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Taken from our downloadable Depression Program |
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Your Quick Depression Quiz ResultsOK, let’s see how you did. Question 1 was: "Which of the following can be signs (symptoms) of clinical depression?" a. Exhaustion on waking In fact, any of these can be symptoms of depression, although experiencing one or more of them does not necessarily mean you are depressed. Onto question 2... Question 2 was: “Most depression is due to a chemical imbalance, or genetic factors. True or False? The answer is False. Low serotonin levels are a consequence, not a cause of most depression. There is 10 times more major depression in people born after 1945 than in those born before. This, plus thousands of studies, clearly shows that the root cause of most depression is not a chemical imbalance. Human genes do not change that fast. Following on from this... Question 3 was: "Which of the following are changes
in society that have occurred since the end of World War II, and may
account for the huge increases in clinical depression?" All these factors have contributed to the widescale increase in depression - and there are more besides. Our societies are literally creating depression by the way they are structured. Luckily, we know what to do to reverse this, both individually and in society as a whole. Question 4 was “Why are you likely to wake up
in the morning feeling exhausted if you are depressed?" The answer is b. This is really important if you want to understand how depression works. You are likely to wake in the morning feeling exhausted because when you ruminate negatively, you create emotional arousal that causes the release of stress hormones. That night, in REM (dream sleep), you become emotionally aroused again as dreaming 'flushes out' the emotional arousal from your brain. That is why depressed people have higher levels of stress hormones, and also why you can wake up feeling exhausted. Over-worrying or negative ‘rumination’ makes you dream more (depressed people dream up to three times more than normal). This is, quite literally, exhausting. Also, serotonin production stops completely during REM sleep. So, after a night of over-dreaming (even if you don’t remember your dreams) you’ll wake up with much lower levels of serotonin than normal. Daytime activity raises serotonin levels, making you feel better as the day progresses. And finally, Question 5 was: "Why can ‘all-or-nothing’
thinking be one of the causes of depression?" In fact, as you probably guessed, both are correct. When you are stressed, your brain works differently, making you more likely to resort to 'All-or-nothing' thinking, which causes difficulties in solving complex problems. In turn, this creates more arousal, or stress, and so continues the 'loop', increasing the amount you dream, and so exhausting you. Happily, once your brain de-stresses properly, your thinking patterns normalize and you are able once again to think clearly. This quiz is taken from our downloadable Depression
Program, which gives you the knowledge, power and skills to break the
cycle of depression.
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