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Don't suffer from your depression in silence

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    What are you doing on this stage
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    in front of all these people?
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    (Laughter)
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    Run!
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    (Laughter)
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    Run now.
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    That's the voice of my anxiety talking.
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    Even when there's absolutely
    nothing wrong,
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    I sometimes get
    this overwhelming sense of doom,
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    like danger is lurking
    just around the corner.
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    You see, a few years ago,
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    I was diagnosed with generalized anxiety
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    and depression --
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    two conditions that often go hand in hand.
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    Now, there was a time
    I wouldn't have told anybody,
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    especially not in front of a big audience.
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    As a black woman,
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    I've had to develop
    extraordinary resilience to succeed.
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    And like most people in my community,
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    I had the misconception that depression
    was a sign of weakness,
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    a character flaw.
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    But I wasn't weak;
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    I was a high achiever.
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    I'd earned a Master's degree
    in Media Studies
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    and had a string of high-profile jobs
    in the film and television industries.
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    I'd even won two Emmy Awards
    for my hard work.
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    Sure, I was totally spent,
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    I lacked interest in things
    I used to enjoy,
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    barely ate,
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    struggled with insomnia
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    and felt isolated and depleted.
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    But depressed?
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    No, not me.
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    It took weeks before I could admit it,
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    but the doctor was right:
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    I was depressed.
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    Still, I didn't tell anybody
    about my diagnosis.
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    I was too ashamed.
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    I didn't think I had the right
    to be depressed.
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    I had a privileged life
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    with a loving family
    and a successful career.
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    And when I thought about
    the unspeakable horrors
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    that my ancestors
    had been through in this country
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    so that I could have it better,
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    my shame grew even deeper.
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    I was standing on their shoulders.
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    How could I let them down?
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    I would hold my head up,
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    put a smile on my face
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    and never tell a soul.
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    On July 4, 2013,
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    my world came crashing in on me.
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    That was the day I got
    a phone call from my mom
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    telling me that my 22-year-old nephew,
    Paul, had ended his life,
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    after years of battling
    depression and anxiety.
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    There are no words that can describe
    the devastation I felt.
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    Paul and I were very close,
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    but I had no idea he was in so much pain.
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    Neither one of us had ever talked
    to the other about our struggles.
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    The shame and stigma kept us both silent.
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    Now, my way of dealing with adversity
    is to face it head on,
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    so I spent the next two years
    researching depression and anxiety,
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    and what I found was mind-blowing.
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    The World Health Organization reports
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    that depression is the leading cause
    of sickness and disability
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    in the world.
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    While the exact cause
    of depression isn't clear,
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    research suggests
    that most mental disorders develop,
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    at least in part,
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    because of a chemical
    imbalance in the brain,
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    and/or an underlying
    genetic predisposition.
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    So you can't just shake it off.
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    For black Americans,
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    stressors like racism
    and socioeconomic disparities
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    put them at a 20 percent greater risk
    of developing a mental disorder,
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    yet they seek mental health services
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    at about half the rate of white Americans.
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    One reason is the stigma,
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    with 63 percent of black Americans
    mistaking depression for a weakness.
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    Sadly, the suicide rate
    among black children
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    has doubled in the past 20 years.
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    Now, here's the good news:
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    seventy percent of people
    struggling with depression will improve
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    with therapy, treatment and medication.
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    Armed with this information,
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    I made a decision:
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    I wasn't going to be silent anymore.
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    With my family's blessing,
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    I would share our story
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    in hopes of sparking
    a national conversation.
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    A friend, Kelly Pierre-Louis, said,
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    "Being strong is killing us."
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    She's right.
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    We have got to retire
    those tired, old narratives
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    of the strong black woman
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    and the super-masculine black man,
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    who, no matter how many times
    they get knocked down,
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    just shake it off and soldier on.
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    Having feelings isn't a sign of weakness.
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    Feelings mean we're human.
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    And when we deny our humanity,
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    it leaves us feeling empty inside,
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    searching for ways to self-medicate
    in order to fill the void.
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    My drug was high achievement.
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    These days, I share my story openly,
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    and I ask others to share theirs, too.
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    I believe that's what it takes
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    to help people who may
    be suffering in silence
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    to know that they are not alone
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    and to know that with help,
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    they can heal.
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    Now, I still have my struggles,
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    particularly with the anxiety,
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    but I'm able to manage it
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    through daily mediation,
    yoga and a relatively healthy diet.
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    (Laughter)
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    If I feel like things
    are starting to spiral,
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    I make an appointment to see my therapist,
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    a dynamic black woman
    named Dawn Armstrong,
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    who has a great sense of humor
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    and a familiarity that I find comforting.
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    I will always regret
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    that I couldn't be there for my nephew.
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    But my sincerest hope
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    is that I can inspire others
    with the lesson that I've learned.
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    Life is beautiful.
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    Sometimes it's messy,
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    and it's always unpredictable.
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    But it will all be OK
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    when you have your support system
    to help you through it.
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    I hope that if your burden gets too heavy,
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    you'll ask for a hand, too.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Don't suffer from your depression in silence
Speaker:
Nikki Webber Allen
Description:

Having feelings isn't a sign of weakness -- they mean we're human, says producer and activist Nikki Webber Allen. Even after being diagnosed with anxiety and depression, Webber Allen felt too ashamed to tell anybody, keeping her condition a secret until a family tragedy revealed how others close to her were also suffering. In this important talk about mental health, she speaks openly about her struggle -- and why communities of color must undo the stigma that misreads depression as a weakness and keeps sufferers from getting help.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
06:35

English subtitles

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