It’s undeniable that modern medications to treat depression have brought relief to millions. But medication alone is likely to produce only symptomatic relief, without addressing the underlying causes of depression or its impact on our lives. Relying on medication alone may leave you dependent on it over the long term without leading to full recovery. It’s well-established that recovery from depression is best served by engaging in therapy as a part of the treatment program. For that reason, therapy is an essential component of effective treatment for depression.
While you can and should rely on your therapist for help, there are many things that you, the patient, can do to enhance your chances for recovery.
A good therapist can guide a patient in steps that can yield good results. But a therapist alone can only accomplish so much. While you can and should rely on your therapist for help, there are many things that you, the patient, can do to enhance your chances for recovery. Some, in fact, are essential. Here are some suggestions drawn from my own recovery process.
- Be willing to work—hard! Expect to be an active participant in your own recovery. Your therapist can’t do the work for you.
- Read—about your condition, its causes and its therapy. Be an informed consumer.
- Don’t rely on medications alone. They are only an aid; don’t let them become a crutch.
- Expect to feel some pain as you go through recovery. This is a necessary and valuable part of the process. Understanding this, and being willing to face it, will help.
- Be consistent in your recovery program. Don’t switch therapists and treatment methodologies just because you are frustrated with the pace of progress. Recovery can take time.
- Be patient. Most likely, your depression took a lifetime to build; you can’t expect to recover from it in a matter of weeks or even months.
- Learn to express your feelings. Writing in a journal helps. Learn to write so that you pour out a free flow of thoughts, even if they don’t seem to make sense at the time.
- Be open to small feelings. The chances are that the feelings that are most hidden from sight are also the most important to uncover. Given them a chance to surface.
