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throwaway020620 · 6 years ago
This is blatantly incorrect to the point of being offensive.

> If the individual is responsible for her own happiness, then she is also responsible for her own unhappiness

Just hold right there. There was nothing about "responsibility for unhappiness" in the source that was quoted. Author just casually added this part. "Responsibility for your own happiness" just means that it's _you_ who is in control and that you actually can change things - no matter how bad they look at the moment.

> It is a deeply moral message. Failing to be happy is simply immoral. If you are such an immoral and bad person that you have become unhappy — or depressed — it is you, and you alone that is to blame.

Being unhappy does not make yourself a bad person. This is literally one of the first things you hear when you visit psychologist to treat your depression.

> Yet the psychiatric and public discourse remain bent on treating depression as a personal problem devoid of context

Incorrect. Context is incredibly important and is being discussed a lot during therapy sessions.

And so on and so forth.

Source: my own experience with depression.

Edit: grammar

fonadesty · 6 years ago
> There was nothing about "responsibility for unhappiness" in the source that was quoted.

I'm sort of baffled by this claim of yours. The quoted source is very clearly saying that happiness is up to the individual:

> Happiness is a personal responsibility. Happiness is not something you can expect to get from others. Everybody has the key to their own happiness. And hence also the responsibility to put the key in the right lock.

Likewise, I think your other points seem to miss the point of the author. She's not claiming that being unhappy makes you a bad person, she's illustrating that that's a common viewpoint in modern society, and is attempting to refute it. She also views therapy very favorably, and is trying to imagine a therapy that focuses on the collective rather than the individual.

starpilot · 6 years ago
Depression isn't sadness. Sadness is healthy, depression is when it runs amok like a cancer, sometimes with no apparent cause. Someone with a great life, job, friends, health, can be horribly depressed. That's what makes it illness. It's not due to low serotonin levels. The serotonin / chemical imbalance theory has been out of favor for the past ten years: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12115-007-9047-3, right now we think it's more related to decreased levels of neurogenesis but we're not entirely sure. The "happiness is an inside job" thing works if you're not depressed. When you are, it's like your "happiness muscles" don't work at all. You're just a non-responder to positive stimuli. It's like telling someone that any other illness is really their fault, with the underlying message being that they want you to go away.

Deleted Comment

denverkarma · 6 years ago
This article is very “inside baseball” for the far left. As far as I could understand, the article basically says: depression is caused by the world being terrible, and the world is terrible entirely because of capitalism, so depression is mostly capitalism’s fault. Therefore, we on the left (the article is explicit that it is only for “we on the left”), must learn that therapy is a kind of important political collective act to help us recover from our depression so we can fight capitalism, and not be fooled into thinking it’s something that our depression is something we have individual agency over.

I guess.

I don’t have a deep understanding of depression, except that it is a very real and difficult thing that many people struggle with. So let me caveat that first.

But I have to say, my gut reaction is that it’s rather sad to take a worldview that makes things so dire as to say one’s own depression and the apparent increase in depression around the world is entirely due to the politics you oppose.

To me this reads as the tragic consequences of ever escalating polarization. Instead of seeing the politics around you as merely diverse ideas held by your friends and neighbors, you see it as something more like a species differentiator - and “they” are in control. Well, yes, that would be dire.

But out in the real world it turns out the vast majority of people on the right and the left are not so far out to the wings of their ideology, and that if they sat down over a nice meal they could have a great conversation and really enjoy each other’s company, perhaps even learn from each other and positively influence each other.

The political world around us is indeed depressing, but I would argue we shouldn’t wish that we could get out of bed so we can “throw a brick through a window,” but perhaps instead so we can work toward understanding and reconciling with our neighbors instead.

bobwaycott · 6 years ago
You’re taking a rather crudely reductionist view on the article, and one the article directly admonishes the reader not to do:

> It would be an offense to say, well, it’s just politics... to understand depression through political frames does not mean that the problem of depression can be immediately solved by political means. There is a horror to depression that cannot and must not be translated too quickly into the sphere of politics, regardless of our critical and revolutionary aspirations.

The article is suggesting we should eschew the hyper-individualization of our understanding, diagnosis, and response to depression—and do so by contextualizing it within the political economy in which it lives. It’s a call specifically to not reduce it to chemicals, subjects, and personal responsibilities—and, instead, recognize the impacts of capital, structures, and collective responsibilities which capitalism (and the defensive and capital-protecting ideology and politics it gives rise to) wishes us to ignore. This is the capitalist “realism” the author states runs in tandem with depressive realism—that there are no alternatives, that there really is nothing to be done about the current state of affairs.

