UnDoing Depression
What you'll learn
- Understand the relationship between behavior, thought, and emotion.
- Identify Ultimate Goals associated with their own nondepressed state.
- Create and carry out Immediate Goals which serve their Ultimate Goals.
- Use a series of nonpharmacological strategies to enhance their sleep cycle.
- Appreciate the relationship between exercise and nondepressed mood.
- Enhance their diet to improve energy and mood.
- Prioritize social contact and build their social network.
- Elevate the importance of enjoyable activity in their hierarchy of activities.
- Identify potential avenues for personal meaning by examining their own past.
- Reduce the risk of relapse using structured planning strategies.
Requirements
- If you suspect that you may have depression, and have not yet done so, please consult your physician. This course is not psychotherapy, and cannot be considered a substitute for professional care.
Description
Note: As a special introductory offer, this course is priced at $10 for a limited time. This price will increase in increments to reflect the actual development costs of the program. Once you have purchased the program, however, it is yours. No price changes apply or alter your access to the course.
Depression is one of the most difficult experiences in life, yet it is one of the most common of psychological complaints. Regardless of what causes it for a particular person (and there are usually multiple risk factors involved), depression will affect all aspects of a person's experience: their emotional state, their behavior, their thoughts, and their physical functioning. Unfortunately, changes in each of these areas tend to magnify changes in the others, creating a spiral of symptoms.
Cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) works to disrupt these spirals by focusing on elements within the person's control - in particular, the behavior and thoughts (not too surprisingly, given the name!). This course presents an understanding of depression, then advocates an emphasis on action to start the cycle moving in the upward direction.
Most people, during depression, want to feel better. Once that happens, they reason, their motivation will return and then they can begin reclaiming their lives. Unfortunately, this leaves them in an existence in which the depressed state is maintained. In CBT we reverse the plan: Take action, then get motivated, then feel better.
Nice idea - but how do you take action without motivation? Answer: Using a structured system of behavioral activation - essentially, gradual goal setting targeting the areas of life likely to produce the greatest payoffs in mood. Once the mood lifts, even by a tiny amount, their is a slight clearing in "brain fog," enabling a bit more action, which can improve the mood just a bit more, challenging the negative thoughts that depression brings, and raising the energy enough to do a tiny bit more. We create a feed-forward cycle that mimics the downward collapse into depression.
Great, but how do you know where to start? We review the areas that have received the most research support, and provide concrete guidelines about how to make the most of them. You will be asked to examine your life in a series of exercises designed to identify your own targets for initial work.
The ideas given in this program are taken from the research literature, as well as from the author's books Your Depression Map and How to be Miserable, as well as the Changeways Core Program, which is a CBT-based depression group therapy protocol in use around the world (and translated into six languages).
It is important to understand that depression can be a severe problem requiring care by a healthcare professional who can assess you directly. This program is not a substitute for such care. If you suspect that you have clinical depression, please see your doctor and consider enlisting the help of a psychologist or other qualified counsellor.
What if you have done so and it is clear that you are not clinically depressed, but simply in a dull, dissatisfying, or unmotivated place in your life? The techniques in this course are also recommended and helpful for many people in this situation. In fact, without the severe loss of energy that depression brings, you may be able to make use of the strategies in a more accelerated fashion.
Remember, though: Watching videos doesn't help anyone very much. Most of the course recommendations involve getting away from the computer and getting involved in outside life. You'll get a 100-page guidebook to help you in your efforts.
Who this course is for:
- This course is suited to individuals with depressed mood wishing to take concrete action to reclaim their lives and feel better. This may include people with clinical depression, but also those with less intense mood disturbances, including a sense of inertia, boredom, or dissatisfaction with their lives.
- Those with possible clinical depression should take this course only after consulting with a qualified healthcare professional. Some depressions may be symptomatic of other ailments best treated medically. As well, depression can be a serious problem that requires personalized attention that a course such as this cannot provide.
- This program is not intended for those individuals diagnosed with Bipolar Disorder, Schizophrenia, or those experiencing psychotic symptoms.
- Individuals with unusually severe clinical depression may find that even with assistance from a physician or counsellor, they are unable to make use of the strategies in this program until the episode lifts to at least some degree.
Course content
- Preview04:47
- Preview9 pages
- Preview08:59
- Preview07:49
- Preview03:54
- Preview1 page
- Preview03:21
Instructor
Randy Paterson is a psychologist and author in Vancouver Canada. His most recent book is the popular How to be Miserable: 40 Strategies You Already Use. He is the Director of Changeways Clinic and writes a blog called PsychologySalon. His work emphasizes the treatment of problems related to stress, anxiety, depression, and significant life change. His previous books include The Assertiveness Workbook, Private Practice Made Simple, and Your Depression Map, as well as a variety of resources and protocols for mental health practitioners. He conducts workshops on mental health issues for the public and for mental health professionals within Canada and internationally.