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Health & Wellness

It's More Than the Blues: Why Men Finally Have to Face Their Depression

By Linda Franklin, AlterNet. Posted June 13, 2007.


Our society's inability to recognize depression in men is putting their relationships and physical health in jeopardy.
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A close friend of mine told me about her first marriage to Paul, 55. Although he can now say that he suffered from depression some 15 years ago when they were married, back then he had no words or theories to understand his feelings.

Alicia, my friend, remembers how Paul would never sleep with her, despite the fact that they'd just married. He gained weight. He was irritable -- downright nasty sometimes. And despite a strong work ethic that ensured he never called in sick, today when Paul looks back on those days, what he remembers is that all he wanted to do was lay in bed and sleep. "I just had no energy," he recalls. At the time, Paul was in a dead-end job, working with a man he had no respect for, and his father, who has since died, had just entered a nursing home.

Having to put his father in a home, Paul believes, was likely the trigger. "It went against everything I was raised to believe," he says, citing his Italian heritage and sense of responsibility toward family. "Where I came from [in Italy], you just didn't send your parents away just because they were old. But the truth was that my father was too ill for my wife and I to take care of him. And even though I knew that, I also felt really guilty. I was angry with myself, I guess, for not being able to do for my father what I'd been raised to do."

Between working for a man whose machinations went against Paul's sense of integrity, and having to make a decision about his father, whose placement in a nursing home ended much of how Paul saw himself as a family man, Paul lost a huge portion of his identity. And that loss became depression.

Fifteen years ago, however, Paul had none of these insights, and before he would come to them and eventually get better, the depression destroyed his marriage. He's grateful that he and Alicia maintained a close friendship, but every now and then, he says, he lets himself wonder what might have been, had his depression not gone untreated all those years ago.

Paul's inability to recognize his depression is not uncommon. Depression, so often seen as a woman's disease, shows up differently in men than it does women. Whereas women, for example, may be able to express their hurt, men more often lash out, appearing more angry than they do sad.

But the numbers tell quite another story. Although 80 percent of Americans diagnosed as depressed are women, fully 80 percent of those who commit suicide are men. And as men grow older and are impacted by the variables of aging -- from experiencing hormonal changes (and the flagging libido that often results) to being pushed out of a job that often defined who they were in the world -- their risk for depression that leads to suicide skyrockets. By mid-life, male suicide rate are three times higher than with younger guys. By the time a man reaches 65, that rate increases seven-fold.

This week is National Men's Health Week. And while we hear a lot these days about men and their physical health -- everything from prostate cancer to obesity, heart disease and diabetes -- we hear almost nothing about men and depression. Yet the correlation between physical challenges and mental health challenges cannot be ignored. People who are depressed risk heart disease at twice the rate of the population. A Montreal Heart Institute study a few years ago looked at the lives and recoveries of 222 heart patients. Those patients who'd had heart attacks and were also depressed were four times as likely to die within six months as those who had heart attacks but no depression.


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See more stories tagged with: gender, men, depression

Linda Franklin is the founder and director of High Yield Living, a company that provides baby boomers the information and inspiration that changes how they're aging.

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Incredible! not a single comment yet...
Posted by: babs on Jun 13, 2007 10:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article wasn't kidding about depression in men being a taboo subject.

The "head-in-the-sand" attitude and the fear of any condition that affects the brain and behaviour is still with us.

Many non-sufferers still point to the depressed and demand that they "snap out of it", or helpfully point out that "it could be worse". Try that with an insulin diabetic and you might get punched - say it to a depressed person and they will feel even more useless and isolated.

the dearth of postings on this subject paints a huge picture of an ever-increasing problem and its inevitable, untreated results.

