-
"I felt a funeral in my brain,
-
and mourners to and fro
-
kept treading, treading til I felt
-
that sense was breaking through.
-
And when they were all were seated,
-
a service, like a drum,
-
kept beating, beating,
-
til I felt my mind was going numb.
-
And then I heard them lift a box
-
and creak across my soul
-
with those same boots of lead again,
-
then space began to toll,
-
as if the heavens were a bell
-
and being were an ear,
-
and I, and silence, some strange race wrecked
-
solitary here.
-
Just then, a plank in reason broke,
-
and I fell down and down
-
and hit a world at every plunge,
-
and finished knowing then."
-
We know depression through metaphors.
-
Emily Dickinson was able to convey it in language,
-
Goya in an image.
-
Half the purpose of art
-
is to describe such iconic states.
-
As for me, I had always thought myself tough,
-
one of the people who could survive
-
if I'd been sent to a concentration camp.
-
In 1991, I had a series of losses.
-
My mother died,
-
a relationship I'd been in ended,
-
I moved back to the United States
-
from some years abroad,
-
and I got through all of those experiences intact.
-
But in 1994, three years later,
-
I found myself losing interest in almost everything.
-
I didn't want to do any of the things
-
I had previously wanted to do,
-
and I didn't know why.
-
The opposite of depression
-
is not happiness, but vitality,
-
and it was vitality
-
that seemed to seep away from me in that moment.
-
Everything there was to do
-
seemed like too much work.
-
I would come home
-
and I would see the red light
flashing on my answering machine,
-
and instead of being thrilled to hear from my friends,
-
I would think,
-
"What a lot of people that is to have to call back."
-
Or I would decide I should have lunch,
-
and then I would think that
I'd have to get the food out
-
and put it on a plate
-
and cut it up and chew it and swallow it,
-
and it felt to me like the Stations of the Cross.
-
And one of the things that often gets lost
-
in discussions of depression
-
is that you know it's ridiculous.
-
You know it's ridiculous while you're experiencing it.
-
You know that most people manage
-
to listen to their messages and eat lunch
-
and organize themselves to take a shower
-
and go out the front door
-
and that it's not a big deal,
-
and yet you are nonetheless in its grip
-
and you are unable to figure out any way around it.
-
And so I began to feel myself doing less
-
and thinking less
-
and feeling less.
-
It was a kind of nullity.
-
And then the anxiety set in.
-
If you told me that I'd have to be
-
depressed for the next month,
-
I would say, "As long I know it'll be
over in November, I can do it."
-
But if you said to me,
-
"You have to have acute anxiety for the next month,"
-
I would rather slit my wrist than go through it.
-
It was the feeling all the time
-
like that feeling you have if you're walking
-
and you slip or trip
-
and the ground is rushing up at you,
-
but instead of lasting half a
second, the way that does,
-
it lasted for six months.
-
It's a sensation of being afraid all the time
-
but not even knowing what it is that you're afraid of.
-
And it was at that point that I began to think
-
that it was just too painful to be alive,
-
and that the only reason not to kill oneself
-
was so as not to hurt other people.
-
And finally one day, I woke up
-
and I thought perhaps I'd had a stroke,
-
because I lay in bed completely frozen,
-
looking at the telephone, thinking,
-
"Something is wrong and I should call for help,"
-
and I couldn't reach out my arm
-
and pick up the phone and dial.
-
And finally, after four full hours
of my lying and staring at it,
-
the phone rang,
-
and somehow I managed to pick it up,
-
and it was my father,
-
and I said, "I'm in serious trouble.
-
We need to do something."
-
The next day I started with the medications
-
and the therapy.
-
And I also started reckoning
-
with this terrible question:
-
if I'm not the tough person
-
who could have made it
through a concentration camp,
-
then who am I?
-
And I have to take medication,
-
is that medication making me more fully myself,
-
or is it making me someone else?
-
And how do I feel about it
-
if it's making me someone else?
-
I had two advantages as I went in to the fight.
-
The first is that I knew that objectively speaking,
-
I had a nice life,
-
and that if I could only get well,
-
there was something at the other end
-
that was worth living for.
-
And the other was that I had
access to good treatment.
-
But I nonetheless emerged and relapsed,
-
and emerged and relapsed,
-
and emerged and relapsed,
-
and finally understood
-
I would have to be on medication
-
and in therapy forever.
-
And I thought, "But is it a chemical problem
-
or a psychological problem?
-
And does it need a chemical cure
or a philosophical cure?"
-
And I couldn't figure out which it was.
-
And then I understood that actually,
-
we aren't advanced enough in either area
-
for it to explain things fully.
-
The chemical cure and the psychological cure
-
both have a role to play,
-
and I also figured out that depression was something
-
that was braided so deep into us
-
that there was no separating it
-
from our character and personality.
-
I want to say that the treatments we have
-
for depression are appalling.
-
They're not very effective.
-
They're extremely costly.
-
They come with innumerable side effects.
-
They're a disaster.
-
But I am so grateful that I live now
-
and not 50 years ago,
-
when there would have been almost nothing
-
to be done.
-
I hope that 50 years hence,
-
people will hear about my treatments
-
and be appalled that anyone endured
-
such primitive science.
-
Depression is the flaw in love.
-
If you were married to someone and thought,
-
"Well, if my wife dies, I'll find another one,"
-
it wouldn't be love as we know it.
-
There's no such thing as love
-
without the anticipation of loss,
-
and that specter of despair
-
can be the engine of intimacy.
-
There are three things people tend to confuse:
-
depression, grief, and sadness.
-
Grief is explicitly reactive.
-
If you have a loss and you feel incredibly unhappy,
-
and then, six months later,
-
you are still deeply sad, but
you're functioning a little better,
-
it's probably grief,
-
and it will probably ultimately resolve itself
-
in some measure.
-
If you experience a catastrophic loss,
-
and you feel terrible,
-
and six months later, you can barely function at all,
-
then it's probably a depression that was triggered
-
by the catastrophic circumstances.
-
The trajectory tells us a great deal.
-
People think of depression as being just sadness.
-
It's much, much too much sadness,
-
much too much grief
-
at far too slight a cause.
-
As I set out to understand depression,
-
and to interview people who had experienced it,
-
I found that there were people who seemed
-
on the surface to have what sounded like
-
relatively mild depression
-
who were nonetheless utterly disabled by it.
-
And there were other people who had what sounded
-
as they described it
-
like terribly severe depression
-
who nonetheless had good lives in the intercesses
-
between their depressive episodes.
-
And I set out to find out what it is
-
that causes some people
-
to be more resilient than other people.
-
What are the mechanisms
-
that allow people to survive?
-
And I went out and interviewed person after person
-
who was suffering with depression.
-
One of the first people I interviewed
-
described depression
-
as a slower way of being dead,
-
and that was a good thing for me to hear early on
-
because it reminded me
-
that that slow way of being dead
-
can lead to actual deadness,
-
that this is a serious business.
-
It's the leading disability worldwide,
-
and people die of it every day.
-
One of the people I talked to
-
when I was trying to understand this
-
was a beloved friend
-
who I had known for many years,
-
and who had had a psychotic episode
-
in her freshman year of college,
-
and then plummeted into a horrific depression.
-
She had bipolar illness,
-
or manic depression, as it was then known.
-
And then she did very well
-
for many years on lithium,
-
and then eventually,
-
she was taken off her lithium
-
to see how she would do without it,
-
and she had another psychosis,
-
and then plunged into the worst depression
-
that I had ever seen
-
in which she sat in her parents' apartment,
-
more or less catatonic, essentially without moving,
-
day after day after day.
-
And when I interviewed her about
that experience some years later
-
— she's a poet and psychotherapist
named Maggie Robbins —
-
when I interviewed her, she said,
-
"I was singing 'Where Have All The Flowers Gone'
-
over and over to occupy my mind.
-
I was singing to blot out the
things my mind was saying,
-
which were, 'You are nothing. You are nobody.
-
You don't even deserve to live.'
-
And that was when I really started thinking
-
about killing myself."
-
You don't think in depression
-
that you've put on a grey veil
-
and are seeing the world through the haze
-
of a bad mood.
-
You think that the veil has been taken away,
-
the veil of happiness,
-
and that now you're seeing truly.
-
It's easier to help schizophrenics who perceive
-
that there's something foreign inside of them
-
that needs to be exorcised,
-
but it's difficult with depressives,
-
because we believe we are seeing the truth.
