Old tree, taking a time-out, filling its soul Odiorne State Park: 3/29/14 CC Jean Stimmell |
He convincingly
documents how our mood system is a complex, multi-faceted, biological part of
us, mostly beyond our conscious awareness, and it has significant evolutionary
survival value.
Unfortunately,
as modern humans, we have lost sight of positive attributes of depression
because of the cultural constructs we have created through language. Using our
ability to spew forth words, we have constructed stories depicting depression as
an arch villain, a dreaded pathology that is unequivocally bad.
The
trouble is, as Rottenberg notes, “the stories we tell ourselves about our moods often end up
being just that. Stories.”
“One of the amazing
things about the mood system is how much of it operates outside of conscious
awareness. Moods, like most adaptations, developed in species that had neither
language nor culture. Yet words are the first things that come to mind when
most people think about moods. We are “mad,” we are “sad,” we are “glad.” So
infatuated are we with language that both laypeople and scientists find it
tempting to equate the language we use to describe mood with mood itself.
This is a big
mistake. We need to shed this languagecentric view of mood, even if it
threatens our pride to accept that we share a fundamental element of our mental
toolkit with rabbits and roadrunners.”[3]
Rottenberg cites studies showing how subjects with depressed mood are
more deliberate, skeptical, and careful in how they process information from
their environment than subjects with elevated mood, concluding:
“Just as animals
with no capacity for anxiety were gobbled up by predators long ago, without the
capacity for sadness, we and other animals would probably commit rash acts and
repeat costly mistakes.”[4]
So what is the bottom line.?
The bottom line that resonates with me is the poetic definition of
depression that Rottenberg cites by Lee
Stranger, from his essay “Fading to Gray,”
Perhaps what we call
depression isn’t really a disorder at all but, like physical pain, an alarm of
sorts, alerting us that something is undoubtedly wrong; that perhaps it is time
to stop, take a time-out, take as long as it takes, and attend to the
unaddressed business of filling our souls.[5]
xxx
Coco barking up the wrong tree but not depressed |
[1] I am indebted to Maria Popova
for her review of Rottenberg at:
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2014/03/24/the-depths-rottenberg-depression/
[2] The Depths: The Evolutionary
Origins of the Depression Epidemic by Jonathan Rottenberg
[3] Ibid.
[4] Ibid.
[5] Lee
Stringer from his essay “Fading to Gray,” found in the altogether fantastic
2001 volume Unholy Ghost:
Writers on Depression: