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Annie's Mailbox®, October 3

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Dear Annie: I am a 50-year-old woman who has struggled with depression for nearly 30 years. I've almost destroyed my career because I lack the motivation to seek out new tasks. I have spent many years as a virtual prisoner in my home because I see no reason to go out. I've become estranged from family and old friends. Those few people who are still around often worry because I am so pessimistic and angry.

I can't say I've tried every method imaginable to dig myself out of depression, but I have been in therapy three times and on prescription antidepressants without any noticeable success. I cannot seem to lift my mood for more than a couple of weeks at a time. Many days I resolve to keep a positive attitude, but it rarely lasts past midday.

I have heard of those who successfully cured their depression, so I know it can be accomplished, but it's beyond my reach. I do not have a primary care physician. I cannot afford the time or money to see a therapist regularly. My income is too high to qualify for any free or income-based programs. In-patient rehab is completely out of the question.

With the current rise in unemployment and greater numbers of people without health care coverage, what does someone like me do? — Depressed and Overwhelmed

Dear Depressed: The fact that you are writing us indicates you have not given up, and this is a good sign. Medication often is a trial-and-error process to find the best individual treatment. There are self-help groups that can offer emotional support, as well as information and resources, and they are free. Here are three to get you started: the National Alliance on Mental Illness (nami.org) at 1-800-950-NAMI (1-800-950-6264); the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance (dbsalliance.org) at 1-800-826-3632; and Recovery International (recovery-inc.org) at 1-866-221-0302.

Dear Annie: In the past few years, I have observed three different families learn the hard, sad truth about three different upscale retirement communities that promised "continuing care" for residents.

I say "caveat emptor."

In all three cases, everything was great: designer facilities, lovely food in lush dining rooms, fabulous activities and fine attention to the residents' needs. However, in all three cases, the family member became ill and was hospitalized and then released to the skilled nursing facility of their retirement home. Each family immediately learned that the facility didn't offer "that degree" of skilled nursing and they would have to find another place.

Of course, the information was in the fine print of the contract but glossed over by eager marketing directors. Annie, please urge potential residents and families to ask hard questions about exactly what is included and have an attorney review the contract. If told a nursing facility covers "everything," insist that statement be in there. — Lafayette, Ind.

Dear Lafayette: Some facilities do indeed cover every type of care, but all contracts should be read closely and scrutinized by an attorney. Thanks for warning our readers to pay close attention when they are looking at retirement communities.

Dear Annie: Your response to "Pregnant and Confused," the married woman who slept with "Pete" and is now pregnant with twins, was good, but didn't go far enough. She absolutely has to tell her husband so he can decide whether he wants to stay married and keep those twins if they are not his. And if he does, he should go after Pete for child support.

Pete needs to learn not to fish in another man's pond and is responsible for any damage he causes. And I'd dump that untrustworthy wife. — Bob in Virginia

Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190, Chicago, IL 60611. To find out more about Annie's Mailbox, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS.COM


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2 Comments | Post Comment
LW1: Has she tried simply getting more exercise? That produces natural hormones that can lighten your mood and make you feel better. Next, she should think about finding something productive to dedicate her time to outside of working hours- volunteer work helping the homeless, church activities, political activism, serving meals to the elderly, reading to children - whatever. It also sounds like this woman has completely cut herself off from the outside world, and I've found through personal experience that spending too much time alone can cause a person to lose his or her sense of perspective. Human beings are social creatures, after all, and getting plugged-in with a network of people who have something in common, can aid in recovery, even if it's just a support group. I am sure that medication can also help in some cases, but it sounds like this LW has been down the pharmacological road and found that it is a dead-end. Drugs are only a solution when the problem is just a chemical imbalance in the brain; if there is truly something amiss in one's life, then antidepressants will not solve the underlying problems.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Matt
Sat Oct 3, 2009 9:13 PM
Dear Annie,
I, too, struggled with depression most of my life. For me, depression is when I get all caught up on "me". ("Oh, poor me", "Why does this stuff always happen to me?" , "My boss is always picking on me." "My spouse doesn't appreciate me." "Everyone takes me for granted." "No one puts me first." etc.) Watch for the the "ME".... this is my signal - I'm beginning to become depressed.
What I do is.... refocus on others. I became a teacher after raising our own children. I find that by concentrating on helping them become useful members of our society .... my depression goes away. I feel valuable and appreciated. And when I look at the complications in their little lives...my "problems" don't seem so important.
You could volunteer to read to elementary children struggling to learn to read; mentor a troubled teen and model behaviors that will help that child be successful, become a big brother or sister for a middle school child with few positive role models.
Hope this works for others as well as it has for me. (31 years I've "managed" my depression, and counting.)
Focused on Helping Others
Comment: #2
Posted by: Donna Mitchell
Sun Oct 4, 2009 8:01 AM
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