" Depression " as a psychiatric term denotes a condition in which the
sufferer overreacts to stimulli. The feeling of sorrow and pain is too
much as to the degree of the circumstances causing it. Little slights
are blown all out of proportion and the individual becomes extremely
sensitive and overreacts to trivial transgressions. That which people
usually just shrug off are clutched to the bosoms by the depressives
and a person feels extreme pain where he shouldn't.
You are right Francis when you speak of neurological and psychological
 aspects of depression but the truth is that all moods and
thought-processes have a neurological basis and  behavioural diseases
are also treated with medication.
My point is that if a person sees the real causes of his feeling ,
with the help of medicines and therapy if necessary , he will realize
that he is being over-sensitive and thus bring himself to terms with
his malady and regain his equilibrium. He will then go about his life
calmly as the cause of his depression was trivial. Again there are
people who are living horrible lives and do not even dream of suicide.
Suicide is no solution , but just an escape from difficulties and if a
person just perseveres a little he might surmount his problems.

On Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 8:36 PM, frantheman <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> On 12 Jan., 15:33, RP Singh <[email protected]> wrote:
> Depressions are usually temporary and if a person
>> is patient most of the time it blows over and a man starts enjoying life. 
>> ... it is the weak and negative people who
>> commit suicide. They are not really suffering much , rather they have just
>> become negative and see everything in a morbid manner.
>
> You obviously know little of the suffering of depression, RP. Even on
> the neuro-physiological level, the imbalance of various neuro-
> transmitters in the synaptic gap between neurons - and particularly
> problems with regard to serotonin uptake - has been well observed and
> documented - it is the basis for the newer generations of
> pharmaceutical anti-depressants which have helped many (if not all)
> sufferers.
>
> I have personal experience of depression; it is now many years past,
> successfully treated with a mixture of medication and therapy. I
> wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy. I have had a number of friends who
> have ended their lives as a result of depression. I think of one, one
> of the strongest, sensitive and most loving persons I have known, in
> particular. He fought and suffered for years and powerlessly observed
> his life slowly but but inevitably disintegrating around him as a
> result. Shortly before he finally took his life he confided to a
> friend his fear that the suffering the enduring hopelessness he was
> experiencing was driving him mad.
>
> To state that "they are not really suffering much" is to show a
> profound lack of understanding, empathy and compassion.
>
> Francis

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