-
But the truth lies.
-
I became obsessed with that sentence.
-
"But the truth lies."
-
And I discovered, as I talked to depressive people,
-
that they have many delusional perceptions.
-
People will say, "No one loves me."
-
And you say, "I love you,
-
your wife loves you, your mother loves you."
-
You can answer that one pretty readily,
-
at least for most people.
-
But people who are depressed will also say,
-
"No matter what we do,
-
we're all just going to die in the end."
-
Or they'll say, "There can be no true communion
-
between two human beings.
-
Each of us is trapped in his own body."
-
To which you have to say,
-
"That's true,
-
but I think we should focus right now
-
on what to have for breakfast."
-
(Laughter)
-
A lot of the time,
-
what they are expressing is not illness, but insight,
-
and one comes to think what's really extraordinary
-
is that most of us know about
those existential questions
-
and they don't distract us very much.
-
There was a study I particularly liked
-
in which a group of depressed
-
and a group of non-depressed people
-
were asked to play a video game for an hour,
-
and at the end of the hour,
-
they were asked how many little monsters
-
they thought they had killed.
-
The depressive group was usually accurate
-
to within about 10 percent,
-
and the non-depressed people
-
guessed between 15 and 20 times as many
-
little monsters — (Laughter) —
-
as they had actually killed.
-
A lot of people said, when I chose
to write about my depression,
-
that it must be very difficult
-
to be out of that closet, to have people know.
-
They said, "Do people talk to you differently?"
-
And I said, "Yes, people talk to me differently.
-
They talk to me differently insofar
-
as they start telling me about their experience,
-
or their sister's experience,
-
or their friend's experience.
-
Things are different because now I know
-
that depression is the family secret
-
that everyone has.
-
I went a few years ago to a conference,
-
and on Friday of the three day conference,
-
one of the participants took me aside, and she said,
-
"I suffer from depression and
-
I'm a little embarrassed about it,
-
but I've been taking this medication,
-
and I just wanted to ask you what you think?"
-
And so I did my best to give
her such advice as I could.
-
And then she said, "You know,
-
my husband would never understand this.
-
He's really the kind of guy to whom
this wouldn't make any sense,
-
so I just, you know, it's just between us."
-
And I said, "Yes, that's fine."
-
On Sunday of the same conference,
-
her husband took me aside,
-
and he said, "My wife wouldn't think
-
that I was really much of a guy if she knew this,
-
but I've been dealing with this depression
-
and I'm taking some medication,
-
and I wondered what you think?"
-
They were hiding
-
the same medication in two different places
-
in the same bedroom.
-
And I said that I thought
-
communication within the marriage
-
might be triggering some of their problems.
-
(Laughter)
-
But I was also struck
-
by the burdensome nature
-
of such mutual secrecy.
-
Depression is so exhausting.
-
It takes up so much of your time and energy,
-
and silence about it,
-
it really does make the depression worse.
-
And then I began thinking about all the ways
-
people make themselves better.
-
I'd started off as a medical conservative.
-
I thought there were a few
kinds of therapy that worked,
-
it was clear what they were,
-
there was medication,
-
there were certain psychotherapies,
-
there was possibly electro-convulsive treatment,
-
and that everything else was nonsense.
-
But then I discovered something.
-
If you have brain cancer,
-
and you say that standing on your head
-
for 20 minutes every morning makes you feel better,
-
it may make you feel better,
-
but you still have brain cancer,
-
and you'll still probably die from it.
-
But if you say that you have depression,
-
and standing on your head for 20 minutes every day
-
makes you feel better, then it's worked,
-
because depression is an illness of how you feel,
-
and if you feel better,
-
then you are effectively not depressed anymore.
-
So I became much more tolerant
-
of the vast world of alternative treatments.
-
And I get letters, I get hundreds of letters
-
from people writing to tell me
about what's worked for them.
-
Someone was asking me backstage today
-
about meditation.
-
My favorite of the letters that I got
-
was the one that came from a woman
-
who wrote and said that she had tried therapy,
-
she had tried medication,
-
she had tried pretty much everything,
-
and she had found a solution
and hoped I would tell the world,
-
and that was making little things from yarn.
-
(Laughter)
-
She sent me some of them. (Laughter)
-
And I'm not wearing them right now.
