It affects us all some way or another and yet people still don't truly know what it is. It's time to inform people that depression isn't just being down and being lazy. It's so much more than that and it's time for people to understand that. People who are depressed aren't choosing to act or feel like that. That is how they have to be because of this disease.
Friday, March 15, 2013
Works
Documentary Cited
The Depression Project. Dir. Grace Owen. Grace Owen, 10 Mar. 2011. Web
Nonfiction Book Cited
Willis, Laurie. Depression. Detroit: Gale Group, 2008. Print.
The Depression Project. Dir. Grace Owen. Grace Owen, 10 Mar. 2011. Web
Nonfiction Book Cited
Willis, Laurie. Depression. Detroit: Gale Group, 2008. Print.
5 Articles on Depression
Articles
1. 20 Tips to Tame Your Stress
By Lynn Ponton, MD
In this article it’s saying how
some stress in your life is good because it keeps people motivated and on top
of things, but if you have too much stress it will lead people to turn to
drugs, alcohol, or eating too much food. There are many different ways to deal
with stress but some people don’t know all the different ways.
What it
comes down to is taking a small amount of time out of a busy day and just
sitting down and taking some deep breathes. Then go on to do something that
will just free your mind for a little bit whether that be a hobby, exercising,
or just writing out a list of things that need to get done. Dealing with stress
can be done as long as you don’t let it get too bad. Nothing is worse than
being paralyzed with stress.
Ponton, Lynn. "20 Tips to Tame Your Stress." 20
Tips to Tame Your Stress (2013): n. pag. Web.
2. Choosing the Best SSRI
By Regina Bussing, MD
This
article is about how antidepressants have gotten better throughout the years.
Now doctors are seeing their patient and deciding which medication will work
best for them because there are so many new choices. Back in the 1980’s there
wasn’t much to choose from so doctors had a very limited amount. Now however
they can talk to the patient see what they’re symptoms are and can match that
patient with the best antidepressant for them. If that one doesn’t work or the
side effects are too intense then they can just prescribe a different one.
In this
article a man who’s had depression ever since he got out of college in the 80’s
was prescribed an antidepressant that the side effects were too awful for him.
He decided to go off of them and just live with his depression, but a few years
later he went to the doctor again and they told him there are a whole bunch now
that are more effective than before and if he doesn’t like how this one makes
him feel then they can try a different kind.
Bussing, Regina. "Choosing the Best SSRI."
Choosing the Best SSRI (2006): n. pag. Psychcentral.com. John M. Grohol, Psy.D.
Web.
3. Study Questions Effectiveness of Therapy
for Suicidal Teenagers
Benedict Carey
This article is saying how
therapy along is not enough sometimes for suicidal teenagers. When they have a
mental illness mixed with an eating disorder or a behavior problem it caused a
lot of trouble for that person causing treatment to be very difficult.
Depression in teenagers is getting incredibly hard to treat. This article says
that one in 8 teenagers have persistent suicidal thoughts. About a third of
these teenagers had made plans and attempted those usually within a year of
having those thoughts.
Researchers
surveyed 6,483 adolescents from the ages of 13 to 18 and found that 9 percent
of male teenagers and 15 percent of female teenagers experienced some stretch
of having persistent suicidal thoughts. Among girls, 5 percent made suicide
plans and 6 percent made at least one attempt (some were unplanned). This is a
big issue now and it’s getting worse. Doctors are feeling confused by what to
do to help these teenagers.
Carey, Benedict. "Study
Questions Effectiveness of Therapy for Suicidal Teenagers." Study
Questions Effectiveness of Therapy for Suicidal Teenagers [New York] 09 June
2013: n. pag. Print.
4. Are You Hiding Depression Behind a Smile?
Lisa Mayoh
This article is about how
people in Australia and everywhere else are hiding their depression behind a
smile. They are pretending that everything is fine so people don’t notice but
once they’re alone they let it all out. When celebrities come out and say that
they suffer from a mental illness it tends to help other people say oh maybe I
can get help too and not try and cover this up anymore.
On
average, one in four Australian women and one in six Australian men will have
depression at some point in their lives. Many of these people are not getting
the treatment they could be causing them to suffer in silence more. Australians
are trying to help this problem as much as they can.
