si red ug empz maoy tambal sa depression... kampay..
By the way, you need to eat right pud plus exercise
My former boss would always say "sound body, sound mind"
Audentes Fortuna Juvat
laughter is the best medicine. ayawg sigig huna2 anang problema kay molabay ra na.![]()
who's seriously depressed here? kanang dili ra arte2 nga 'depressed' ha.
someone nga nagtake ug meds or hv gone to a psychologist/psychia? kinsa inyo doc? please reply
@bordogoy
True, laughter is good, but to address that advice to someone suffering from depression is careless. Depression is a real disease, those who are truly suffering are truly struggling. It's 2014, with the availability of information on the Internet, there is no excuse to be careless and insensitive. Would you say the same to the number of people who are suffering from depression as an outcome to Yolanda? Or victims of rape and/or sexual abuse? Depression stems from a variety of causes, some genetics and some are triggered by life events. Those that have succumb to suicide because of overwhelming feeling of helplessness caused by the disease are no laughing matter or best be brushed off as something as careless as that expression you just made.
What if it depends on the size of your hippocampus? Do not confuse Clinical Depression with the abuse of the word depressed, they don't always mean the same thing, that word is so widely misused by non-sufferers. No one can dictate the series of life events a person goes through and how well can that person cope, if you fail at it it's not always your fault. If you keep brushing off people that way, you are adding to the stigma and will only discourage a true sufferer from seeking professional help, clinically depressed people needs help to get through life, have some compassion and choose your words appropriately next time. Whatever your examples are can never be compared to another for you simply don't have everyone's information about their life events, genetics/anatomy and predisposition to the disease.
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