Depression Information

Beating Stress, Anxiety and Depression


Why are these illnesses on the rise? And why do some people become so ill through these illnesses, they can find it hard to function?

Well they sure don't happen overnight! You don't suddenly wake up one morning and feel stressed or depressed. It's not like flicking on a light switch! And by the same rule, if you're suffering, you can't just wake up one morning, flick off the switch and say "Great, I'm better now."

Many people who don't suffer from these illnesses often say to sufferers:

"Come on, snap out of it."

If only it was so easy! Should anyone say this to you, please forgive them as it's just a lack of understanding. It's very hard for people to understand how you're feeling if they haven't been there.

The fact that these illnesses don't suddenly happen means we can draw some parallels with illnesses such as heart diseases, some cancers and strokes.

Because these illnesses don't just suddenly happen either.

If we look at heart disease, it's often the result of damaging behaviors practised over many years. Behaviors such as smoking, lack of exercise and a diet high in saturated fat. Strokes are a result of similar behaviors and cancers too, particularly heavy smoking and drinking as you know.

So how do stressful illnesses such as stress, depression and anxiety compare?

Stress is also the product of harmful mental habits and behaviors. These habits and behaviors are developed and practised over years - since childhood in most cases. These are the mental processes that enable us to make sense of our lives and the circumstances we're faced with. When we reach adulthood, we perform them automatically because we've learned these behaviors by repetition.

Think of it like learning to drive a car. Initially, the skills required to control the vehicle needed conscious thought. It seemed really difficult didn't it? But once we've performed them for sufficient periods, we drive on auto-pilot. We've mastered the required skills by repetition.

Here's the key: if we eat healthy food, take regular exercise, cut out harmful behaviors such as smoking and drinking, we improve our health and drastically reduce the risk of heart disease, cancer and strokes. We are repeating good habits, habits that will give our physical well being a huge boost.

It's exactly the same for stress. What's important to understand is that not everyone becomes stressed or depressed - even when tragic and traumatic circumstances happen to them. Just like people who lead a healthy lifestyle and avoid harmful habits and behaviors, people don't become stressed or depressed because they have learned effective habits and behaviors that prevent stress from arising.

This is very good news if you suffer from these illnesses. Because just as we can learn habits and behaviors which cause us to become highly-stressed, depressed or anxious, we can learn the habits and behaviors which stop these terrible illnesses in their tracks. And the more often we make use of them, we'll soon begin to perform them automatically and our mental health will benefit enormously.

No more feeling stressed out. No more feeling unable to cope. No more anxiety and no more depression. EVER.

I'm living proof of this. For 5 years, a series of traumatic events sent me spiralling into an anxiety-induced depression nightmare. I came out of it by learning the natural skills that starve these illnesses. The more I used them, the less anxious I became. They're now as natural to me as driving a car, and I've completely eradicated anxiety and depression from my life.

You can do it too.

Chris Green is the author of the new book "Conquering Stress", a special program which will show you how to conquer stressful illnesses such as depression, anxiety, panic and worry permanently and without taking powerful drugs. You can learn more about this new book and purchase it at http://www.conqueringstress.com


MORE RESOURCES:

CEP News

GM shares hit lowest price since Great Depression
BusinessWeek - Nov 20, 2008
Shares of General Motors Corp. plummeted to a low not seen since the days of the Great Depression as hope that the automakers could receive a financial ...
GM shares soar on news of auto loan compromise BusinessWeek
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Voice of America

The Big Three Depression risk
CNNMoney.com - 20 hours ago
Some fear a loss of GM, Ford and Chrysler would take US into another depression. Even if that doesn't happen, a major auto failure would clearly hurt. ...
Auto Execs Reset Bailout Pitch; Republicans to Rewrite CAFE for Loans Ward's Auto (subscription)
Big Three do not have their act together Scripps News
Ailing automakers plead for $25b in loans Boston Globe (registration)
Detroit Free Press - Voice of America
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We've Been Down This Road Before: A Great Depression Quiz
Huffington Post, NY - 40 minutes ago
Half of these quotes are taken from Arthur Schlesinger Jr.'s "The Crisis of the Old Order," about the Great Depression and the coming of the New Deal; ...


An Eight-Point Plan to Avoid a Depression
TheStreet.com - 7 hours ago
It will take the Great Depression II off the table once and for all. This must be done now. Today. January is too late. Another depression will not be ...
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The Daily Voice

Are We Headed For Another Great Depression?
The Daily Voice, NY - 5 hours ago
Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman sees a parallel between today's economic woes and the Great Depression era. "In 2008, as in 1932, ...
Obama's One-Time Opportunity: to Restructure the American Economy Huffington Post
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Some see a recession, some a depression, but it’s bad all over
Christian Science Monitor, MA - 6 hours ago
For others, the word “depression” has entered the everyday lexicon. We sorted data from a recent Pew Research Center survey, conducted just before Election ...


Gov. Gardner made major changes to North Carolina during Depression
Triangle Business Journal, NC - 6 hours ago
As governor of North Carolina from 1929 to 1933, O. Max Gardner was dealt the hand of confronting the effects of the Great Depression. ...


Arthur Foulkes: The Great Depression is not the place to look for ...
Terre Haute Tribune Star, IN - 14 hours ago
The Great Depression, which started in 1929, lasted well over a decade with high unemployment and real economic well-being not significantly improving until ...


Depression survivors have lesson to teach
Reading Eagle, PA - 2 hours ago
The Issue: Children of the Great Depression recall what life was like when the unemployment rate was more than twice what it is today. ...


FDIC chair Bair: More 'ammunition' coming to strengthen banks
Bizjournals.com, NC - 4 hours ago
Bair grew up in Kansas, raised by parents who emphasized the value of thrift after living through the Depression. “We’ve kind of lost touch” with those ...

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