13 Comments
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Trish Chedgzoy's avatar

I wholeheartedly believe as well many depressions are a lack of vitamins and minerals and a good diet that are key to our brain health. We are eating mainly dangerous synthetic food with zero mineral content,highly toxic and dangerous to the brain. Also the elephant in the room is the dangerous bioweapon called the vaccine, now depression and suicide is off the scale with that poison circulating in the brain and body. Mass depopulation underway I fear.

Anteros Astrology's avatar

yes, to the deadly bio weapon. My endocrine system coincidentally stopped working not long after being jabbed. Imagine my anger and frustration. Fortunately, I have a lot of positives to compensate. I’m sure many people are unable to say that. But my point is this, the bio weapon is deadly, but what is far more insidious is the world of globalists who are an acting a policy of eugenics against the people of the world. How could we have anything but mass insanity until there’s a movement to counteract the psychopaths? in an ideal world, anger, depression and psychosis will only be the beginning of the retribution that will rightfully come one day and it won’t be in a courtroom with phony fake money that’s worthless and being printed like wallpaper. Any child who knows anything about economics knows that this is an entire other ball of melting wax put on our children’s plate for them to suck on. I think it’s about time people started expressing their anger in less uncertain, terms or nothing is going to ever change. If you don’t want war, you better get busy and figure out another plan because that’s where this is all headed.

Edith's avatar

Yes!!! This is so true🥲

The Advocacy Chronicles's avatar

I could not agree more. I am frustrated with the ever increasing rates of depression, self harm, anxiety and suicide for the entire population and yet no one is looking at the origin story. You nailed it. Circumstances lead to suicide - or it has been proven so in my small corner of the community. My brother nor my Father In Law - mentally ill. Both died by suicide due to life circumstances - one from lack of money, one from grief. All the pills in the world wouldn’t have mattered to either of them ❤️ thanks for being real ..

The Advocacy Chronicles's avatar

not always, not everyone … just clarifying :)

Dr. Cheryl Moore's avatar

This was great. There is so much to this including our food system toxicity, environmental and genes in our bodies not working at an optimal because of our quality of life.

Rogue Psychologist's avatar

Excellent point about the food supply and lifestyle factors. I have seen seasonal depression cured by Vitamin D supplementation and anxiety reduced by stabilizing blood sugar through protein/healthy -fats/low processed food diets. I have seen gluten free diets work wonder for mood issues with people who struggle with autoimmune disorders that include brain fog. low energy, anxiety and depression.

Dr. Cheryl Moore's avatar

Keep doing what you’re doing, because it’s working. People need this information. Thank you for all you do!

TinyDancer's avatar

Pleasantly surprised as I read the first paragraph then skipped to the last, then kept scrolling up and up and all the while appreciating your ideas. I often do that w/new-to-me writers, to avoid wasting time when I disagree w/the first & last thoughts. As someone who’s suffered situational depression-at a death for example & now often struggles with demoralization (who hasn’t what w/all the global chaos?) as well as had a majority of loved ones have long term disability from mental illness, I found the most surprising fact that there’s no protocol for weaning off psychotropic meds. Can that be right?

Rogue Psychologist's avatar

I have asked several MDs that I trust and respect about this. In my experience if a patient initiates the request a prescriber will work with them to wean off meds. I only know of one patient in all of my years of practice who was reducing meds at the insistence of her PCP.

Joey jinx's avatar

Well done we are doing our opmost and have been

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Oct 16, 2024
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Rogue Psychologist's avatar

Hello Gabriel,

In my experience as a treating psychologist, what differentiates depression from sadness for many people, is that depression is more about an inability to experience emotions (called anhedonia) than experiencing feelings of sadness. Of course one can be sad about not being able to feel things as well. Sadness as an emotion tends to be situation specific and time limited. It diminishes with time and self care.