We could all use some wisdom. Read the Blog
Four Steps to Shaping a Wiser Brain
What’s On Your Self-Care List This Summer?
Summer’s a great time to return to getting healthier and having fun. What’s on your list to make it happen? Read the Blog
Depression Linked to Telomere Enzyme, Aging, Chronic Disease
Depression isn’t just emotionally painful. It has a profound and serious physical health consequences. Read the Story
Leaving Behind Depression
People with depression tend to hide. They hide their pain. They hide the truth about their suffering because they fear no one will understand. So, they hunker down. They suck it up. They deal with it. Millions of Americans do this every day, seven days a week.
What is the alternative? The polar opposite of hiding seems to be a coming out into the open, a revelation of one’s true self. This involves vulnerability and trust and not a small measure of courage. But it can be done. Millions of Americans do this every day, seven days a week.
I know that in my own life, my hiding began in childhood. Seeking to avoid physical and emotional abuse at the hands of my father, I hid. I did so to be safe. Where would I hide? In the closet behind the hung clothes, the rafters of our garage or the cool and musty basement with the spiders. Sometimes, I would run as fast as I could on summer afternoons into the deep, verdant woods that surrounded my childhood home. I would lay down in the middle of a pine forest with my dog, surrounded by the trees that were my friends, that were my protectors as they hid me from my raging alcoholic father.
Drifting into adulthood, I didn’t let go of my habit of hiding. I had learned that others were not safe or just didn’t care. Like many other depressives, I became a pleaser, an overachiever and a success in my career – all the while hiding a sense of dread that I couldn’t figure out, let alone name.
I now know that I don’t need to hide anymore. I know that it is okay to be my true self with others I care about: my wonderful wife, my precious daughter, friends who are like brothers and sisters to me. Not hiding doesn’t always eliminate depression, but I have come to believe that there is a deep healing that takes place in intimacy that no antidepressant on its best day could match. I have come to believe in the strength and resilience of the human spirit, both mine and others. We won’t always find love and acceptance when we reach out to others. But then again, no one does in this imperfect, fragile and beautiful world. But I do know if we take the risk, if we leave the voices of our childhood that we’re not safe behind, we open ourselves to healing and an end to depression.
Lawyers, Put Down the Digital Pacifiers and Get a Better Life
From the site Leaving the Law, one lawyer’s call for others in the law to put down the digital stuff were connected to so that there’s time to really think about the more important stuff in life. Read the Blog
Stemming the Tide of Law Student Depression
A Yale law professor’s Journal article about the causes of law school depression and what the science of Positive Psychology can teach us. Read the Article
The Lawyer Personality: Why Lawyers Are Skeptical
Lawyers are outliers and tend to see the glass a half-empty. Why are lawyers so prone to skepticism? Read the Story
Mental Health Checkups as Important as Annual Physicals
We need to prioritize mental health in the same way as we do physical health researchers conclude. Read the Story
Are Lawyers More Miserable Than General Population?
The answer might surprise you. Read the News
My Dark Materials: The Music of Depression
From The New York Times, a musician writes about his relationship with music and depression. Read the Story
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