Fooling yourself with delusions of a better time, and laughing it off is the easiest way to deal with the problem, but is it really the best way?
Quote from: Prime Gestalt on June 28, 2015, 10:39:34 PMFooling yourself with delusions of a better time, and laughing it off is the easiest way to deal with the problem, but is it really the best way?I know you don't like when I do this, but I'm just going to try and compare this with my own experiences that I think are remotely similar. People are always telling me that, because of my pessimism, I'm setting myself up not for disappointment, but... I'm sort of inadvertently creating a self-fulfilling prophecy. Things only end up sucking the worst when I convince myself that it's going to suck. And in some ways, I think that's true. My own poor attitude about a situation often results in the situation being substantially worse than if I hadn't told myself, "This is gonna suck. I know this is gonna suck."And I know it's more of an "attitude" problem for you, of course, but do you think that... when you type things like, "fooling yourself," "delusions," "laughing it off"... Do you think you might be setting yourself up for a negative experience? Because I'd like to tell you that those thoughts are not what I'd call delusional. That, above of all, is what bothers me the most. If you want to be "happier," you have to be... I don't want to say "open-minded", because that's not what I mean, but it's the closest thing. Because I know you're obviously open-minded, and you are willing, but...Clearly, there's something missing, and I can't really... put my finger on it. Maybe motivation.Like, do you feel like you're "getting enough" out of your life?Do you not foresee yourself "getting enough" in the future?
I'm just at a loss for what you want to hear sometimes.
Quote from: Verbatim on June 29, 2015, 12:00:19 AMI'm just at a loss for what you want to hear sometimes. People aren't always looking for magic words that will heal them. Sometimes just chatting, venting the frustrations helps an inkling.
Quote from: Prime Gestalt on June 29, 2015, 12:09:51 AMQuote from: Verbatim on June 29, 2015, 12:00:19 AMI'm just at a loss for what you want to hear sometimes. People aren't always looking for magic words that will heal them. Sometimes just chatting, venting the frustrations helps an inkling.Fair enough. I guess my question still stands, then--if you know any others with dysthymia, have you observed how they cope with it, and is there anything that they do that you haven't tried or considered trying yet? I would imagine that medication is the most popular method, but as you mentioned, it can be expensive--not to mention, potentially dangerous.
Well, that's the point of the thread. I know a few people here suffer similarly, most for better reasons than myself. In real life, I have no luck (or is it lucky?) in knowing others with Dysthymia.And I've already been down the medication route; those results ranged from greater lethargy to major depression and more frequent panic attacks.
And yet, I never think that I should end it all. That'd just be silly, it's just a bad day. I'll sleep better tomorrow, soon my problems will be behind me. Fooling yourself with delusions of a better time, and laughing it off is the easiest way to deal with the problem, but is it really the best way? Medication's fine and dandy, but not everyone has the time or money to flip through the catalog of prescriptions the doctor has to sell to meet his monthly quota. So really, what else can you do besides grit your teeth and take the pains in stride?