ipt model of depression : The Fuel Of Stress, Anxiety and Depression

November 4th, 2005

ipt model of depression : The Fuel Of Stress, Anxiety and Depression

- Chris Green

In the 21st Century, it is predicted that stress and stress related illnesses such as depression and anxiety will become the biggest killers. Despite significant advances in housing, standards of living, quality of food, and medical science, the pressures all of us have to face in todays world are as demanding as any pressures experienced by our predecessors.

Why are these illnesses on the rise? And why do some people become so ill through these illnesses, they can find it hard to function?

Well they sure dont happen overnight! You dont suddenly wake up one morning and feel stressed or depressed. Its not like flicking on a light switch! And by the same rule, if youre suffering, you cant just wake up one morning, flick off the switch and say Great, Im better now.

Many people who dont suffer from these illnesses often say to sufferers:

Come on, snap out of it.

If only it was so easy! Should anyone say this to you, please forgive them as its just a lack of understanding. Its very hard for people to understand how youre feeling if they havent been there.

The fact that these illnesses dont suddenly happen means we can draw some parallels with illnesses such as heart diseases, some cancers and strokes.

Because these illnesses dont just suddenly happen either.

If we look at heart disease, its often the result of damaging behaviors practised over many years. Behaviors such as smoking, lack of exercise and a diet high in saturated fat. Strokes are a result of similar behaviors and cancers too, particularly heavy smoking and drinking as you know.

So how do stressful illnesses such as stress, depression and anxiety compare?

Stress is also the product of harmful mental habits and behaviors. These habits and behaviors are developed and practised over years since childhood in most cases. These are the mental processes that enable us to make sense of our lives and the circumstances were faced with. When we reach adulthood, we perform them automatically because weve learned these behaviors by repetition.

Think of it like learning to drive a car. Initially, the skills required to control the vehicle needed conscious thought. It seemed really difficult didnt it? But once weve performed them for sufficient periods, we drive on auto-pilot. Weve mastered the required skills by repetition.

Heres the key: if we eat healthy food, take regular exercise, cut out harmful behaviors such as smoking and drinking, we improve our health and drastically reduce the risk of heart disease, cancer and strokes. We are repeating good habits, habits that will give our physical well being a huge boost.

Its exactly the same for stress. Whats important to understand is that not everyone becomes stressed or depressed even when tragic and traumatic circumstances happen to them. Just like people who lead a healthy lifestyle and avoid harmful habits and behaviors, people dont become stressed or depressed because they have learned effective habits and behaviors that prevent stress from arising.

This is very good news if you suffer from these illnesses. Because just as we can learn habits and behaviors which cause us to become highly-stressed, depressed or anxious, we can learn the habits and behaviors which stop these terrible illnesses in their tracks. And the more often we make use of them, well soon begin to perform them automatically and our mental health will benefit enormously.

No more feeling stressed out. No more feeling unable to cope. No more anxiety and no more depression. EVER.

Im living proof of this. For 5 years, a series of traumatic events sent me spiralling into an anxiety-induced depression nightmare. I came out of it by learning the natural skills that starve these illnesses. The more I used them, the less anxious I became. Theyre now as natural to me as driving a car, and Ive completely eradicated anxiety and depression from my life.

You can do it too.


About the author:

Chris Green is the author of the new book Conquering Stress, a special program which will show you how to conquer stressful illnesses such as depression, anxiety, panic and worry permanently and without taking powerful drugs. You can learn more about this new book and purchase it at www.conqueringstress.com

ref : ipt model of depression

depression cutting yourself : 5 Tips to Reduce Depression - Wayne Perkins,

November 3rd, 2005

depression cutting yourself : 5 Tips to Reduce Depression

- Wayne Perkins, Clinical Hypnotherapist

While war and poor economic conditions begin to affect people all over the world, more and more people suffer with depression. The more we focus on news events and the business climate, the more we are depressed. Whatever the reason you feel is the cause of your depression, the following five simple tips guarantee you reduce it significantly.

1. Do not read newspapers.

Newspapers publish negative stories most of the time. Even in peaceful periods, newspapers will find the worst in humanity and place negative stories on display in order to promote sales and subscribers. Stories focused on War, rebellion, death, destruction, doom and despair abound in the newspapers.