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Depressed Woman
Posted by: ilene on Jun 13, 2007 10:56 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Suddenly the topic of depression takes on added importance because it's recognized in men. As a woman who is bipolar and knows how serious depression is, it offends me no end to see this attention given to this illness because it's being recognized in men. Disease and illness is only important it seems when men have them. For years women who suffered from depression were told they were hysterics (and other things). This is the worst kind of sexism! The only good thing coming out of this attention to depression may be new treatments or medication.

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» Well, you're much less likely to kill yourself! Posted by: karma_ran_over_dogma
But why this drugs, drugs, drugs approach?
Posted by: heid on Jun 13, 2007 12:47 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The reality of depression and the misery it causes is, of course, a real concern. However, the idea implicit in this article that treating it with pharmaceutical drugs is the answer is utterly terrifying, along with the big-pharma assumption that all depression is abnormal and should be medically treated.

I'm not trying to minimize the importance of depression as a concern. However, I frequently had doctors attempt to cram antidepressants (SSRIs and SNRIs) down my throat, rather than having my later-demonstrated genuine physical problems addressed. I have had doctors again try to force them on me when any rational person could see that depression was a normal response to a miserable situation - and allowing myself to feel ultimately resulted in genuine healing, something that could not have occurred had I given in an taken drugs, which would have prevented me from feeling an honest emotion.

Though there likely are people whose depression derives from a chemical or physical problem, I truly must wonder at the statistics produced by our medical system, which derives huge profits from pushing pharmaceutical drugs. Nowadays, it's difficult to find a doctor's office that hasn't been corrupted with ads - posters, "information" booklets, ads on prescription pads, ads on desk blotters - for SSRI and SNRI drugs. They're found in every kind of doctor's office - and none of them, outside of psychiatrists, have any special training in psychiatric disorders. Yet, even podiatrists are prescribing these things.

While I have genuine sympathy for those with depression that exists with no outside cause, cases like the premier one in this article - in which a man was depressed because of a miserable job and guilt for placing his father in outside care - do not belong under the rubric "depression treatable by drugs". These people need nothing more than the understanding of those around them and an acceptance of their own emotions - things that are not available in pharmaceutical pills.

Shame on AlterNet for falling into the trap of blindly accepting the pharmaceutical-corporate rigged attitude of treating every human variation as a disease.

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A complete misrepresentation of what I stated
Posted by: heid on Jun 14, 2007 3:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I made quite clear that there are cases of depression with physical causes, and made no suggestion as to how they should be approached.

Snide comments, suggesting absurdities like being a follower of L. Ron Hubbard, in no way further this issue.

I made three points:

-- Huge numbers of inappropriate prescriptions are being made for depression by doctors who are, in no sense, qualified in psychoanalysis.

-- Too many people are being given disease diagnoses, when they are actually having normal, even healthy, reactions to difficult circumstances - as in the case of the man whose case is being used as the article's primary subject.

-- Pharmaceutical firms clearly have a hand in this, as demonstrated by their very obvious presence in so many doctors' offices.

I never said, nor would I have said, that clinical depression doesn't exist, and certainly would never have suggested that depression doesn't have negative effects on heatlh. It most assuredly does - but wholesale drugging of people , as now exists, is hardly the solution. This idea merely plays into the hands of the pharmaceutical corporations, and the author's unquestioning acceptance of drugs helps feed a dangerous reliance on drugs, when much better solutions may be at hand - like the simple act of talking out one's problems.

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Anti-depressants indeed are hugely misused
Posted by: Wish on Jun 14, 2007 11:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What user 'heid' states is absolutely true: the absolute over-use of drugs for depressed people. I have experienced all sides myself, and am absolutely convinced that greater part of people who get anti-depressant do NOT need these drugs.
But apart form the whole financial aspect of the pharmaceutical industry, and doctors and shrinks who make money out of it, it's also a very easy 'solution'. Just start taking the drugs and then we'll see what's next. I was astounded to see on American tv ads for these drugs "feeling under the weather? just ask your doctor for drugs X and you'll feel so much better". What bullshit!!

