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“Happy now?”: An honest and magnificent new essay about depression by Anna Quon

Thursday, November 26th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesThe UpDown ReportBooks & Book Reviews

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This year I fulfilled a lifelong dream of becoming a published novelist. The whole process of getting my book “Migration Songs” ready for print was a daunting one. My jewel of an editor saw me through the ups and downs, delivering endless pep talks to get me over the hurdles of insecurity. One minute I’d be fine, the next, sunk, but she always knew how to keep me moving from sunk to relieved. I felt like I never depended so much on another person for my mental health.

The novel is published and selling well. After a long lean stretch, I am bringing in some money from a project or two that I’ve been waiting on. And I have the support of my family and friends. But somehow I seem to be struggling with feelings of emptiness and futility.

On the surface, I have nothing to be depressed about. But does depression have to be “about” something?

We have been taught that the propensity for depression can be partly genetic and partly attributable to early life experiences, and it is well-recognized that the condition is not always situation-based. But for a long time I have believed that if I were able to change my thinking, I would be able to avoid depression.

I have consciously attempted to exchange negative thoughts for positive ones, successfully navigating a trip to Russia in 2006 on the basis of encouraging self-talk. It also helped that I was taking my medication as prescribed, as I continue to do today. But the feelings of spiritual loss have not abated.

I know I have been stressed-out lately, from dealing with certain people in my life, and because of money woes. I have also been feeling lost because of not having a clear work schedule. I shouldn’t be surprised… these are familiar feelings, and familiar scenarios. But I suppose I thought publishing my novel might just create a new kind of happiness that would not easily disperse.

Just as depression is not necessarily situation-based, neither is happiness. There may be nothing in the world that can make me happy, and only one person in the world who can—myself. And maybe, there will be times when even I, however much I work on thinking positively, may not be able to pull myself up out of the muck.

I once thought gratitude was the answer, and that if I could be grateful for what I have, the good things in my life, that I would magically be happier. It’s possible that I have forgotten to act on that lesson. But it’s also possible that there is no magic bullet, that there will be times when we just can’t seem to turn our dark moods around.

I’m going to keep trying the things that have worked in the past to increase my happiness, and the things that seem promising. But now that I am older, I am also prepared to live with a certain amount of darkness and pain.

The quest for happiness seemed like a worthwhile one, when I was young. It still seems reasonable to hope for happiness, but perhaps it is not so reasonable to expect feelings of happiness to be the inevitable and lasting conclusion of getting something “right” (whether it be thinking or attitude or being good or living a certain way).

Happiness may well be the by-product of seeing beauty in the world and other people. It may be something which must pass, the way anger and sadness do. It may be that some people have a natural talent for happiness, while others have to work at it. And it may be that our memories of happiness can feed our souls with as much light as actual moments of happiness do.

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I have been happy, and have no doubt that I will be again. I also know that the times in between will not kill me, and perhaps most importantly, that they are not a punishment for having done something wrong. I am open to the idea that I can change something in order to be happier but I will refuse to assign blame to myself if I don’t achieve the kind of happiness we all hope for. Happiness, after all, is not a test, but a state of being that I believe we are all born to recognize, enjoy and long for.

My editor probably doesn’t realize she was also a kind of happiness coach for me while I was revising my novel. I got by on her kind and enthusiastic words until the next wave of despair hit. Maybe I can learn to be my own shrink and cheerleader, or maybe I can simply take what comes and deal with it then.

I’ve never liked unhappiness, but maybe I can learn to endure it a little, while waiting for the next batch of happiness to wash up.

Like shells on the beach of my life.

Anna Quon is a Nova Scotia-based writer, and a much-cherished ongoing contributor to Irked Magazine. To purchase her critically-acclaimed debut novel click here.

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A riveting online chat with Pulitzer Prize winning (Aspie) author, editor, music critic, producer and professor Tim Page

Saturday, October 31st, 2009
Filed under: ThemesAuties & AspiesInterviewsBooks & Book Reviews

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Tim Page, author of “Parallel Play: Growing Up with Undiagnosed Asperger’s” and a Pulitzer Prize winning music critic, was online at washingtonpost.com Tuesday, October 27 to take readers’ questions and to discuss the effects of Asperger’s syndrome on his life and coping mechanisms he uses to treat it.