Stop reading the newspaper and reduce the negative input to your brain.

2. Turn off your television.

Watching and listening about the horrible economy and the losses associated with War will add to depression. In fact, you guarantee the feeling of helplessness. Helplessness allows depression to nurture. If you really need to watch or listen to these kinds of news stories, promise yourself you will bury yourself in the documentaries that are sure to follow in the next 5 or 10 years. A way you can eliminate most of the negative input to your brain is by setting it aside for a date somewhere in the future. I guarantee in the future, you will not find it very interesting.

When visitors come to your home, make sure you turn off your television and keep it off. News television broadcasters are fighting for your guests’ attention as they promote despair, war, death, and destruction with many headline news interruptions. Those little banners that run across the bottom of the screen grab your attention and they take hold of your consciousness. Television will diminish your positive spirit.

3. Say good things about others

My mother always says, “if you can’t say anything nice about others, don’t say anything at all.” However, when you find yourself in a conversation and a relative says, “Remember Uncle Phil?” ” He was an alcoholic”; respond with ” Yes, Uncle Phil was an alcoholic and he was the most charitable person, I have ever met.”

Connect your relative’s negative statement about Phil with a positive one. Set yourself up to find the positive in anyone’s statement and you will keep negative thoughts and depression from overtaking your life.

4. Get physical exercise

Adults forget about exercise when suffering from depression. Make sure you are exercising daily and sending more oxygen to your brain cells. The result of exercise will improve your health as well as your attitude.

5. Breathe deep and relax.

Breathe deeply and relax. For 3 minutes each hour take a short mental vacation.

Practice the following breathing exercise to relax your body and mind. You can engage in this exercise while you are standing in the checkout line at the supermarket or when listening to others talking on a telephone. You can complete the exercise at home or at work.

Take three deep breathes and relax. As you inhale, concentrate on calm and peaceful thoughts. You may think about relaxing by a mountain, by the ocean or comfortably in your favorite room at home.

As you exhale, concentrate on pushing any tension out of your lungs. Focus on positive images in your life. Focus on laughter, love, excitement, and hope.

Keep breathing in and out in this pattern until you feel better. If you practice the exercise often, you will notice wonderful changes in your outlook and in other aspects of your life.

Let yourself feel great now!

Enjoy your family, your friends, and your life.

–Wayne F. Perkins

Copyright 2003 Wayne Perkins

About The Author

Wayne F. Perkins is a clinical hypnotherapist and author of “How to Hypnotize Yourself Without Losing Your Mind.” and hypnosis distance education courses located at:
http://www.wayneperkins.net/
“My mission in life is to help you achieve your mission in life.”
wayne@wayneperkins.net

April 03, 2003

ref : depression cutting yourself

Aetna to Pay for Program to Manage Depression (New York Times)Prompted in

November 2nd, 2005

Aetna to Pay for Program to Manage Depression (New York Times)
Prompted in part by employers who cite depression as a cause of absenteeism and low productivity, Aetna will begin paying for a depression management program.

New guidelines will help Canadian youth beat depression-The Canadian Association for Adolescent Health Annual (American Psychological Association)
TORONTO, Nov. 2, 2005 (Canada NewsWire via COMTEX) — North America's first, published clinical guidelines for the management of depression in adolescents in the primary care setting - the Guidelines for Adolescent Depression in Primary Care (GLAD-PC) - will be presented today for the first-time at the 11th Annual Canadian Association for Adolescent Health (CAAH) National Conference, taking place

Online Therapy Does Help Beat Depression (RedNova)
By Eben Harrell DEPRESSION can be treated on the internet as effectively as through face-to-face sessions with a therapist, a new study has found.

Consumer Reports Medical Guide Provides Free Information about Childhood and Teen Depression Treatment (U.S. Newswire via Yahoo! News)
To highlight the importance of recognizing the symptoms of depression in children and finding childhood and teen depression treatment, Consumer Reports Medical Guide www.ConsumerReportsMedicalGuide.org is providing free information on its home page throughout November in conjunction with the release of its new, in-depth report on Depression in Children (available to

Online therapy does help beat depression (Scotsman.com)
DEPRESSION can be treated on the internet as effectively as through face-to-face sessions with a therapist, a new study has found.


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