Posts Tagged anxiety
Clinical Depression Runs in the Family – How Do You Deal With It?
I recognized that something was wrong about the time I was 20 years old. At the time I was serving as a missionary for my church in Europe in the country of Hungary. I was speaking fluent Hungarian and doing something that I dreamed of most of my life. My religion and missionary experiences are for another article. Right now I want to focus on my struggle with clinical depression, a disease that affects a large amount of people. My goal is to give a little bit of hope to somebody out there that they can know that, first, they are not alone, and second, there is a way to beat it.
My Family Struggles With Depression
One of the toughest things I had to deal with growing up is the fact that so many people are ignorant when it comes to understanding clinical depression. It is commonplace to believe that people with manic depression belong in the looney-bin. They believe that depression equals handicap or incapability. Fortunately, I was exposed to depression at a young age. So I guess my perspective comes from a different angle then most. Read the rest of this entry »
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Mood Changing Vices
When I am home and down I tend to play my music. Music has always been my biggest cure in life. I can play whatever kind of music I am in the mood for and tend to let my emotions release one way or another.
There are times when I might be a little mad, I find it is those times when I tend to go out and shop. I find that spending a little money I wouldn’t normally spend makes me feel better. Not a great habit, but it works.
When I feel anxious, I clean and clean and clean and clean.
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Doctors Can Predict the Onset of Eating Disorders – Anxiety and Eating Disorders
Doctors states that schizophrenia and depression are not the mental disorders that have the highest mortality rate; rather, they point out that among people who have this disorder, 20% of them yield to the illness. Therefore, it is helpful if there are ways to predict the risk factors of having eating disorders and who will likely develop it.
According to the statistics, almost 90% of those who have bulimia, anorexia, or both, are young women in their 20’s and teens. When they reach adolescence, their eating disorders have fully developed. Colleges in America reported that more than 40% of students have any of the three disorders in their florid or sub clinical form.
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