The entire conversation was fascinating (and well worth the read), but in case you’re in a hurry…here are some excerpts from Tim’s responses that leapt off the page:

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Wichita State University’s Psychology Department offering FREE 12-session program for adults coping with depression

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesThe UpDown Report, Campaign Watch

Wichita State University’s Psychology Clinic is offering a free 12-session program for adults coping with depression. ”We are looking for as many people as we can get,” said Rob Zettle, the psychology professor at WSU who is conducting the clinic. No drugs are prescribed, Zettle said, but people who are currently on depression medication can participate . . . Participants will be screened and evaluated for the program. One-on-one sessions will then be scheduled. For more information or to schedule a screening evaluation, contact Zettle at 316-978-3081 or robert.zettle@wichita.edu. [via]

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Mental Health Problems On Campus: Nationwide Push For Colleges To Prioritize Psychiatric Support

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesThe UpDown Report

Arcadio Morales, one of six residence deans at Stanford University, has lived in an apartment in the campus dorms for 15 years, often fielding late-night phone calls from students about everything from Frisbee injuries to mid-term anxiety to alcohol poisoning. He says some arriving freshmen have always packed emotional baggage along with their laptops and books. But the mix of problems he’s called to weigh in on has become more serious in recent years.

“Early on,” he says, “most of the issues that surfaced were roommate issues, compatibility issues.” He still gets that sort of thing, along with the calls from “very involved” parents who want him, for example, to go down the hall and wake up their son or daughter. But these days, Morales is getting more calls about students in need of substantial psychiatric support.

“We’re getting students that wouldn’t have been here 10 years ago,” Morales says, “because they’re on antidepressants or antipsychotic medication, and they’re functioning fairly well.” But it can be a big challenge for colleges when these students have crises, he says.

National epidemiological studies confirm that what Morales is seeing is happening on campuses nationwide, irrespective of the type of college or its size …

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Continue reading this very important NPR report
Listen to the corresponding NPR audio segment

Then…

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According to Psychiatrist Dr. Catherine Harmer and her team of researchers at Oxford University…

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesThe UpDown Report

Antidepressant

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Antidepressants “work instantly”

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TONY CLEMENS: “Thank God for the Ontario Health Insurance Plan”

Sunday, October 25th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesBum Deal

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You know how much homeless blogger Tony Clemens’ recently prescribed medications cost per month???

Click here to find out >>

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In other news, Tony’s been “evicted” by the new guys in town >>

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The Utterly Capable Left Thumb Blogger follows up with Nurse Ratched’s superiors!

Friday, September 4th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesCerebral Ballsy, Campaign Watch

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On Monday, we clued you into the situation.

Today…

Read Glenda’s “Response to Nurse Ratched”!

& then…

Buy Glenda’s truly inspiring book!

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The Left Thumb Blogger does it again!

Monday, August 31st, 2009
Filed under: ThemesCerebral Ballsy

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Glenda Watson Hyatt (aka The Left Thumb Blogger, aka The Red Hot Motorcycle Mama) is a phenomenally talented writer, public speaker and entrepreneuse. On her award-winning and always-fascinating blog, she regularly shares her experiences living with cerebral palsy to motivate and inspire others to think about how they perceive their own situation and their own world around them. She does all this by typing with only her left thumb!

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CLICK HERE to read a very, very,

very, very, very, very, very, very,

very, very, very, VERY powerful

essay that Glenda wrote recently

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And click here to read all of Glenda’s Irked posts

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Jasmine Oore’s short (and funny) film about…bowel disease!

Friday, August 21st, 2009
Filed under: Irked Videos

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The winner of the 2009 Short Film Faceoff—a competition co-sponsored by CBC Television in the Maritimes and the Atlantic Film Festival Association—is Glamour Guts, directed by Jasmine Oore (who was diagnosed with Crohn’s disease as a teen and had her colon removed in 2002). Oore’s win includes a $35,000 development/production deal from the CBC for her next project. The film has been described as “a three-minute blast of furious cinematic whimsy detailing one woman’s recovery from permanent digestive rearrangements” and “a shrewdly timed, freeze-frame-filled laugh riot.”

Bowel Disease has never been this sexy, glamorous, or in vogue!

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ANTI-BULLYING CRUSADE: Jaylen Arnold’s Tourette’s challenge!

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009
Filed under: Campaign Watch, Irked VideosThemesAuties & AspiesQuIrked Kids

Jaylen_Arnold_title_graphic (Description: Jaylen Arnold, 8, is seen here with one of the wristbands like the ones he given out to his friends and other people at his school. The wristband represents Tourette's syndrome awareness.) (Photo credit: Paul Johnson/The Ledger)

The website jaylenschallenge.org is the dream of a wonderful little 8-year-old boy named Jaylen Arnold. Jaylen suffers from Tourette Syndrome. He wants to educate people about bullying, bringing attention to the difficulties he faces in his day to day living. He hopes to make you laugh, make you cry, but most importantly make you aware that those with disabilities are not only normal—but incredibly special people. With your help and support he can spread the word and teach people to help…not bully.

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