(October 24, 2017 at 9:14 pm)mh.brewer Wrote:(October 15, 2017 at 10:10 pm)mh.brewer Wrote: bold mine
No offense intended but can you tell us who made this diagnosis? (professional degree) FYI, emotional trauma can be a cause/symptom of clinical depression. One is not necessarily exclusive of the other.
Bump to try and get a response. But I'll not hold my breath.
You seem to have a deep investment in your belief because you keep repeating the same thing over and over (with specific fixations) hoping that one of us will agree with you. I won't be that person.
What I'm trying to do here is to present my idea perfectly because, in the past, I have presented it in such a way that others deemed it as nonsense. I don't think the fault is with my worldview here. Rather, I think the fault is the way I am presenting it. Hopefully, this time, I have gotten it right so that others take deep consideration into it and wonder if it could really be true rather than just dismissing it as nonsense. That would really allow people to take deep consideration into our positive emotions as being the real good value to their lives rather than dismissing them as trivial things. As for your question, I have diagnosed myself because I am convinced that I do not have clinical depression. Every time an emotional trauma has passed, I was fully recovered and doing just fine. There was no depression lingering about that had me wondering why I was still depressed.