Are The Symptoms Of Depression Visible?
Are The Symptoms Of Depression Visible?
Gloom is a psychological instability and how would you realize you have it? Symptoms such as fever, runny nose, headache, and cough are easily felt. And they provide a rather clear signal that a person is sick with the flu. What about mental illness? Are the symptoms of depression visible? Here are a few situations showing side effects that appear to be undetectable yet are a sign of psychological maladjustment, for this situation, significant gloom (as well as bipolar despondency). The first scenario is that I am in "hibernate" mode. You can't wake up and sleep long past noon. Barely awake for lunch, I missed it many times. He takes an afternoon nap after being up for one to two hours for brunch. This pattern is permanent and it is fair to judge that I am a lazy person. I could also easily justify that 'I'm always tired. The second scenario is about feelings of helplessness and/or hopelessness that can be overwhelming and overwhelming. "There's nothing I can do," "My contribution wouldn't make the situation better," "She's sick, I can't help her feel better," "There are no solutions we can provide to our clients, we won't get our contract renewed." Many people, including me, would say that I lack persistence and determination to find solutions, I lack positivity, and I have a weak character. It's just easy to judge my performance and conclude that I'm helplessly useless. The third context is when unrest occurs. "What should I do?" “I can't sit still, I'd better pack my bag, maybe I should clear the dining table. Frustrated by my inability to get things done, I am irritated by my family's general comments. When the tolerance level drops, irritation escalates into anger or rage, unfortunately, directed at my family, those closest to my heart. So what do I take from this: an irritable day? Or it could be dismissed as another bad day, then no big deal. These seemingly. y harmless feelings and behaviors, what is it when I experience them for a week, two weeks, or three? Should I brush it off and/or accept that it's just me - I'm lazy, I'm weak-willed, I have a bad temper? I am in an age where the diagnosis of mental illness is mostly based on self-reported symptoms. I am lucky enough that my sibling showed me a newspaper clipping about depression and its symptoms 30 years ago. With information about depression in mind, albeit reluctantly, I saw my first psychiatrist in my teenage years. When I was alone, I tried to understand these common (and invisible) symptoms - tiredness, sleepiness, anger (and rage), feeling worthless, and at worst, suicidal

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