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  • b4777467766has quoted3 years ago
    The social sciences are where you apply the scientific method not to what’s happening in

    a test tube or a particle collider, but to how you and I live every day—to social life.
  • b4777467766has quoted3 years ago
    In that moment, I finally understood for the first time why—throughout this

    journey—I kept thinking about that day when I got terribly sick in rural

    Vietnam. When I yelled for drugs to stop my worst symptom—the extreme

    room-spinning nausea—the doctor told me: “You need your nausea. It is a

    message, and we must listen to the message. It will tell us what is wrong

    with you.” If I had ignored or silenced that symptom, my kidneys would

    have failed, and I would have died.

    You need your nausea. You need your pain. It is a message, and we must

    listen to the message. All these depressed and anxious people, all over the

    world—they are giving us a message. They are telling us something has

    gone wrong with the way we live. We need to stop trying to muffle or

    silence or pathologize that pain. Instead, we need to listen to it, and honor

    it. It is only when we listen to our pain that we can follow it back to its

    source—and only there, when we can see its true causes, can we begin to

    overcome it.
  • b4777467766has quoted3 years ago
    grieve because we have loved.

    We grieve because the person we have lost mattered to us. To say that grief

    should disappear on a neat timetable is an insult to the love we have felt.

    Deep grief and depression, she explained to me, have identical

    symptoms for a reason. Depression, I realized, is itself a form of grief—for

    all the connections we need, but don’t have.

    And now I realized—just like it is an insult to Joanne to say that her

    ongoing grief for her daughter is a form of mental dysfunction, it was an

    insult to my teenage self to say that his pain was just the result of bad brain

    chemistry. It was an insult to what he had been through, and to what he

    needed.
  • b4777467766has quoted3 years ago
    So instead of seeing your depression and anxiety as a form of madness, I

    would tell my younger self—you need to see the sanity in this sadness. You

    need to see that it makes sense. Of course it is excruciating. I will always

    dread that pain returning, every day of my life. But that doesn’t mean the

    pain is insane, or irrational. If you touch your hand to a burning stove, that,

    too, will be agony, and you will snatch your hand away as quickly as

    possible. That’s a sane response. If you kept your hand on the stove, it

    and burn until it was destroyed.
  • b4777467766has quoted3 years ago
    It’s a signal, saying—you shouldn’t have to live this way
  • b4777467766has quoted3 years ago
    When I was a

    child, Margaret Thatcher said, “There’s no such thing as society, only

    individuals and their families”—and, all over the world, her viewpoint won.

    We believed it—even those of us who thought we rejected it. I know this

    now, because I can see that when I became depressed, it didn’t even occur

    to me, for thirteen years, to relate my distress to the world around me. I

    thought it was all about me, and my head. I had entirely privatized my pain

    —and so had everyone I knew.
  • b4777467766has quoted3 years ago
    Because you are being told depression and anxiety are misfirings of brain

    chemicals, you will stop looking for answers in your life and your psyche

    and your environment and how you might change them. You will become

    sealed off in a serotonin storyYou will try to get rid of the depressed

    feelings in your head. But that won’t work unless you get rid of the causes

    of the depressed feelings in your life.

    No, I would say to my younger self—your distress is not a malfunction.

    It is a signal—a necessary signal.

    I know this is going to be hard to hear, I’d tell him, because I know how

    deep your suffering cuts. But this pain isn’t your enemy, however much it

    hurts (and Jesus, I know how much it hurts). It’s your ally—leading you

    away from a wasted life and pointing the way toward a more fulfilling one.
  • b4777467766has quoted3 years ago
    Your biology can make your distress worse, for sure.

    But it’s not the cause.
  • b4777467766has quoted3 years ago
    When I ask people—‘What would

    you [personally] do with a basic income?’ about 99 percent of people say

    —‘I have dreams, I have ambitions, I’m going to do something ambitious

    and useful.’ ” But when he asks them what they think other people would

    do with a basic income, they say—oh, they’ll become lifeless zombies,

    they’ll binge-watch Netflix all day.
  • b4777467766has quoted3 years ago
    There is evidence—from other scientific studies—that

    shame makes people sick. For example, closeted gay men, during the AIDS

    crisis, died on average two to three years than openly gay men, even

    when they got health care at the same point in their illness. Sealing off a

    part of yourself and thinking it’s disgusting poisons your life.
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