-
I suggested to her that she also should look up
-
obsessive compulsive disorder in the DSM.
-
And yet, when I went to look
at alternative treatments,
-
I also gained perspective on other treatments.
-
I went through a tribal exorcism in Senegal
-
that involved a great deal of ram's blood
-
and that I'm not going to detail right now,
-
but a few years afterward I was in Rwanda
-
working on a different project,
-
and I happened to describe
my experience to someone,
-
and he said, "Well, you know,
-
that's West Africa, and we're in East Africa,
-
and our rituals are in some ways very different,
-
but we do have some rituals that have something
-
in common with what you're describing."
-
And I said, "Oh." And he said, "Yes," he said,
-
"but we've had a lot of trouble with
Western mental health workers,
-
especially the ones who came
right after the genocide."
-
And I said, "What kind of trouble did you have?"
-
And he said, "Well," he said,
-
"They would do this bizarre thing."
-
He said, "They didn't take people out in the sunshine
-
where you begin to feel better.
-
They didn't include drumming or music
-
to get people's blood going.
-
They didn't involve the whole community.
-
They didn't externalize the depression
-
as an invasive spirit.
-
Instead what they did was they took people
-
one at a time into dingy little rooms
-
and had them talk for an hour
-
about bad things that had happened to them."
-
(Laughter) (Applause)
-
He said, "We had to ask them to leave the country."
-
(Laughter)
-
Now at the other end of alternative treatments,
-
let me tell you about Frank Roussekoff.
-
Frank Roussekoff had the worst depression
-
perhaps that I've ever seen in a man.
-
He was constantly depressed.
-
He was, when I met him, at a point at which
-
every month he would have electroshock treatment.
-
Then he would feel sort of disoriented for a week.
-
Then he would feel okay for a week.
-
Then he would have a week of going downhill.
-
And then he would have another
electroshock treatment.
-
And he said to me when I met him,
-
"It's unbearable to go through my weeks this way.
-
I can't go on this way,
-
and I've figured out how I'm going to end it
-
if I don't get better.
-
But," he said to me, "I heard about a protocol
-
at Mass General for a procedure called
-
a cingulotomy, which is a brain surgery,
-
and I think I'm going to give that a try."
-
And I remember being amazed at that point
-
to think that someone
-
who clearly had so many bad experiences
-
with so many different treatments
-
still had buried in him somewhere enough optimism
-
to reach out for one more.
-
And he had the a cingulotomy,
-
and it was incredibly successful.
-
He's now a friend of mine.
-
He has a lovely wife and two beautiful children.
-
He wrote me a letter the Christmas after the surgery,
-
and he said,
-
"My father sent me two presents this year,
-
First, a motorized CD rack from The Sharper Image
-
that I didn't really need,
-
but I knew he was giving it to me to celebrate
-
the fact that I'm living on my own
-
and have a job I seem to love.
-
And the other present
-
was a photo of my grandmother,
-
who committed suicide.
-
As I unwrapped it, I began to cry,
-
and my mother came over and said,
-
'Are you crying because of the
relatives you never knew?'
-
And I said, 'She had the same disease I have.'
-
I'm crying now as I write to you.
-
It's not that I'm so sad, but I get overwhelmed,
-
I think, because I could have killed myself,
-
but my parents kept me going,
-
and so did the doctors,
-
and I had the surgery.
-
I'm alive and grateful.
-
We live in the right time,
-
even if it doesn't always feel like it."
-
I was struck by the fact that depression
-
is broadly perceived to be
-
a modern, Western, middle class thing,
-
and I went to look at how it operated
-
in a variety of other contexts,
-
and one of the things I was most interested in
-
was depression among the indigent.
-
And so I went out to try to look at what was
-
being done for poor people with depression.
-
And what I discovered is that poor people
-
are mostly not being treated for depression.
-
Depression is the result of a genetic vulnerability,
-
which is presumably evenly
distributed in the population,
-
and triggering circumstances,
-
which are likely to be more severe
-
for people who are impoverished.
-
And yet it turns out that if you have
-
a really lovely life but feel miserable all the time,
-
you think, "Why do I feel like this?
-
I must have depression."
-
And you set out to find treatment for it.
