More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
A Simple Solution for Depression? It Doesn't Exist
by Therese Borchard, Everyday Health
April 8, 2015

T.S. Eliot wrote, ?We shall not cease from exploration, and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time.? I remembered those words as I strolled around the Holistic Health Fair in Annapolis the other day. Presented by the Maryland University of Integrative Health, it occupied three floors of the Loews Hotel devoted to massage therapists, acupuncture specialists, detox experts, yoga instructors, and professionals from all kinds of local healing and wellness centers.

Ironically, they were all the same professionals that I met 10 years ago when, at the lowest point of my breakdown, I decided to drop modern science like a boyfriend with bad breath and go the holistic route. I was sure that someone had the one and only solution that would heal me of my inner demons, the magic urn of ancient cat pee that, with only three sniffs of prehistoric urine, could set my psyche back in balance. So I asked everyone I knew: ?Where is the path to the magic urn?? And they all pointed me in different directions.

I followed all the paths. To yoga instructors and acupuncture specialists and massage therapists and recommended naturopaths. I took Chinese herbs and banged magnesium packets against phone books because that?s what the instructions said. I paid psychics to describe the color of my aura, and to tell me what helpful and frightening things it had to say about my inner life. I listened to tapes of mystic healers like Caroline Myss as I knelt in child pose in our bedroom closet with a candle lit.

I listened to friends and relatives who told me that my medication was toxic, so I weaned off almost all of my drugs.

I did not get better.

In fact, I got worse, and was hospitalized a second time.

Like most psychiatrists, mine tried a few combinations of drugs and recommended that I return to psychotherapy.

I got a little better, but the remission lasted only two years.

Ten years later, I know the hard truth: There is no simple answer to depression.

If someone tells you they have the cure ? whether it be Prozac or Chinese herbs or an anti-stress oil for $30 or six amazing sessions of therapy ? my guess is that they are more concerned about paying their mortgage than being a companion with you along your health journey. No one who has spent less than a year with you can really know what you need to feel better. And if it doesn?t require hard work on your part ? like getting up in the morning to exercise, or eliminating sugar, alcohol, and processed foods from your diet, or exploring some type of relaxation and meditation tool you will use daily to de-stress ? it won?t last.

Unfortunately, nothing worth having comes easy, like the Sheffield band said.

As I walked around the room the other day, I felt older and wiser. The gray hair framing my face and the crows feet around my eyes showed the difference between who I was ten years ago and today. But more so I noticed the newfound confidence I have in my own health philosophies that don?t fit neatly into any category ? holistic or traditional. I embrace both of them and more. Yes, the last 10 years have certainly been an exploration like Lewis says: learning what works, what doesn?t, and how to handle the stuff on which I?m mixed. That?s why I attended the fair.

I knew that some of the services and items being sold at the booths might very well help me manage my illness, but that none of them could possibly claim to be the answer for me as some of their literature suggested because my situation is as unique as everyone else walking around the room. Acupuncture did not help me, but I have friends who have benefited from it; the ?detox bars? that can supposedly fix my depression had ingredients that would worsen my mood ? however, they might help someone with a sweet tooth who can?t stop eating Hershey bars at work.

Ten years ago, I would have listened to each person?s sales pitch and believed their every word, adjusting my health vision yet again based on some new information. Now I know that I am the expert on my health, not my psychiatrist, or my integrative doctor, or my therapist, or my friends and relatives who are anti-medication. I know what works because I have been dutifully logging the results of things like diet, exercise, and stress-reduction tools in a journal for the last ten years. I have my own reliable data!

Psychiatrists offer an important piece of the puzzle, but only a piece. I have yet to find one who talks to patients about the substantial effects of diet on mood, or how getting your heart rate into the aerobic zone every day can fend off suicidal thoughts. Most don?t talk much about meditation practices or relaxation techniques either. It?s not totally their fault. If they take insurance, they don?t have time to discuss anything other than medication and recommendations for a psychotherapist.

Holistic doctors and naturopaths offer another valuable perspective, but, again, only a piece of the puzzle. The herbs and essential oils and relaxation CDs they sell are the easy stuff. What?s hard is living your life in a holistic way ? which involves daily exercise, and lots of trips to the grocery store, and taking time to cook. Wanting a bottle of special herbs to bring peace of mind is natural, but it?s not going to bring long-term, substantial results.

Nope, nothing worth having comes easy.

And that includes a solution for depression.
 
Have you heard about medical benefits of certain parts of the plant marijuana.
It is suppose to help depression along with other illnesses like chronic pain and epilepsy and more trial basis is going on in States it is not the street stuff It is suppose to help people with PTSD like army people who have seen horrific things in war
Just it is interesting maybe one day there will be more hope for people with chronic depression and other diseases with this plant
 

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
No. But I can tell you that regular marijuana, whether bought or homegrown, definitely makes depression, anxiety disorders, and other mental health conditions progressively worse over time in chronic users.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
You are so correct in saying regular plant can and will cause more problems it is a street version not one grown in a lab for the purpose of healing.


But i saw a program they are using different parts of the plant they are making progress with separating the parts that can cause harm they are taking that away
In time perhaps this plant that has such a negative cog-notation will change and will benefit so many
I am not willing to chance it because it is a drug just like the others drugs i will not chance it but it shows so much promise In its trial time it has saved many army personal from committing suicide they are producing different strains of the plant that target different illnesses
For someone that has so many in their family with schizophrenia i am too afraid to try it but i am assured that part of the plant is removed that would affect that part of my brain

Anyways in the future perhaps after more studies in the future not my time it will be a plant like others that will heal not harm but heal
 

GDPR

GDPR
Member
I think it is a good thing and is already helping many people and I am glad that there's so many states that allow it for medicinal use.

I think there's a big difference in people using it just to get high and people who use it medicinally.I used to use it just to get high and now that I no longer do,I realize it really did make everything worse for me.

But I am interested in trying the oil for my anxiety,the oil that is helping so many kids with seizures.If I could be helped,without the high,I would like that.

I also think it could be used to help addicts get off heavy drugs,like heroin.Even my own kids have said they believe they could stay away from other drugs if they could use marijuana legally.Although it is a drug also,I think it would be less harmful than sticking a needle in their arms.

I am all for medical marijuana.It may not be for everyone but I do believe it helps many.Soon it will be legal for recreational use where I live,I am not sure I like that idea,but for medical reasons,yes.
 
Cannabidiol oil,that's what it's called,what I would like to try for my anxiety.I have been reading many good things about it,it sounds promising.

Cannabidiol - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

5 Must-Know Facts About Cannabidiol (CBD)

What is CBD? ? Project CBD

Yeah, I have also found that cannabidiol oil helps a ton! I have struggled with anxiety for years, specifically panic attacks. I used to take Paxil, and then wellbutrin..but nothing really changed and when I decided to discontinue using the withdrawal effects were awful. So after about 6 years of just suffering, I decided to try giving CBD oil a chance. I found out a lot of info about it from Project CBD and CBD For Anxiety: Can it really help?. I purchased my first bottle of CBD and honestly didn't really notice a mental change. What has happened after a year of use is my panic attacks and heart palpitations just stopped. Like I don't really think or act any different the physical stuff just ended without me even trying..just being consistent in use. I take about 100mg of CBD a day divided into a morning and night dose. I hope this personal story may be comforting to you..all I can do is just say try it and continue to use it consistently for a few months and see what happens. Talk to your Doc too if needed before use..but give it s shot I was a huge skeptic too so I understand that side of it. I use this brand, give it a shot Cannabidiol Life
 
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