The article is calling attention to the possibility—no, the need—to reject this false narrative. There are alternatives, but, the article suggests we instead find comfort in increasingly diagnosing and pathologizing what could be normal effects of capitalism on those who live under it. Instead of recognizing the ways in which our social, political, and economic structures impact subjects, we instead say it’s the subjects who have a chemical imbalance or defect:

> In this way, the diagnosis provides momentary meaning to meaningless misery. The suffering gets a name and a cause: a lack of serotonin. But this cause has causes which in the diagnostic system — and in the capitalist world as a whole — remain undiagnosed and untold.

Whether or not you agree with such a possibility, the very question is, I think, provocative and worth considering and discussing.

denverkarma · 6 years ago
To be honest I’m not so bothered by the idea that depression could be extrinsic, or at least partially extrinsic.

What I find “crudely reductionist,” in the article is the very idea of “capitalist realism,” and the idea that some notion called “capitalism,” can be the cause of all depression.

Are we to think that depression did not exist in the Soviet Union? Or perhaps in the mercantilist kingdoms of the colonial era? Or perhaps not in the Roman Empire? Or what about ancient China or India?

There’s some irony in saying “capitalist realism tries to fool us that this is all there could ever be,” when the article itself is declaring that capitalism (or any -ism) can only be some kind of evil force which naturally causes depression.

It doesn’t read to me like a thoughtful scientific article, but like a religious text decrying another religion.

I find the real world is not nearly so black and white. Certainly the “capitalism” as practiced in the United States is far different than that practiced in Norway, as well as the statist system in practice in Cuba and currently falling apart in Venezuela.

It’s hard for me to see this author as doing anything other than taking a victim mentality and trying to prescribe it for everyone else, laying Universal blanket blame on the authors preferred heresy.

denverkarma · 6 years ago
Hah! This got downvoted in the first second after posting, which to me says the down-voter couldn’t have read past the first sentence. Come on now, HN downvotes are for unconstructive or inappropriate comments. If you disagree you’re not supposed to downvote, you’re supposed to reply :)
pbourke · 6 years ago
People are also brigading comments from other accounts despite them being substantive. HN guidelines say not to comment on voting but something sure seems up here.
bobwaycott · 6 years ago
> If you disagree you’re not supposed to downvote, you’re supposed to reply :)

This is incorrect. However, you may find this portion of the guidelines for comments enlightening:

> Please don't comment about the voting on comments. It never does any good, and it makes boring reading.

dec0dedab0de · 6 years ago
On hn downvotes are for posts you disagree with. Inappropriate or unconstructive get flagged.

For what its worth I upvoted your first comment because i agree, and downvoted your second for complaining about votes

claudeganon · 6 years ago
> The political world around us is indeed depressing, but I would argue we shouldn’t wish that we could get out of bed so we can “throw a brick through a window,” but perhaps instead so we can work toward understanding and reconciling with our neighbors instead.

Reasoning from this perspective, wouldn’t this require a society that is more collectively and communally-oriented that one based around extreme competition with each other as the means of survival?

I don’t see how you resolve this antagonism in a society like the US, where failing to ruthlessly compete against others can mean losing healthcare for your family and children, slipping into homelessness, etc. Obviously, other countries mitigate this more with robust safety nets, but you seem to be mistaking a symptom for a cause.

_bxg1 · 6 years ago
Is the website dead for anyone else?
segfaultbuserr · 6 years ago
It's dead for me as well, the server backend is overloaded, it took 3 minutes to process my request but eventually sent me the page.

Try https://web.archive.org/web/20200216142141/https://lareviewo....

austincheney · 6 years ago
(2019)

The article seems to articulate that happiness is the opposite of depression and that unhappiness is synonymous with depression. That could be arguably a thing in a purely rhetorical sense but is absolutely incorrect in a clinical sense.

Clinically speaking depression is the multi symptom result of one or more chemical imbalances in the brain resulting in arrhythmic emotional states. The opposite of depression from a clinical perspective is emotional balance. This is why treating specifically the symptoms of depression often results in relapses at later times.

curuinor · 6 years ago
If it is a chemical imbalance only, why are there large differences in rate in different time periods in the same culture, with suicide rates hand in hand (https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/8/9/e023144)? Why does the depression rate go way up during recessions and other economic phenomena (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4741013/)? What biological-chemical thing happens during an economic recession?
austincheney · 6 years ago
Financial distress is a key catalyst associated with suicidal ideations. That doesn’t mean financially distressed people are generally suicidal or even depressed. It does mean that stresses associated with finances are a frequently identified/measured trauma that can impact depressed persons who may not be clinically diagnosed as depressed. Depression is often undiagnosed and self-managed like many other mental health diseases.
abstractbarista · 6 years ago
Are you sure? I thought the "chemical imbalance" story was made up by pharmaceutical companies to justify their new class of antidepressants.

https://qz.com/1162154/30-years-after-prozac-arrived-we-stil...

kdmccormick · 6 years ago
I mean, if you think about what a brain is, you could consider basically any any mental disorder is just a "chemical imbalance". Saying that depression is one isn't false, but, to your point, I think pharmaceutical companies harp on this point in order to sell antidepressants.

