S
spanishguy22
Enlightened
- Apr 9, 2019
- 1,003
I'm curious at what age depressed people here had their first encounter with depression.
I'm curious at what age depressed people here had their first encounter with depression.
When I was 15-16 I was hit hard with depression. I'm 28 now and it's back. Just wish I had the balls to hang myself.
Isolating, work, cats and videogames works wonders but it wont work forever. .......
I wish i had off button for feelings, except for my cats ;)
Same. 17 to 20 was when everything went downhill really quickI got depressed at at 15, however, I only feel like it actually reached mental depression when I turned 17 when I'd skip school due to it and harm myself. Before that I felt like it may have een but I honestly had no symptoms.
What I could gather from the poll confirmed my suspicions and the scientific studies
Same. 17 to 20 was when everything went downhill really quick
Your parents is crazy, 3 yrs old in therapy jeezI've probably always been depressed, my parents had me seeing a therapist at 3 years old, but it didn't become unbearable/constant until I was about 9. So I selected childhood to pre-puberty, even though I tried to make my first attempt at 7, but it wasn't realistic.
No argument there. It was more family therapy since we all were going, but the therapist would talk to us separately as well. I can actually still remember the therapist sitting me in front of a dollhouse asking me to reenact my life. I started getting individual therapy around 4 years old.Your parents is crazy, 3 yrs old in therapy jeez
Skeptical about what? I agree that they are partly responsible. Neither of them were in a healthy mindset to raise a child and should have dealt with their own demons instead of playing family and having a child as a bandaid.In all honesty I think depression is a made up illness.
Medical practitioners are just abusing the psychological process of how humans interpret words existing and correlate it with reality; as depression must be a real illness because the word exists and is heavily used by doctors. People either get assigned a good life or a bad life at birth and the outcome will make the psych okay or miserable about existence.
edit: Also @JadedGray your parents are insane and I'm skeptical but maybe they might be responsible for what you think is depression. Unhealthy behaviour from parents can result in lasting effects and when it happened during developmental stages of childhood.
No argument there. It was more family therapy since we all were going, but the therapist would talk to us separately as well. I can actually still remember the therapist sitting me in front of a dollhouse asking me to reenact my life. I started getting individual therapy around 4 years old.
Skeptical about what? I agree that they are partly responsible. Neither of them were in a healthy mindset to raise a child and should have dealt with their own demons instead of playing family and having a child as a bandaid.
Thank you for your kind words. By all means share your opinion, we're all here to do that. I think the main reason they had me in therapy wasn't because I was showing obvious signs of depression (that didn't start until I was 6 years old, when I wrote a story about suicide in school) but because they knew I was being raised in an unhealthy environment and wanted someone to explain why things were the way they were in a way that they couldn't and also for them to get help too (they both were depressed and suicidal). I think it was their way of making up for everything. They probably had good intentions and were just overwhelmed and needing guidance. My mother definitely had a bad upbringing. She was raised poor and her father was an abusive alcoholic. Her mother did the best she could having to raise her and her siblings pretty much on her own. My father didn't have a bad upbringing, but he seemed to be the black sheep of the family and didn't get along with them. He cut off all contact with his family before I was born and hasn't spoken to them in almost 30 years.I always have doubts in expressing my opinion concerning something like this subject because I rarely think its acceptable to make judgement about these things with certainty. I wasn't there to witness it or comprehend your life from your own outlook for the events of being forced into that situation. I'm thinking someone could have a positive impact from being brought to a therapist young and be grateful for it. In your case that didn't happen so maybe you being brought to a therapist shouldn't have happened or other factors were to blame for the negative outcome. I'm sad you experienced parents that had a child as a bandaid because that must mean they failed you a lot in life. Maybe they had shitty parents as well and placed too much faith in someone labeled a "professional" in how to living a happy life. Instead of just acting on what's necessary for a person to be happy and succeed in life.
No! That's awful. It won't kill you you'll be in excruciating pain and call emergenciesDanke for replying. I think I may try tonight. However, I'm trying to find out if I can mix bleach with alcohol to get it down easy. Not found anything cause of the search engine censorship :/
Our brain is total aids man...I remember my parents taking me to the psychologist since I was born practically, can't recall a time in my early years that I wouldn't be in that therapist's office. but when I first started getting depressed and wanting to ctb was at 7/8 years old. I don't remember how or why it happened. I guess depression doesn't always has a reason to be there, it just happens. Later I opened up some repressed memories of childhood trauma and I understood everything lmao. I have vivid memories of me praying to god to kill me every night when I was so young. Didn't want to be alive then, and i don't want to be alive now, just that now I have reasons. Haha.
I put early childhood too. Apparently I stopped eating when I was like 2 weeks old, which is probably the best an infant can come up with to ctb. My mother has "post-partum psychosis" on her death certificate and of course that affected me as well.
But I want to emphasise that after my late 20s (and after multiple ctb attempts, hospitalisations, spells of clinical depression, etc) I somehow got properly engaged with life. I haven't been depressed since then, and have enjoyed quite a lot in life. I'm going to ctb but not because of depression.
Yeah. It wasn't some "chemical imbalance" that made me humiliate myself all those times, never learn anything about the real world, withdraw into fantasy, and slack off until I was 30. Now I realize the horror of the life I've made for myself: no money, no degree, no friends (except old ones too nice to stop replying to occasional texts). Gimme the pill for THAT.In all honesty I think depression is a made up illness.
Medical practitioners are just abusing the psychological process of how humans interpret words existing and correlate it with reality; as depression must be a real illness because the word exists and is heavily used by doctors. People either get assigned a good life or a bad life at birth and the outcome will make the psych okay or miserable about existence.
edit: Also @JadedGray your parents are insane and I'm skeptical but maybe they might be responsible for what you think is depression. Unhealthy behaviour from parents can result in lasting effects and when it happened during developmental stages of childhood.