man, and a nanny helped look after her two elementary school-aged children. She owned two houses and three cars. Her mother lived nearby, and they got along together well.
But somehow, sneaking up within her over the past few weeks was the suspicion that she was a failure. She was plagued with senseless, recurring thoughts that she was useless. At work, she felt unusually anxious in meetings--her heart would pound and her mouth would go dry. Social occasions, too, were becoming a kind of torture. She was respected for her success, but putting on a cheerful face was a strain, and she felt like a fraud.
She would lie awake at night worrying about trivial things. As she lay in the tangle of bedclothes, her mind paced restlessly through inner, winding corridors. And she dreamed:
She stood barefoot on the cold cement floor in an aisle between rows of gleaming office furniture. She was in a large factory, and there was new-looking machinery in it. But it was strangely still and silent. There were no people there.
She woke feeling very disturbed. The next day, she was cranky and impatient from lack of sleep. The dream came back to her again the next night, and this time she woke up feeling exhausted. She canceled the appointments she had scheduled for that day and tried to get some rest.
Once the children were off to school, she sat in bed, daydreamed, and wrote in her journal. As she mulled over the dream, she realized that the furniture reminded her of her fathers office, which she had visited as a child. It was at the time when he had been promoted to division manager in the large company he worked for. She remembered that visit well, since it was the last time she'd seen him at work. A few months after his promotion, he was killed in a car accident.
Suddenly her dream made sense to her: the shiny office furniture and the eerie absence of people. She understood that as a child she had connected the two events in her mind--her father's shining success at the office and his tragic death. Success is dangerous, the dream was telling her; no one can remain there. And as she thought about it now, she felt a sudden stab of anger at her father for having been at work, away from her for so much of his time, and for having been so successful.
On a subconscious level now, she understood that her own success in business also felt dangerous to her. Her heart had been trying to tell her this as it pounded in her chest during meetings. These vague feelings were compounded by her nagging worries that she was neglecting her children because of her work schedule. The real danger of success in work, she realized, was that it can take you away from your children--as it had done with her father.
This complex mixture of issues--unresolved grief, negative beliefs from her childhood, and a desire to spend more time with her children--had been partly submerged in her unconscious mind. Her symptoms of depression had been a sign that her mind and body were struggling to resolve the conflict. Because she was willing to pay attention to her dreams, the issues had been brought to light. Now she was able to add the resources of her conscious mind to deal with them.
Andrea decided to cut down her work hours, from her previous sixty or sixty-five hours per week to a more reasonable forty. She accomplished this by taking on an associate. This improved her lifestyle tremendously; with her associate covering much of the after-hours work, Andrea had more time for her children and partner. She was also able to set aside time for herself for a daily morning walk.
Within a very short time Andrea experienced a dramatic improvement in her mood. She felt that for the first time in her life she was fully actualizing her priorities. For her, the depressed response had been an important step in the process of her self's unfolding.
As you'll discover in this book, stories like hers are not rare. If the depressed response is respected, and treated properly, they are more the rule than the exception.
Our Bodymind's Healing Responses
Every disease is a physician.
--Irish Proverb
We usually think of our body and mind as somehow being independent of each other. The truth is that they are so inter-dependent that they might really just be different ways of describing the same thing. I like to refer to them with a single term, the bodymind, because it expresses their essential oneness.
The human bodymind has a profound ability to heal itself. Over the millennia of evolution, built-in healing mechanisms have been developed to protect us from all sorts of problems: infections, poisons, physical trauma, and even psychological difficulties. When these healing mechanisms are activated, they cause major changes in our bodymind, changes that are designed to help us overcome or adapt to problems. Many things can be altered: the functioning of our cells and organs, the level of hormones, the body's temperature, the amount of energy we feel, the sleep/wake cycle, and even our mood.
But these healing changes in themselves can be distressing. In fact, most of the symptoms of illness that we experience are actually produced by our bodymind as it struggles to deal with and overcome the underlying problems.
Consider the following example: You unknowingly ate a toxic substance. Your bodymind would then respond with changes specifically designed to overcome the effect of the toxin. Your brain's built-in vomiting centers would be activated, causing nausea and vomiting in order to expel the toxin. You would also lose your appetite, encouraging you to rest your bowels and allowing you to recover. Your healing responses would thus be acting wisely to overcome the problem, even though all that you might be conscious of is that you're feeling very sick and distressed. You might mistakenly think that your vomiting is itself the problem rather than the solution.
Another example: You were exposed to a flu virus. Your bodymind would respond with changes specifically...
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