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How to beat ‘depression’

Published: Sunday, February 7, 2010

Updated: Monday, February 8, 2010 07:02

    I am a Tufts alumnus who was back on campus last week while headlining Theta Chi's Comedy Night for Haiti. I picked up a copy of the Tufts Daily in the Mayer Campus Center and found the Jan. 25 Features article by Carter Rogers, "High expectations take their toll like never before."  

    While I can agree and say how hard it is and how we are surrounded by burdens and how it's impossible to get a job, make money, etc … that just isn't true. So I'd rather give you, my fellow Jumbos, a few pointers to help lessen the overwhelming troubles of life.

    You should know your environment. It is the job of mainstream news media to make the world seem as dangerous as possible. Fortunately or unfortunately, that is what sells. If I could break news stories into three categories, they would be: problems, distractions and solutions. Their purposes are to upset, to divert and to inform, respectively. Problems have actually been upgraded to catastrophes thanks to the economic recession, which is a contraction in the marketplace and not an apocalypse. Distractions are the reason we're stuck with Paris Hilton and forced to wonder where the "Jersey Shore" cast is going to show up next. And solutions may wait 'til page 10 of a publication when the other two categories take up the first nine.

    Also, the quantity of media has grown exponentially in the past decade with the advent and expansion of the Internet and social media. That's why terror and panic seem so rampant in our environment. Thanks so much, Ashton Kutcher, for getting in a race with CNN to see who could have one million followers first on Twitter.com. Because the more we see tweets about bloodshed or scandal, the more unsettled we'll feel.

    I could recommend two remedies for that: Either try avoiding the news for one week and see if your mood changes, or take a walk and see for yourself how dangerous the environment is or isn't.

    You should follow your nose. At the risk of sounding like a commencement speaker, don't let the pressure of finding a job run you ragged and don't let that first job define your career. A career is just a series of jobs. My first job was a day camp counselor. After college my first job was an intern for the National Hockey League. Now I'm a comedian — go figure. You're only looking for what you're going to do next, not what you're going to do for the next 50 years. I don't expect to be a comedian my whole life, but plans change (or stay the same).

    And don't feel like you have to change or compromise your integrity to fit in to some company or club. It's just like a relationship — the other person should like you for who you are. Another alternative is you could always make your own club. That's what Bill Gates did, that's what Tufts alum and eBay founder Pierre Omidyar (E '88) did and that's what Oprah Winfrey did times infinity.

    It's okay to seek out help. Communication is the universal solvent. Whether it's making up with your parents or getting back together with your girlfriend or boyfriend, it's all accomplished through communication. That's why counseling can be very helpful. While at Tufts I went to the Counseling and Mental Health Service once and got through every present problem and upset I had at the time, and when I walked out of the building, I felt the weight of the world off my shoulders. Why did it work? Because someone was listening to me and acknowledging what I had to say. That was really it. It's good to have a few people like those at a counseling center who can listen, because stuff happens.

    When there are cases that can go off the rails, this is when the person in the other chair suggests what is wrong with you. However, any medical diagnosis is not the best idea; it's one thing to have a friend offer two cents, but it's another when you're being told what your problem is and then it's given a label.


    Depression is a feeling, not an illness. Anyone can be in a funk, but if you're feeling down, it doesn't warrant you being labeled as something out of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. If someone has high blood pressure, that's something clinically proven that you can treat, but if I'm sad or feeling overwhelmed, that doesn't mean I need to be put in an arbitrary category. It may mean I need to take steps to handle my environment, whether it's a person, a group or a situation.

    Those are a few of the things I have applied to my life to keep the gloom away. Yes, the gloom sometimes returns when we don't want it to or when our schedule overwhelms us or we're overstressing about life's obstacles, but it's just gloom; it's not us. If we let it be us, we won't get anything done. Thankfully, we all know we are capable of getting a lot done because we all did get into Tufts in the first place.

    So do the next thing ahead of you, plan accordingly and have fun when you get there.

 

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7 comments Log in to Comment

Jumbolaya
Thu Feb 25 2010 01:51
To be fair, your advice is sound for people who are just feeling down, in a funk, or disheartened. But depression is a different beast, and it's not as simple to beat as just being given advice. I'm not saying pill-popping is a silver bullet, but don't dismiss it forthright. It can and has done a lot of good for people.
Anonymous
Mon Feb 22 2010 14:55
Thank God we aren't letting you come to Greek Jams again this year. I looked into your credentials before I we allowed you to perform this year and to admit, I was quite uneasy letting you perform after researching your Scientologist agenda. Thankfully, you didn't push any of that then, and, since your poor performance last year was obvious to the whole board, you won't have the opportunity to push your agenda this year.
D
Mon Feb 22 2010 14:01
Depression is a feeling AND an illness. It's unfortunate that we don't have separate terms. I understand your intention was not to belittle those who DO suffer from clinical depression, but please take care to be more sensitive in the future. For those of us dealing with clinical depression and more normal daily stresses at the same time, things can look a lot scarier. Sorry, one trip to mental health services is NOT going to fix me. And, please, it's not the news that makes me anxious--I don't even have a tv!--it's reports back from the job front from graduated friends and pressure from my parents that leave me tearing my hair out.

I appreciate that you were trying to give us some encouragement, so thank you for that, but a little more compassion and respect would make your message a lot more helpful.

Computer gal
Tue Feb 9 2010 03:27
Thanks for this article--I agree wholeheartedly. I was falsely labeled and put on medication unnecessarily which happens a lot. I have since found better solutions to feel good, and you mention some of them in your article.
Anonymous
Tue Feb 9 2010 00:47
a great piece. life can come at you at any time. physical causes can come from feeling depressed and can accompany it. look to your environment. the body's natural state is not to be ill.
Xander
Mon Feb 8 2010 23:07
Re: Anonymous
I sympathize with your knee jerk reaction, it does sound like he is advising us to try the garden hose before calling 911. However this is an op-ed aimed at the student body at-large. The advise is sensible. These are moderate solutions for mild changes in mood that most people experience. For most people sadness is a feeling and not an illness. Clinical depression is a serious disease, however that is not what the author is talking about. Mental illnesses are sometimes diagnosed necessarily. Someone who is slightly overweight needs to change their behavior, not get surgery and take pills. That isn't to say that a morbidly obese fellow doesn't need medical attention.
Anonymous
Mon Feb 8 2010 15:35
"Depression is a feeling, not an illness." I wonder whether it is your credentials as a comedian or your credibility after being "fixed" after a quick stop by Counseling and Mental Health Services that allows you to make such a patronizing, able-ist, and pathetically ill-informed statement. I'm glad that -- for you -- your statement rings true; however to dismiss all those who experience depression (which, despite what you communicate, can have physical causes requiring more than a friendly ear, which, yes, involves *diagnoses* to facilitate treatment) is ignorant and beneath a college newspaper.

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