What GP gets right, though, is that depression != sadness. It is normal (and often healthy) to feel sadness after experiencing loss or other hardships. It is not healthy to feel hopeless and devoid of energy for months on end... that's what depression is.

austincheney · 6 years ago
Yes, I am sure. Drugs are a medical treatment for depression but are not the only or generally preferred treatment.
xfitm3 · 6 years ago
A better definition of depression can be extrapolated from the DSM: https://www.psycom.net/depression-definition-dsm-5-diagnosti...

I want to highlight an important sentence:

> To receive a diagnosis of depression, these symptoms must cause the individual clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning. The symptoms must also not be a result of substance abuse or another medical condition.

starpilot · 6 years ago
The chemical imbalance theory is BS and dead https://qr.ae/T6UgWb. We don't understand depression fully, but more signs are pointing to low neurogenesis in the hippocampus. Chem imbalance may draw from medieval notions of imbalanced humors.
austincheney · 6 years ago
> Chem imbalance may draw from

It draws from the preferred means of treatment for suicide survivors: controlled boredom under observation by mental health professionals in a hospital until emotional equilibrium is reestablished from the lack of external stimulus.

zepto · 6 years ago
The chemical imbalance theory is not supported by science, but is used by drug companies for marketing.
claudiawerner · 6 years ago
Mark Fisher addresses a component of the chemical imbalance theory, and why it doesn't go far enough:

>This commodification lay in the so-called ‘bio-chemicalization’ of depression. This is the assertion that depression is caused primarily by biochemical imbalance in the brain, namely low serotonin levels. To treat mental health illness is to treat the symptoms of a single person who ‘owns’ their illness. Depression is internalised and individuated. As such, we lose a sense of collective responsibility for mental health illness in terms of causation, understanding and treatment.

>This is not to dispute that depression is not neurologically verifiable. Rather, it is to dispute that the neurological disposition of depressed people is caused only by internal, biochemical factors. If, like Fisher, we ask: ‘What causes low serotonin levels?’ we are forced to comprehend mental health illness as a culturally contingent phenomena caused by a conjuncture of biochemical and societal factors.

From: https://thepanoptic.co.uk/2017/08/06/repoliticising-depressi...

>This is a crucial question. The way in which social and political problems are converted into individual pathologies, to be explained via chemical imbalances or family history, neatly sums up so much of what has happened under capitalist realism. It’s what I’ve called the privatisation of stress. Depression has been described as a pathology of responsibility: you feel intensely responsible for the state that you’re in. The excruciating paradox is that, while you feel that only you can get yourself out of depression, the condition consists precisely in your inability to act. There’s more than an analogy with the political hopelessness and fatalism that have characterised capitalist realism.

From: https://theoccupiedtimes.org/?p=3454

You can actually see just how much scrutiny the pure theory of chemical imbalance has come under from psychologists and sociologists on Google Scholar[0].

"The cause of mental disorders such as depression remains unknown. However, the idea that neurotransmitter imbalances cause depression is vigorously promoted by pharmaceutical companies and the psychiatric profession at large. We examine media reports referring to this chemical imbalance theory and ask reporters for evidence supporting their claims. We then report and critique the scientific papers and other confirming evidence offered in response to our questions. Responses were received from multiple sources, including practicing psychiatrists, clients, and a major pharmaceutical company. The evidence offered was not compelling, and several of the cited sources flatly stated that the proposed theory of serotonin imbalance was known to be incorrect. The media can play a positive role in mental health reporting by ensuring that the information reported is congruent with the peer-reviewed scientific literature."

[0] https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C5&q=depr...

jka · 6 years ago
Thanks for responding with thoughtful messages and references; I'd agree that the simplification of depression (which I have no doubt is the result of multiple, complicated factors; social, environmental, political and nutritional).

It'd seem much more inline with the spirit of the HN guidelines if others could respond and critique to your messages instead of downvoting (which feels like it may be more of an attempt to suppress a message).

dayofthedaleks · 6 years ago
'Anxious? Depressed? You might be suffering from capitalism: Contradictory class locations and the prevalence of depression and anxiety in the United States'

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4609238/

claudiawerner · 6 years ago
Excellent article, and to anyone interested in the topic, I'd suggest going beyond the review and reading Mark Fisher himself. His book, Capitalist Realism, as mentioned by the article, is short but an essential read to understand the politics of mental health: its current privatization at the hands of pharma companies and individualization at the hands of self-help authors and YouTube stars.
mbostleman · 6 years ago
Privatization, pharma? Between regulation and licensing it was my understanding that in practical terms pharma is at least as much public as it is private.
intopieces · 6 years ago
claudiawerner is talking about the privatization of mental illness, not Pharma, as outlined by Mark Warner in the essay “The Privatisation of Stress” from 2011.