Can Mindfulness Treat Depression?

There is often a lot of back-and-forth debate regarding the positive and negative effects of antidepressants on the increasingly common condition of depression. You can search the internet for days, even weeks, and read tons of articles supporting both sides of the argument: are antidepressants even worth trying? Each person’s situation is different, obviously; but the general consensus is that antidepressants should be a last resort for people who have been diagnosed with major to severe depression. And if one is prescribed antidepressants, then for how long must the person take the medication until it’s safe to go without? Often people say that antidepressants are simply an aid while the person is getting to the cure. So what’s the cure?

The “cure” is also a very debatable topic…the popular thought trending is that there isn’t a cure for depression, that it’s a life-long condition that one must learn to cope with. Who knows if that’s true? It may be for some, and may not be for others. Surely there have been people who have once been severely depressed and have had an awakening, change, or “cure” appear. You can also find numerous stories all over the internet regarding cures. Whatever the experience, whether or not someone is taking antidepressants, “thought work” needs to happen.

The article below has a suggestion supported by 30DaysNow.com – and that is to give mindfulness a try if you are experiencing depression. Remember, you are not “depressed.” Or to say it differently: you are not defined, labeled, or identified by the condition of Depression. This not to say that a person doesn’t experience the feelings and thoughts that accompany depression; it’s to say that YOU (as a human being) are not depression. Give mindfulness a try for helping to reduce depression, click on our guide 30 Days to Reduce Depression.

 

The following article is from Psychology Today, author Stuart J. Eisendrath MD.

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Depression is the most disabling condition in the developed world. It causes more disability than other common illnesses such as coronary heart disease or cancer. This is due to several factors: It typically starts at an early age, its episodes are long-lasting, and they tend to recur over the lifespan. Depression produces symptoms such as sad mood, loss of energy and enjoyment in life, weight and sleep changes, and in some instances thoughts about death or suicide. Yet the most common form of treatment, antidepressant medications, is often only partially effective.

Antidepressants

The Sequenced Treatment of Antidepressant Resistant Depression (STAR*D) study showed that after 12 weeks of full antidepressant treatment, only one-third of patients had fully recovered. Perhaps even more sobering, after four antidepressant trials over the course of a year, only 45 percent were in recovery because some who had recovered relapsed during the year.

Although antidepressants can be helpful and even lifesaving at times, there is a need for additional treatments both to help treat depressive episodes and to prevent them from recurring. There are numerous psychotherapeutic interventions that may be helpful. These include a range of treatments such as cognitive behavior therapy, interpersonal therapy, behavioral activation therapy, and mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT). MBCT differs in several important respects from the other types of therapy.

Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy

MBCT is built around a core component of mindfulness meditation in contrast to the other modalities. Mindfulness is focused on noticing what is happening in the present moment and letting go of focusing on the past or future. Mindfulness can be thought of as taking place in a discrete period of meditation or in an attitude you bring to daily events — a dispositional approach to the world. In depression, you may notice a tendency to focus on the past, often ruminating about past failures or deficits. With anxiety, a common co-occurring condition with depression, you may notice a focus on catastrophes that loom in the future. Mindfulness, with its focus on the present, is naturally antidepressant as it lets go of thoughts about past ruminations and future catastrophes.

In addition to its core focus on mindfulness, MBCT differs from other modalities through its focus on acceptance of depression. This means that rather than trying to resist it or distract yourself, you acknowledge it. This does not mean resignation. Acceptance means becoming aware of it so that you can respond skillfully to it. As an analogy, an alcoholic can never get help for themselves until they accept they are an alcoholic; once they do, the possibility for change arises.

MBCT focuses on changing your attitude about depression. Most people who suffer from depression have a great deal of self-criticism: “I’m a weak person,” “I’m a defective person,” “I’ll never be healthy again,” and other self-critical comments. When a relapse occurs the self-criticism typically rises to operatic levels. But with MBCT, the approach is to be more similar to other medical problems. For example, would a diabetic who has an exacerbation say, “I’m a weak person”? Mindfulness helps you understand that your depressive thoughts are just that—thoughts—and not facts that have to be believed.

This highlights MBCT’s metacognitive stance: It helps you understand the way you are thinking. An important component of mindfulness meditation involves accepting whatever is present in the current moment without judgment or criticism. Think about that for a moment. For example, you can notice that you are feeling depressed but don’t have to judge yourself to be weak because of that.

These features of MBCT differ from some of the other approaches. For example, with traditional cognitive behavioral therapy, once you identify a negative thought, you would typically try to replace it with an alternative or more balanced thought. This can be difficult if you have been depressed for some time because you are so locked into a depressive viewpoint. With a mindfulness approach, you would notice the negative thought and, instead of replacing the thought, learn to let go of it. For example, if you were meditating on your breath moving in and out, and you became distracted by a thought of what’s for dinner, you could learn to relinquish the thought about dinner and bring your attention back to the breath. The same applies for depressive thoughts. For example, “Ah, there’s a depressive thought, but I don’t have to follow it out, I can bring my attention back to my breath.”

In some ways mindfulness allows you to have some distance from your thoughts and feelings as you observe them. As an analogy, you could think of yourself walking down a street looking into storefront windows filled with depressive thoughts and feelings. With mindfulness you can observe these without having to go into the stores; you can keep walking down the street.

When Antidepressants Aren’t Enough

My new book, When Antidepressants Aren’t Enough: Harnessing the Power of Mindfulness to Alleviate Depression, offers step-by-step techniques for developing mindfulness skills and using them to shift your response to depression. Instead of becoming more depressed about being depressed, you can learn a new way of coping. The approach is based on evidence-based techniques that were proven effective in a National Institute of Health study. You can shift from depression’s self-critical stance to a self-compassionate one and in the process experience much less suffering. Our research has shown that reduced depression, anxiety, and rumination and increased self-compassion with this approach.

Because depression tends to produce a sense of helplessness and hopelessness, improvement may not seem likely. But these thoughts and feelings are symptoms of depression, not facts. Our research shows that the majority of people experience beneficial effects. In fact, the people with the most improvement had the highest depression scores to begin with. If you can shift to an experimental attitude and give the techniques a try, you can see for yourself.”