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Stuck in a Rut


Dear Rachel,

I’m not sure why I have been feeling so down lately, but I find that I just want to sleep all day and don’t feel like doing anything productive. It is not as if I suffered some major tragedy, so there is really no reason for me to feel like this, but I guess I am just stuck in a rut and I don’t know what to do about it. Every day seems like a repeat of the day before. Any suggestions?

Depressed
Los Angeles

Dear Depressed,

Our emotional well being is actually very similar to our physical well being. For example, the more we eat, the more our stomachs stretch, and therefore the more we need to eat the next time to feel full. So one can say over and over again how she would like to lose weight, yet if she continues to stuff herself at a meal, she will only be hungrier at the next.

What I am trying to say is that it is specifically your behavior that is keeping you in your state of depression. While it might not have been what initially caused you to feel down, it is certainly what is preventing you from getting out of your rut.

Chassidic philosophy teaches us that the word in Hebrew for depression, atzvut, is etymologically related to the Hebrew word for laziness, atzlut. This shows us that the less we do, the more depressed we are going to feel. The reason for this is that we were created in this world to do, to act, to move. If we become stagnant, we are working against our nature, we cannot feel that we are fulfilled and we will therefore become depressed. Being alive means that we need to constantly be productive, that we need to constantly grow. When we stop, when our day becomes a repetition of the one before, when our life becomes a straight line rather than a lot of ups and downs, it means we have flatlined. We may not be physically dead, but we are emotionally and spiritually dead.

So now the question is how can you get out of wherever you are stuck. Clearly, it would mean that you need to start doing things, becoming active. But contrary to popular belief, it is usually not by finding something you enjoy doing and just doing it. While sometimes that may help, that may work, the focus is still on you and completely on you. And if you are the only one who stands to gain and the only one to motivate yourself, you may choose that what you really feel like doing is staying in bed all day and not going out.

Rather, the best way to get your mind off of yourself and your depression is to focus on someone else, and ideally on someone else who you feel is in a worse situation than yourself. Try to do some volunteer work. Try to spend some time at the local hospital visiting children or at an old age home with the elderly. You will find that by helping another you will end up gaining more than you give. If you focus on making another person happy, you will not be able to focus on how miserable and stuck you feel. And when you succeed in making the other happy, meaning that you have changed someone else’s day, made an impact, a change, you will realize and recognize that today is not the same as yesterday, and that tomorrow has even greater potential than today.

I wish you much luck in getting out of your current state of mind, and being able to help others and thus truly being able to help yourself!

Rachel

P.S.: It is important to clarify that the above response is dealing with a case of the blues, not a situation of severe depression that could require medical or psychological treatment. If one finds oneself ever in a situation where the depression is increasing, suggestions such as the above do not seem to help, or one has thoughts or feelings to hurt oneself or others, one must seek immediate professional help. Depression is a serious mental illness and must be treated as such.


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Latest Comments:
Posted: July 25, 2008
depression
anyone who feels like they just want to stay in bed all day needs to be assessed for clinical depression, to imply that it is laziness would be so unfair, there can be biological reasons for depression as well as situations. Sometimes it is a matter of faking it until you make it, sometimes though this is only temporary and further episodes of depression will result until the cause is dealth with, so I sure hope this woman sought out the help of her physician and a counsellor
Posted By Anonymous

Posted: Jan 1, 2008
Needed to get a grip.
For years and years, I went from thing to thing, and from job to job. Then one day a good friend said to me, that I'd do well to find one thing I truly enjoyed and then stick with it all the way through. I was looking for a job, but had no good prospects, and so I began to volunteer for a wonderful phone help line, and soon was in love with the work. As a result of that volunteer job, I now have a wonderful paying job, and I actually like my work. I not only took the advice of my friend, but I let my faith play the most important roll in the getting that job, and now I am truly happy. That is the first time I've been able to say that in quite a long time. If you are in a rut, figure out one thing you truly like doing, do it, and follow it through. You might just be surprised.
Posted By Anonymous

Posted: Dec 11, 2007
stuck in a rut
Look for service groups in your area. I joined one several years ago. Groups often know of opportunities in your area that you may not be aware of. Also a great way to meet people and get more involved. Lots of fun doing a lot of good. I didn't have time to notice how sad and lonely I was. After a short time, I looked forward to our 6:00am meetings and getting to see my new friends.
Posted By Anonymous



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