Health – Depression & Broken
Heart
by Teow Aun
Chew
zone3
You don’t have to suffer in silence. In most cases of panic attack, it
usually starts with depression. A female reporter in Hong Kong who
successfully juggled the demands of writing for publications around the
world suddenly suffered panic attack. She often had panic attacks as she
was overwhelmed by feelings of isolation, hopelessness, inadequacy and
failure. She would always excuse herself and pretended to have urgent
private calls to make so that she could get out and calm down.
A cartoonist for a famous Japanese magazines; suddenly hit a dry spell
in 1986 and she was afraid to get out of bed in the morning. She stopped
eating and lost seven kilos within a few days. She was left without
getting any assignments for a month and spent her time lying in bed,
smoking and drinking and was overwhelmed with thoughts of dying. Both the
female reporter and cartoonist were suffering from clinical
depression.
There are millions of people like them and they kept the illness to
themselves. In Japan alone there are more than six millions people
suffering from depression according to Dr Takahashi Toru of the Toru
Clinic in Tokyo. It is estimated that one in 13 people aged 24 to 64
suffered from depression according to a study done by Singapore National
Mental Health survey.
We seldom hear about depression just thirty years ago but the world is
different now. People were different then, but presently many human beings
have lost their value of life. Many have lost their conscience and killing
is everywhere. People live in fear from many kinds of threats and even in
the comfort of their homes, danger is there. There is no peace even to
just go marketing for fresh vegetables. A bomb may explode anytime,
anyplace.
Financial security is one of the main causes for depression. Jobless
people or those hardly can make end meet, are usually victims of
depression which can after some time of suffering start to have panic
attacks. Depressive disorders range from dysthymia – low grade, chronic
depression – to bipolar disorder, or manic depression, which causes
extreme swings between depressive lows and manic high. Depression remains
widely misunderstood and sufferers lead a double life. One minute full of
confidence and another minute worse than a little mouse when panic attack.
Depression is a taboo among Chinese and if people know that you are
depressed, they will avoid you.
I should say broken heart is the worst mental blues and almost everyone
gets the blues once in a lifetime. Those who have not experience it are
lucky or maybe they have never fallen in love before. They will not be
able to grasp the anguish depression brings. It’s so emotionally intense
that it paralyses you and says one sufferer, “You never know when it will
end, the pain is so overwhelming that you want to end it all.”
People will sometimes give advice with the best intentions for broken
heart but says Siti Mohammad, a young female accountant who has lived with
depression for much of her life: “Sometimes my relatives will tell me to
look at the positive side of things. They say, ‘You have to be strong and
believe in God.’ They make it sound as if I could just snap out of it. If
it was that simple, I wouldn’t be like this.”
Depression is often inadequately treated or not treated at all because
the truth of broken heart may not be admitted by the sufferers. For
instance, many Malays believe the emotions lie in the liver and will
complain about stomach soreness rather than admit to depression. Among the
Chinese, the heart is often seen as the source of emotions, so they
complain about chest discomfort. Singapore National University’s Kua says
these cultural factors lead to misdiagnosis or no diagnosis at all in as
many as one-third of cases.
For the elderly, physical ailments can mask symptoms of depression (it
is often confused with Alzheimer’s disease), and there is a belief, even
in the medical community, that depression is simply a fact of an older
person’s life. According to a study conducted in the 1980s by Dr Lee Aik
Hoe, president of the Malaysian Mental Health Association, showed that
three-quarters of people who had attempted suicide also suffered from
depression.
Rose Lee’s depression nearly killed her. As a teenager, she tumbled
into a black pit and said, “I was severely depressed – the pain was
terrible. It seemed logical to kill myself.” Richard Ng of Kuala Lumpur
said he lost his father to suicide. “He displayed signs of depression –
being withdrawn and losing his appetite – signs that I recognized but did
nothing about, but when he committed suicide, I was shattered.”
The road to recovery is a tough one but it can be treated. If it is not
because of broken heart, then the chances of recovery is good with
medication. If it is because of broken heart, then there is no medicine
that can cure a broken heart. There are many drugs that physicians can
prescribe and certain antidepressants really work effectively so as to
allow the sufferers to get on with life. But drug may have side effects
like insomnia and sexual dysfunction, professional help is advised in such
a case to take the right type and also avoid the risk of taking an
overdose.
One of the best rescues is interpersonal and cognitive counselling.
Therapy can help to change a patient’s thinking and reappraise their
external circumstances. Interpersonal therapy focuses on specific-related
problems, while cognitive therapy tries to counter the feelings of
worthlessness and hopelessness that plague those who are depressed. In
Malaysia the “Befrienders” is doing an excellent voluntarily job to make
life worth living. The 24-hour helpline, modelled on the Samaritans in the
United Kingdom, is one of the oldest services in Asia. It has more than
200 volunteers and fielded 24,000 calls a year.
Suicide is a grave sin according to spiritual teachings in almost every
religion. Certain religion says that if a person commits suicide, he will
also commit suicide for his next seven future lives. I had a relative who
committed suicide many years ago. She was one of the most beautiful women
in my hometown and married to one of the richest men there. Very fortunate
during her younger days because of her beauty, but when her husband passed
away early in life, she was cheated of everything she possessed by a
conman who only wanted her properties. Unable to take the pain of her
broken heart and loss of all her possessions, she took her life.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
T.A Chew had gone through a very severe broken heart in 1993.
Fortunately six months before it happened, Goddess of Mercy showed him a
miracle and he realized that Heaven loves him more and it is unconditional
love. He understands very well the pain and it is only through doing good
deeds and meritorious works that broken hearts can be mended fast.
Website: http://www.white-sun.com/
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