Mayoh, Lisa. "Are You Hiding Depression Behind a
Smile?" Nationwide News [Australia] 30 Oct. 2011: n. pag. Print.
5. Young and Carefree? Not So, Stress Survey
Shows
Sharon Jayson
People called “Millennials”
are more stressed than anyone else at this time. Millennials are young adults
from 18 years old to 33 years old. They are mainly stressed because of these
reasons: 76% work 73% money, 59% relationships, 56% family responsibilities,
and 55% the economy. Doctors are saying that because they have so much school
debt and can’t get a job after they graduate college their stress levels
increase immensely. These people though are trying to get rid of their stress
whether that be hanging out with family/friends, going out and exercising,
eating, listening to music, or in some cases turning to drugs and alcohol.
For
these people their stress is about 5.4 on a scale of 1-10. 1 is little to no
stress and 10 is a great deal of stress. They say that these people are growing
up in tough time were a lot of pressure was put on them to work hard and
achieve greatness so when they graduate from college and can’t get a job it
just goes against everything they were brought up to do and they feel like
failures.
Jayson, Sharon. "Young and Carefree? No So, Stress
Survey Shows." USA Today 07 Feb. 2013: n. pag. Print.
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Thesis statement
Why do people think that depression is just someone being sad and whiny? People just don't understand depression and I think it's about time we inform more people that depression is more than just being "sad".
Something interesting
http://www.depressedtest.com/
Here's a link to a depression test. I'm not saying that this is at all accurate I'm just providing something that might help you go and talk to a doctor and get help. I'm not trying to diagnose anyone.
Here's a link to a depression test. I'm not saying that this is at all accurate I'm just providing something that might help you go and talk to a doctor and get help. I'm not trying to diagnose anyone.
Prezi
This is my prezi I created about depression. It's really just basic but I think it is still kind of informative.
http://prezi.com/0esmngdm5b96/untitled-prezi/?kw=view-0esmngdm5b96&rc=ref-33730969
http://prezi.com/0esmngdm5b96/untitled-prezi/?kw=view-0esmngdm5b96&rc=ref-33730969
Friday, March 8, 2013
Something Interesting
http://www.webmd.com/depression/features/natural-treatments
This is a website about natural treatments for depression. I disagree with the whole set a routine idea because I feel like it would make things worse for you but I'm not a doctor so I don't really know
This is a website about natural treatments for depression. I disagree with the whole set a routine idea because I feel like it would make things worse for you but I'm not a doctor so I don't really know
Monday, March 4, 2013
Nonfiction Book
1.
A summary of your text (or chapters/articles you
read from your text). This should be at least 3-5 solid paragraphs.
My nonfiction
book is about depression. In the book it describes what can make you depressed,
how people handle their depression, and how to treat it. Many people suffer
from depression but they don’t even know it. They think that it is just normal
to feel that way. They believe that it is just part of aging and that you’ll
“snap out of it”. People don’t like to get help because they think that it’s a
weakness, people won’t understand, or they will call them lazy and tell them to
just get over it.
Things that can
make people depressed could be a chemical inbalance in your brain, or something
traumatic that has happened in your life such as a close person dying. There
are many different reasons for depression and doctors still aren’t quite sure
all the different causes of depression. Sometimes it just slowly creeps up on
you, you try to ignore it and blow it off as you just being sad or something
but that’s probably the worst thing you could do. People need to know that this
is a disease and it can be controlled if you get help. No one has to suffer
through this just because other people around them don’t understand this
disease.
Everyone is
different when it comes to handling their depression. Everyone is different in
general. Some people turn to God when the going gets tough and others just try
and get through it the best they can on their own. The best thing people can do
if they think that their depressed is go and see a doctor. They can then tell
you you need antidepressants, to talk to a therapist, or both. Most of the time
it will probably be both. There is another thing such as sending shock waved through
your brain to make it “work the right way” some people believe in this
technique and some don’t either way if someone is desperate and looking for
anything they will try anything.
Depression can
never really be “treated”. It can be helped and contained but it might never
really go away. In my book I read there were people who had it for almost 40
years. 10 of which went undiagnosed. Depression hits hard and affects everyone
differently according to my nonfiction book.
2.
At least 3 key passages from your text (cited by
page number).
“Form of mental illness I have is called Bipolar 2, which means I’m more
likely to suffer from depression than from Mania, it’s frenzied opposite” Pg.
21.
“I began to have certain experiences that were very strange and puzzling
to me. For example, one day, I was talking to someone at work about close
colleague of mine and I just burst into tears. I remember thinking how odd that
was. It wasn’t the sort of behavior that was characteristic of me at all” Pg.
31.
“I
spend about a week in the hospital, where I sank into a kind of oblivion while
my doctor experimented with various antidepressant drugs. He explained that
with mental illness, you can’t just draw a blood sample and say, “Ah-ha! You
need this, or you need that” Pg. 37.
3.
At least 5 thought-provoking questions that
allow readers of your page to think about the topic you have chosen in relation
to your nonfiction book and the world around us.
1.
What is depression to you?
2.
Have you ever experienced it yourself?
3.
Has anyone close to you been diagnosed with any
kind of depression?
4.
In your opinion, is depression something you can
just “snap out of” or is it something serious like a disease?
5.
How do you think people can overcome
depression?
4.
A citation for your nonfiction book. Use
Easybib.com if necessary.
Willis, Laurie. Depression. Detroit: Gale Group, 2008. Print.
5. Include a
picture(s) (one that you created or composed) on the page that relates to the
book you have chosen.
6.
Finally, include a section on how this
particular book has guided or fits in with the issue you have chosen to work
with for this project.
This book fits in with my issue because it is
all about me issue. It has people’s personal stories of how they dealt with
their depression, how they got diagnosed, and how they got treatment. It has a
wide variety of the different types of depression out there and shows many
examples.
Documentary Assignment
1.
Provide a summary
of your chosen documentary. Synthesize
key ideas, concepts, or experiences explored throughout the film. Include a
thorough summary (if written, at least three paragraphs. (5 points)
My documentary is
about depression. It goes around and talks to student who are in college and
how they deal with their depression. It also looks at other people’s point of
view of depression and tries to figure out why mental illness is such a taboo
subject.
In this film even
though it’s only 15 minutes long it explores a lot. The girl who created it
goes and talks to a psychologist who tells us what it expected from someone
with depression and then talks about medicine.
In another part of
the documentary the girl talks to two people who suffer from a mental illness
one has depression and another has Bipolar Disorder. Both of them say how
people without the disease don’t understand what it’s like. You can’t just “snap
out of it”. They talk about their struggles with the disease and how they cope
with it.
2.
Which storytelling
techniques are used in the documentary you viewed? Does the film follow one
person’s story or many? Does the film use footage from other broadcasts/shows
or its own footage? Does the film use statistics, experience, or both? Describe
in detail about the variety of techniques used. (5 points)
This film uses its’ own footage. It used statistics and experiences to
give the watcher information. This documentary follows only about two people’s
stories, and it’s only a small part of their story that we are able to see. In
this film it’s put on by a college student in the UK she goes around the psychologists,
college students, and then to the college mental illness help center. She talks
with all of these people about why depression and other mental illnesses are so
taboo.
3.
What are some elements of the media that are brought into the story
(i.e. news articles, news programs, etc.)? (5 points)
In this story there really weren’t any
media items that were brought into the film.
4.
What types of other sources are provided by the documentary (i.e. interviews, experiences,
etc.)? (5 points)
We hear about her own struggles with
depression and then we hear two other college students’ stories, and how they
coped with their illness. We also hear from a psychologist and a mental help
center.
5.
Is there any bias in this film? Describe in detail why or why not. (5 points)
Well in this film you only really hear from
those who have worked with mental illness or from those who have suffered from
it so I guess in a way it could be biased. They don’t talk to other people who
don’t have a mental illness but there is still information on what they think.
So all in all I don’t really think that this film was too biased.
6.
What information can you take away from your
documentary to include in your research? In other words, how does this connect to your research? (5 points)
This film connects
to my research because it covers what I was looking into. It tells us how
people with mental illness are just like everybody else you can’t just look at
them and see that they’re sick, that’s why mental illness is so hard to
understand for some. I took away that in college there are still places for you
to get help if you feel like you might be depressed or something else. There is
help out there for people if they are willing to go to it.
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