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Undoing Depression: What Therapy Doesn't…
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Undoing Depression: What Therapy Doesn't Teach You and Medication Can't Give You (original 1997; edition 1999)

by Richard O'Connor (Author)

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401463,846 (3.84)3
Examines how depression affects emotions, behavior, relationships, and self, and discusses healthier and more adaptive ways of thinking, feeling, and living happier lives.
Member:LittleMuddyLibrary
Title:Undoing Depression: What Therapy Doesn't Teach You and Medication Can't Give You
Authors:Richard O'Connor (Author)
Info:Berkley Trade (1999), Edition: Reissue, 368 pages
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Undoing Depression: What Therapy Doesn't Teach You and Medication Can't Give You by Richard O'Connor (1997)

  1. 00
    Why Zebras Dont Get Ulcers: A Guide to Stress, Stress-Related Diseases, and Coping by Robert M. Sapolsky (and22polarbears)
    and22polarbears: O'Connor himself sites and recommends this book many times in "Undoing Depression," which prompted me to get a copy of "Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers." Sapolsky has a great writing style that makes the information he presents easily accessible, despite how technical and scientific it often is. For anyone interested in the origins of stress related disease, I could not recommend this more highly.… (more)
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Showing 4 of 4
It has been more than two years since I started reading this book. Since then this book managed to save my sanity at least twice and probably will do so in the future. The amount of red, green and blue color lines almost on every page spread is staggering. I never underlined so much in any other books. It was not always pleasant. There are no magic bullets in it. It’s a true self-help book. But at the very least it can help reader to see what is wrong, how it is wrong and what you can do to change that. It is more like an eye opener; to shine the light on things that depressed (usually but not only) brain hide so skillfully.

But, with all that said I should note for whoever will read this in hopes of changing things. The foundation of solutions from this book is two things – your own work to change yourself and your friends/relatives who will help you in that. If don’t have the latter, the former will be many times harder. This is probably not the book you should read while been truly alone in life. Probably. ( )
  WorkLastDay | Dec 17, 2023 |
There are some great ideas and techniques in this book. At the beginning the author really seems to "get" the depression mindset: "This is the cruelest part of the disease: we blame ourselves for being weak or lacking character instead of accepting that we have an illness, instead of realizing that our self-blame is a symptom of the disease."
But he totally lost me with this one sentence: "In either case, more self-control — plain old willpower — is essential to recovery." Really? Willpower will defeat depression. Yeah...not so much. And I was already turned off by the time I got to this kicker: "Every patient I’ve ever known who was depressed had a difficult childhood." Umm, except me, it seems.

I think the problem here is something the author mentions himself. He admits that he has less experience with the "lethargic" form of depression - where you have no interest in anything, every simple task feels like a mountain to climb. He clearly treats a form of depression I don't even recognize because it's not my experience. So this book might be a game-changer for someone with the over-work kind of depression he speaks about. And maybe that's where his willpower theory would also be helpful. But when you're struggling just to get out of bed, force yourself to eat something, and crying hysterically at nothing at all, this book will just make you feel like you've failed yet again. ( )
1 vote ErinMa | Sep 4, 2021 |
First part of this book is a must read for anyone dealing with depression either personally or through a loved one; friend, co-worker, relative. It describes in great depth and accuracy the internal life of a depressive and why they behave as they do. ( )
  LindaWeeks | May 14, 2018 |
A great book. ( )
  Hanuman2 | Dec 19, 2007 |
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There's probably a basic fear there, that you're simply incompetent and inadequate, that you have to work so hard at life that you have no hope of happiness. One big secret I know from my patients is that everyone, no matter how successful or accomplished, has that kind of fear at times. Drag that fear out into the light of day and look at it with compassionate curiosity. No one who is able to read this book is completely incompetent or inadequate. You probably got that idea from some old, bad experiences, but they're not happening now. If you can face your fears about yourself, they lose all power over you.
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Examines how depression affects emotions, behavior, relationships, and self, and discusses healthier and more adaptive ways of thinking, feeling, and living happier lives.

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