I am getting depressed seeing so many people offering so many different “cures” for the expressed depression that others are complaining about. The stay-at-home situation can be seen as the proximate cause of this self-expressed “depressionitis”.
My depression, being dependent on the depression
others are supposedly expressing, therefore, has no cure.
Let us now analyze whether there is enough reason
for this self-assessment of “depressionitis”.
When there was no COVID-19 pandemic and when
everyone was allowed to sit together, socialize, talk, hold hands, all that people
did was sit together and fiddle with their phones – sending messages (so old
fashioned), posting on Facebook, Instagram, tweet on twitter, or bother others
with WhatsApp forwards; nary a thought about the other people sitting at the
table.
There was one extenuating factor though – all the
others around the table were also doing the same thing. Meeting for a face-to-face
with others (it used to be like “lunch on the third Thursday of the month”, the
fourth Thursday in November being Thanksgiving Holiday in the US) where everyone
is now focusing on her mobile phone. That is irony that is missing. Therefore
depression, I guess.
By the way, this depression due to being home-bound
appears to be a disease of the west. So, you see, Wuhan gave the world COVID-19
and the west is responding with its “depressionitis”.
Let us digress a little bit and see what people did
in the antiquated days when these fancy social media stuff were not there –
there was always the backyard-gossip. It is that virus that has spread far
beyond one’s backyard.
Does this “depressionitis” hold good for DINKs? Despite
not having kids, before COVID-19, they were too stressed out to be depressed - the
meetings with one’s bosses (this is the never-let-go-leech), colleagues,
business partners, teammates, juniors, contractors, the commuting, never end.
With the lock down, the thing continues, and what
more, it continues when you “arrive at the office” the next morning, just going
upstairs to your office-at-home. Basically, nothing has changed. Therefore, what
you experience is not “depressionitis” but continually being stressed out. Miscued
diagnosis.
Oh, I did miss out on one thing – you could not
take the next flight out to continue the meeting in a different continent!
Yeah, now I see why you could be depressed, beyond being merely stressed out.
Of course, COVID-19 came at the most inappropriate
time. It spoiled your summer vacation plan. Nothing can be more depressing than
that.
I know you well enough that you got itchy to get
back into the middle of the action less than halfway through your meticulously
planned vacation, only to be reminded that there would be a penalty for cutting
short your days of stay at the resort hotel. You went into depression for the
rest of your vacation period. My sympathies.
For those with kids, when you went to office, you
thought it was bliss – full eight hours, at the least, of freedom from home! No
nagging husband, no pesky little kids. That bliss is gone now. You have reasons
to be depressed.
Yeah, now you have to do all your household chores.
No maid or manservant to help you, because of the lockdown. You think, “How
sweet it was when I could come home, throw my office bag anywhere I please and
demand a cup of coffee, and some samosas to go with it. Now, I have to make
that coffee, not only for myself but for my wife, too. Alas, I am not even
coming from office.” One sympathizes, just as James Bond did for the skewered
lamb that he had at dinner in Casino Royale.
I have a ready cure for you. Do not allow yourself
to be depressed. Have a variety of interests. If you cannot see NBA basketball,
no fret. Sit down and re-enact in your mind, the last time you were at an NBA
game and what happened there that gave you immense, however fleeting it was,
pleasure. Or, it could be the last time India won World T20. Let that bring a
smile on your face. Imagination is free. No one will know why you are smiling –
an added incentive.
Or, with nothing to do, you cannot boast to your
friend that you wished there were thirty hours to a day so that you can finish
doing those things (be honest with yourself – there was never such a day and
you were just keeping up with the Jones). Now, boast to your friend that
you are catching up on all those readings that you had put off, no less of a
lie, but an anti-depressant. That should count for some.
Or, to go easy on yourself, give your brain
something to think about when you are not doing much of thinking. Boredom or
depression will vanish.
To end this long nonsensical rant, just be honest
with yourself. You would not feel depressed. You have nothing to do and so you
are doing nothing. What is the big deal with that? Is lazing around against the
law? Indulge in that.
Or, just as I am doing – write nonsense, no worse
than the last WhatsApp message you forwarded. That will get you out of your
depression.
To twist and turn the words of London Breed, mayor
of San Francisco, I was depressed of hearing that people are depressed because
of the stay-at-home orders.
I have now the definitive cure.
“Don’t blame it on COVID-19; blame it on yourself!”
Raghuram Ekambaram
6 comments:
Depresssion may not be the right phrase...People do have 'Anxiety' over the possibility of Covid infection and hospitalisation , sufferings etc and possibly death, though the fatality rate is quite low in Tamil Nadu.
There are many people, who heel Covid will not hit thwm and merrily go around without maintaining basic precautions viz mask, hand washing, hhygiene, social distancing etc.
There are many others who on the other hand , are quite anxious about their own health and that of theri near and dear.
Thanks Damodaran. But, reading newspapers you spot "depression" far more often than "anxiety" as you have pointed out. I agree with your distinction, but as media is my implicit focal point, it is "depression".
Raghuram Ekambaram
Surprised to see you here.
For me personally, as I am no spring chicken, physical labour involved in housekeeping without help, that might be second nature to the able bodied young, is back breaking and takes me the whole day.I am exhausted. It leaves me no time to do anything that I enjoy, and that is quite depressing.There is also quite a bit of financial anxiety,and anxiety about future of my loved ones,which I would not wish to elaborate. For me, I am anxious/depressed/sad due to circumstances beyond my control, I really can not feel otherwise,even if I could be depressed etc because of my own fault.
Aditi,
The post is NOT meant for you, or me. I have my own reasons and just like you, I do not want to bring them into this conversation. I am home now, for most of the time and I, unlike you, do have the time - the increased frequency of my posts!
But, when I go to work I am mentally more than stressed, about things that could be happening at home. Even now, I am stressed out inside my house about things that can happen in an instance. No comparison, but I am not sure my situation is so different than yours that there can be no comparison.
Once you said that you have difficulty "living in the moment". Try that now, if you can.
I truly, sincerely appreciate your comment. The only discordant note was, IMHO, you did not recognize the post is not relevant to you. I stayed away from situation like yours (and, mine too), as my suggestions would not be relevant.
Thanks for perceptive comments that drew me out, as usual.
I hope the standard of my posts has not been compromised.
RE
Sir I have thought this same thing at times
"You have nothing to do and so you are doing nothing. What is the big deal with that? Is lazing around against the law? Indulge in that."
Indeed my parents prescribe it to me during my pangs of feeling low. Which are not new during the pandemic but which have been regular in the past few years.
But let us realise why our first instinct to doing nothing is to start feeling low, rather than indulging in it? It is strange when we see that peer pressure exists here too - "oh look at all that he/she did in the lockdown. What did I do? Nothing?". Even when there is probably no reason for that line of thinking. We live in a society which has this vicious cycle of:
"peer pressure to do -> getting depressed because of peer pressure and criticism -> not doing anything because your depressed -> peer pressure to do"
Even in cases where the peer pressure is not openly heard or seen (when others decide to be decent), people like me KNOW that "I should feel bad about myself, this is what society has taught me in my life"
Like you said sir, COVID is an excuse, maybe for some people depression (or anxiety as you prefer to call it) it is new. For many others it is a habit they deem necessary.
- Raghavan Ramalingam
Thanks for the expanded comment, so strongly connected to the issue and taking it further. I believe I mentioned "keeping up with the Jones" - this is the peer pressure brought about on oneself, as you rightly point out. We should break the cycle, perhaps by "living in the moment". I try to follow this dictat and succeed quite infrequently; but even such short respites rejuvenate me.
Best regards,
RE
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