Depression Epidemic Hits Many Hard This Christmas Season
By Michael Snyder/Economic Collapse Blog December 22, 2016 Share this article:
For many people, the holiday season is the most dreaded time of the
year. But does it have to be that way? The holidays can be a real
pressure point because they tend to magnify our problems.
If
you are a very busy person, it is likely that you are even busier and
more stressed for time during December. If your family relationships are
strained, this time of the year can be really tough because there is
pressure to interact with family.
Other people that feel a deep sense of loneliness often find that it becomes even deeper and more intense around Christmas.
And
more than anything else, so many people feel like they are missing out
on something because their holidays never seem to match up with the
glittering ideal that is constantly portrayed in the movies and on
television.
We are a deeply unhappy nation anyway, but this time of the year just seems to make it even worse.
The
truth is that there are a lot of people out there that can't wait for
the Christmas season to be over. If you can believe it, one survey found
that 45 percent of us actually dread the holiday season.
The following is an excerpt from a Psychology Today article...
We
are told that Christmas, for Christians, should be the happiest time of
year, an opportunity to be joyful and grateful with family, friends and
colleagues. Yet, according to the National Institute of Health,
Christmas is the time of year that people experience the highest
incidence of depression.
Hospitals
and police forces report the highest incidences of suicide and
attempted suicide. Psychiatrists, psychologists and other mental health
professionals report a significant increase in patients complaining
about depression. One North American survey reported that 45% of
respondents dreaded the festive season.
A
different survey found a similar result. According to that survey, 48
percent of all men say that they "feel depressed or sad" around
Christmas...
Amid pressures to be "merry"
and "happy", nearly half of men admit that they actually feel depressed
or sad over Christmas, a study by the Samaritans has revealed.
Out
of 140 people polled by an online survey, 48 percent of men said they
feel low in December with 45 percent saying their worries were the most
troubling during the festive period compared to any other time of the
year.
But of course it isn't like we are a
happy bunch the rest of the year either. It has been reported that the
number of Americans formally diagnosed with depression increases by
approximately 20 percent every year, and at this point about one out of
every six Americans is on an anti-depressant or some other kind of
psychiatric drug...
The number used to be
one in ten, but according to new data, one out of every six adult
Americans is taking anti-depressants or some other type of psychiatric
drugs now.
What that breaks down
to is "Overall, 16.7 percent of 242 million U.S. adults reported filling
one or more prescriptions for psychiatric drugs in 2013," according to
research published today in Journal of the American Medical
Association's JAMA Internal Medicine.
Those
are absolutely staggering numbers, and the epidemic is the worst among
middle age women. It may be hard to believe, but at this point one out
of every four women in their 40's and 50's is taking an antidepressant
medication.
And once you get on these drugs you
tend to stay on them for a very long time. One study found that more
than 84 percent of the people on these drugs get them refilled at least
three times a year.
Getting off these drugs is not easy, but staying on them indefinitely can be absolutely debilitating.
When
are we going to recognize that we have a serious national crisis on our
hands? Nobody disputes that we are the most drugged people on the
entire planet by a very wide margin.
Incredibly,
Americans account for only five percent of the global population, but
we consume more than 50 percent of the pharmaceutical drugs.
What is wrong with us?
According
to the New York Times, more than 30 million Americans take
antidepressants right now, and it has been reported that health
professionals in the United States write more than 250 million
prescriptions for antidepressants every year.
If we are not depressed, then why are we taking so much antidepressant medication?
Of
course the truth is that we are deeply depressed as a nation, and there
are many out there that have decided to medicate themselves. In the
United States today, 60 million people abuse alcohol and another 22
million people abuse illegal drugs.
So why are we so unhappy?
Well, there are lots of reasons, but one of the big ones is the breakdown of the family.
The
only two countries that have a higher divorce rate than the United
States are Belarus and the Maldives. When it comes to marriage we are a
dramatic failure as a nation, but nobody seems to be making fixing our
marriages a major national priority.
We also have the highest percentage of one person
households on the entire planet, and this leads to a tremendous amount
of loneliness.
Our wealth and technology have
allowed us to become more isolated than ever before, but that is not a
good thing. A century ago, 4.52 people were living in the average U.S.
household, but now the average U.S. household only consists of 2.59
people.
When you start seeing these numbers, it starts making sense why we are all so deeply depressed.
And
fewer Americans than ever are choosing to get married and start
families. According to a Pew Research Center survey, only 51 percent of
all adults in the United States are married.
But all the way back in 1960, 72 percent of all adults in this country were married.
So what is the answer?
Well,
you don't need to immediately run out and get married and start a
family in order to be happy. In fact, some of the unhappiest people in
the entire world are married.
And you aren't
going to find happiness in Christmas traditions either. You won't find
happiness by buying bigger and better Christmas presents, you won't find
happiness by watching more movies about Santa Claus, and you definitely
won't find happiness in a tree.
In the end,
what we are all craving is love and connection. If you have pleasant
holiday memories, they invariably involve other people. That is because
we were created to love and to be loved, and when we get away from that
we start to get into trouble.
The greatest need
in our world today is love. If you feel as though there is not a lot of
love in your life right now, ask yourself how much love you have been
giving to others.
Often it is the people that
give the most love that end up receiving the most love. So if you want
more love in your life, start reaching out and loving others.
If
you endeavor to become a person of great love, you will become happier
not only during the holiday season, but during every other time of the
year as well.
No comments:
Post a Comment