-
But if you have a perfectly awful life,
-
and you feel miserable all the time,
-
the way you feel is commensurate with your life,
-
and it doesn't occur to you to think,
-
"Maybe this is treatable."
-
And so we have an epidemic in this country
-
of depression among impoverished people
-
that's not being picked up
and that's not being treated
-
and that's not being addressed,
-
and it's a tragedy of a grand order.
-
And so I found an academic
-
who was doing a research project
-
in slums outside of D.C.,
-
where she picked up women who had
come in for other health problems
-
and diagnosed them with depression,
-
and then provided six months
of experimental protocol.
-
One of them, Lolly, came in,
-
and this is what she said the day she came in.
-
She said, and she was a woman, by the way,
-
who had seven children. She said,
-
"I used to have a job but I had to give it up because
-
I couldn't go out of the house.
-
I have nothing to say to my children.
-
In the morning, I can't wait for them to leave,
-
and then I climb in bed and
pull the covers over my head,
-
and three o'clock when they come home,
-
it just comes so fast."
-
She said, "I've been taking a lot of Tylenol,
-
anything I can take so that I can sleep more.
-
My husband has been telling me I'm stupid, I'm ugly.
-
I wish I could stop the pain."
-
Well, she was brought into
this experimental protocol,
-
and when I interviewed her six months later,
-
she had taken a job working in child care
-
for the U.S. Navy, she had left the abusive husband,
-
and she said to me,
-
"My kids are so much happier now."
-
She said, "There's one room in my new place
-
for the boys and one room for the girls,
-
but at night, they're just all up on my bed,
-
and we're doing homework
all together and everything.
-
One of them wants to be a preacher,
-
one of them wants to be a firefighter,
-
and one of the girls says she's going to be a lawyer.
-
They don't cry like they used to,
-
and they don't fight like they did.
-
That's all I need now is my kids.
-
Things keep on changing,
-
the way I dress, the way I feel, the way I act.
-
I can go outside not being afraid anymore,
-
and I don't think those bad feelings are coming back,
-
and if it weren't for Dr. Miranda and that,
-
I would still be at home with
the covers pulled over my head,
-
if I were still alive at all.
-
I asked the Lord to send me an angel,
-
and he heard my prayers."
-
I was really moved by these experiences,
-
and I decided that I wanted to write about them
-
not only in a book I was working on,
-
but also in an article,
-
and so I got a commission from
"The New York Times Magazine"
-
to write about depression among the indigent.
-
And I turned in my story,
-
and my editor called me and said,
-
"We really can't publish this."
-
And I said, "Why not?"
-
And she said, "It just is too far-fetched.
-
These people who are sort of at
the very bottom rung of society
-
and then they get a few months of treatment
-
and they're virtually ready to run Morgan Stanley?
-
It's just too implausible."
-
She said, I've never even heard of anything like it."
-
And I said, "The fact that you've never heard of it
-
is an indication that it is news."
-
(Laughter) (Applause)
-
"And you are a news magazine."
-
So after a certain amount of negotiation,
-
they agreed to it.
-
But I think a lot of what they said
-
was connected in some strange way
-
to this distaste that people still have
-
for the idea of treatment,
-
the notion that somehow if we went out
-
and treated a lot of people in indigent communities,
-
that would be an exploitative thing to do,
-
because we would be changing them.
-
There is this false moral imperative
-
that seems to be all around us
-
that treatment of depression,
-
the medications and so on, are an artifice,
-
and that it's not natural.
-
And I think that's very misguided.
-
It would be natural for people's teeth to fall out,
-
but there is nobody militating against toothpaste,
-
at least not in my circles.
-
And people then say, "Well, but isn't depression
-
part of what people are supposed to experience?
-
Didn't we evolve to have depression?
-
Isn't it part of your personality?"
-
To which I would say, mood is adaptive.
-
Being able to have sadness and fear
-
and joy and pleasure
-
and all of the other moods that we have,
-
that's incredibly valuable.
-
And major depression is something that happens
-
when that system gets broken.
-
It's maladaptive.
-
People will come to me and say,
-
"I think, though, if I just stick it out for another year,
-
I think I can just get through this."
-
And I always say to them, "You may get through it,
-
but you'll never be 37 again.
-
Life is short, and that's a whole year
-
you're talking about giving up.
