Defeating Depression - The Winston Churchill Way
In pic : Windton Churchill laying bricks, being productive and beating depression at the same time. BANG!!
Winston
Churchill fought his depression with bricks. He'd lay them for hours at
his country home in Kent. He joined the bricklayers' union. And in 1921
he wrote about why it worked. It took psychology another 75 years to
catch up.
He called his
depression the "Black Dog." It followed him for decades. His method for
fighting it back was as basic as it sounds: laying brick after brick,
hour after hour.
Churchill
spelled out his theory in a long essay for The Strand Magazine. People
who think for a living, he wrote, can't fix a tired brain just by
resting it. They have to use a different part of themselves. The part
that moves the eyes and the hands. Woodworking, chemistry, bookbinding,
bricklaying, painting. Anything that drags the body into a problem the
mind can't solve by itself.
Modern
psychology now calls this behavioral activation. It's one of the
most-studied depression treatments out there. Depression sets a behavior
trap. You feel bad, so you stop doing things, and doing less means less
to feel good about. Feeling worse makes you do even less. The loop
tightens until you can't breathe inside it.
Behavioral
activation breaks the loop from the action side. You schedule the
activity first, even when every part of you doesn't want to. Doing it
produces small rewards: a wall gets straighter, a painting fills in, a
messy room gets clean. Those small rewards slowly rewire the brain.
Action comes first, and the feeling follows.
Researchers
at the University of Washington put this to the test in 2006. They
studied 241 adults with major depression and compared three treatments:
behavioral activation, regular talk therapy, and antidepressants. For
the people who were most severely depressed, behavioral activation
matched the drugs. It beat the talk therapy. A 2014 review of more than
1,500 patients across 26 trials backed up the result.
Physical
work like bricklaying does something extra on top of this. It crowds
out rumination, the looping bad thoughts that grind people down during
the worst stretches of depression. Bricklaying needs both hands and
gives feedback brick by brick: each one is straight or crooked. After an
hour you can see exactly how much wall you built. No room left for the
mental chewing.
The line George
Mack used in his post, "depression hates a moving target," is good
poetry. The science behind it is sharper. Depression hates a brain that
has somewhere else to be.
- Anish Moonka
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