The whole problem, which is also inherent to the 'standard' psychological healthcare, is that people do not want to FEEL.
Especially in the macho male culture, men do not feel, right? Do not talk about feelings, do not express emotions.

And with these drugs, feelings and emotions are even more subdued and repressed. And...did you ever read about all the possible sice effects?!
In my search for my 'ways', I have experience with anti-depressants, 'standard' psychologists and psychiatrists, AND I have (a lot) experience with what would be called 'alternative' methods. From that, I can say I have a huge aversion to the 'accepted' psychological healthcare. Sure, there are good people among them, but the general view is so limited. There is so much more when going to feeling, bodywork, etc. Yes, also meditation.

For some people drugs may surely be helpful, for most people they are NOT necessary. To say depression is mostly a physical thing shows how little the ones saying this know. There is so much more than chemical A and chemical B.

But it's not easy. You have to be open and committed to be confronted with your fears, pains, trauma's. If you repress them with medicine and whatever, they are not going away. Not at all! They grow bigger and bigger.
It takes courage.
Step out of the box. There's more than the agrressive dr Phil methods you know. If you opt for drugs as the easy way out, or just have your doctor or shrink prescribe you drugs, question it! And try other ways than the standard man/woman in a suite in an expensive room, paying 45 minute hours, doing some talking while the other makes notes while staying distant, and all that standard blahblahblah.
There are many exellent 'alternative' methods and people who can help you get a true grip on your issues. Without the drugs.

But well...'thinking out of the box' (or fééling...), can you do it?!


And by the way: "Depression, so often seen as a woman's disease...", whoever made up that total nonsense?! Why is it suddenly more important when america finally conclude that men also can suffer from depression?! Men can learn a lot from women...

Oh yeah, I am a man.

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Anti-depressants
Posted by: sasquuatch55 on Jun 16, 2007 10:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anti-depressants are poisons that cause many physical and emotional problems. The side effects and withdrawl are pure hell. I have had depression for almost the whole of my adult and adolescent life (51). Was diagnosed 16 yrs. ago, and have tried almost every thing available. Some did nothing, some had such bad side effects I could not tolerate,some quit working, but none of them completely rid me of depression, just a little less depressed, and I would still get bouts of a deep depression that could last for days, just had to ride it out. See a new Dr. ,they try another Medication. i just got out of the hospital because of Drs. playing around with my meds. It has effected my life ,marriage, my being. I will never be free of depression, but can keep it toned down most of the time, but still find no pleasure in things i used to love, don't want to be around anyone, and cannot function most of the time. The stigma will always be there,after all who wants someone around that looks physically capable, but cannot function (to the satisfaction of an employer),and keep a job. He's just a lazy piece of crap. A man is supposed to be strong,and get-up when knocked down, not cower like a beaten puppy.It's something you can't explain,and most people think you can "just get over it", and some can. Even some Psychs. and councilers think that way. I,m tortured by the depression, the med's, the isolation, the stigma. I wish I could "get over it " and have a joyous and productive life. It's a life curse with bad days ,and really bad days . For me its bad ,but for Drs. councilers ,and Pharma. business is booming. I'd like to know how many drugs that are produced actually cure illness and how many just keep us strung out. The war on drugs needs to start with the Pharmaceutical companies and the advertizers, they are a true evil menace to society.

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comments on the "men's depression"article
Posted by: ronsenese on Jun 17, 2007 4:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Read it with particular interest because I am a sufferer diagnosed with depression.... after being diagnosed I opted for pschyotherapy without drugs....this worked and now the doctor says, and therapist agrees , the ailment is in remission.
Had all the symptoms.... change in sleep habit.....in eating and in sexual activity as well as sexual interest...all this coming back to normal after 4 months in therapy. Thanks for the article on the 'DIRTY LITTLE SECRET' that men don't talk about for the reasons you stated ...Perhaps we can break the silence....
RON SENESE

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