-
Think it through."
-
It's a strange poverty of the English language,
-
and indeed of many other languages,
-
that we use this same word, "depression,"
-
to describe how a kid feels
-
when it rains on his birthday,
-
and to describe how somebody feels
-
the minute before they commit suicide.
-
People say to me, "Well, is it
continuous with normal sadness?"
-
And I say, in a way it's continuous
with normal sadness.
-
There is a certain amount of continuity,
-
but it's the same way there's continuity
-
between having an iron fence outside your house
-
that gets a little rust spot
-
that you have to sort of sand
off and do a little repainting,
-
and what happens if you leave
the house for a hundred years
-
and it rusts through until it's only a pile
-
of orange dust.
-
And it's that orange dust spot,
-
that orange dust problem,
-
that's the one we're setting out to address.
-
So now people say,
-
"You take these happy pills, and do you feel happy?"
-
And I don't.
-
But I don't feel sad about having to eat lunch,
-
and I don't feel sad about my answering machine,
-
and I don't feel sad about taking a shower.
-
I feel more, in fact, I think,
-
because I can feel sadness without nullity.
-
I feel sad about professional disappointments,
-
about damaged relationships,
-
about global warming.
-
Those are the things that I feel sad about now.
-
And I said to myself, well, what is the conclusion?
-
How did those people who have better lives
-
even with bigger depression manage to get through?
-
What is the mechanism of resilience?
-
And what I came up with over time
-
was that the people who deny their experience,
-
the ones who say, "I was depressed a long time ago
-
and I never want to think about it again
-
and I'm not going to look at it
-
and I'm just going to get on with my life,"
-
ironically, those are the people
-
who are most enslaved by what they have.
-
Shutting out the depression strengthens it.
-
While you hide from it, it grows.
-
And the people who do better
-
are the ones who are able to tolerate the fact
-
that they have this condition.
-
Those who can tolerate their depression
-
are the ones who achieve resilience.
-
So Frank Roussekoff said to me,
-
"If I had it again to do over,
-
I suppose I wouldn't do it this way,
-
but in a strange way, I'm grateful
-
for what I've experienced.
-
I'm glad to have been in the hospital 40 times.
-
It taught me so much about love,
-
and my relationship with my parents and my doctors
-
has been so precious to me, and will be always."
-
And Maggie Robbins said,
-
"I used to volunteer in an AIDS clinic,
-
and I would just talk and talk and talk,
-
and the people I was dealing with
-
weren't very responsive, and I thought,
-
'That's not very friendly or helpful of them.'
-
And then I realized,
-
I realized that they weren't going to do more
-
than make those first few minutes of small talk.
-
It was simply going to be an occasion
-
where I didn't have AIDS and I wasn't dying,
-
but could tolerate the fact that they did
-
and they were.
-
Our needs are our greatest assets.
-
It turns out I've learned to give
-
all the things I need."
-
Valuing one's depression
-
does not prevent a relapse,
-
but it may make the prospect of relapse
-
and even relapse itself easier to tolerate.
-
The question is not so much
-
of finding great meaning and deciding
-
your depression has been very meaningful.
-
It's of seeking that meaning
-
and thinking, when it comes again,
-
"This will be hellish,
-
but I will learn something from it."
-
I have learned in my own depression
-
how big an emotion can be,
-
how it can be more real than facts,
-
and I have found that that experience
-
has allowed me to experience positive emotion
-
in a more intense and more focused way.
-
The opposite of depression is not happiness,
-
but vitality,
-
and these days, my life is vital,
-
even on the days when I'm sad.
-
I felt that funeral in my brain,
-
and I sat next to the colossus
-
at the edge of the world,
-
and I have discovered
-
something inside of myself
-
that I would have to call a soul
-
that I had never formulated
until that day 20 years ago
-
when hell came to pay me a surprise visit.
-
I think that while I hated being depressed
-
and would hate to be depressed again,
-
I've found a way to love my depression.
-
I love it because it has forced me
-
to find and cling to joy.
-
I love it because each day I decide,
-
sometimes gamely,
-
and sometimes against the moment's reason,
-
to cleave to the reasons for living.
-
And that, I think, is a highly privileged rapture.
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)
Krystian Aparta
The English transcript was updated on 5/11/2015.