Depression: The Dark Truth
• Introduction
• The most devastating disease of modern society
• Symptoms at their core
• Challenges of negative thoughts
• A silent killer
• Conclusion
Introduction
There is a time in your life that you may feel that life is complex and demanding. Something that used to make you happy makes you cry for no reason. Somewhere inside you, you may have doubts about yourself. You feel overwhelmed by questions….
• Who am I?
• What do I want to be?
• Which choices are the best for me?
• What’s the point of doing anything?
You may think that you cannot cope well with the big life changes. So it isn’t strange at times you or a friend may feel disheartened. You are about to face the dark truth inside you.
What does it
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The explosion is about to happen. Negative feelings or traumas cannot heal on their own. Talking about your feelings and thoughts will not make it worst. Instead, it’s a step to seek the support you really need.
Symptoms at their core
Sylvia Plath, a gifted poet, committed suicide and eventually died by her own hand in London in 1963. What was the cause of her death? What made her give an end to her life? The question remains of interest because it throws light on the darkest side of this mental illness. Sylvia Plath suffered from depression. She described her despair as “owl’s talons clenching my heart”.
Reading her biography, you may wonder why this remarkable and talented woman ended her life. What may have caused the onset of depression? What factors might have been responsible for this disease that led to the death of an extraordinary woman?
• Could have it been associated with overwork and failure to fulfill one of her biggest dreams of getting into a Harvard writing class?
• Could have it been her emotional difficulties due to her ambivalent relationship with her mother?
• Could have it been the early loss of her father? She was just 8 years
"I can't imagine what would cause a mother to sever her relationship with her only child," Mrs. Henshaw remarked.
the self-esteem issues as she had in school, and in her personal life. Even things like
to focus her life on her family and did not return to writing until 10 years later when she was
In 1963 on a cold winter day of February 11th, Sylvia Plath ended her life. She had plugged up her kitchen, sealing up the cracks in doors and windows before she was found with her head inside of her gas oven inhaling the dangerous fumes. She was only thirty years old, a young woman with two small children and an estranged ex-husband. A tragic detail of her life is that this is the second time she had tried to commit suicide. Plagued with mental illness her whole life, which is evident within her poetry. She would write gripping, honest portrayals of mental illnesses. Especially within Ariel, the last poetry book she wrote, right before she took her life. Although it’s hard to find a proper diagnosis for Sylvia Plath, it is almost definite that she at least had clinical depression with her numerous suicide attempts and stays in mental hospitals undergoing electroshock therapy. Sylvia Plath is now famously known for her writing and the more tragic parts of her life. Such as the separation from her husband, Ted Hughes, mental illness, etc… Plath may not have intended for her life and art to become inspiration to many people but that has become the end result. Sylvia Plath writing shows symptoms of her suicidal thoughts. To study specific moments in Sylvia Plath’s life, it can be connected to certain writing’s of her’s, such as “Daddy”, The Bell Jar, and “Lady Lazarus”.
Sylvia Plath was an American Poet who was renowned for poetry mostly in the United States. She, however lived a difficult and depressing life which led to a few futile suicide attempts, but ultimately led to a successful suicide attempt leaving her children to live on without a mother. This end result was due to a multitude of issues in her life from Sylvia’s sanity. She wasn’t the most stable child. Her marriage also played a role in her suicide. Her successes weren’t acclaimed until after her death, when a majority of her work was released. There were two major aspects to her life: her poetry and her sanity. These three combined make up a majority of Sylvia’s life.
history of depression, ADHD, substance abuse and anxiety disorder on both sides of her family.
Looking at the symptoms such as anxiety attacks, overeating, fear of accomplishment, fear of abandonment, and so forth—can be interpreted as outward manifestations of unconscious conflicts that have their origins in childhood experiences and defensive reaction to these experiences that are necessary to her as a child.
history of mental illness leading to disordered thinking. She would struggle with this illness that
She had lost her way because she lost her mother at such an early age and had no one else to depend on. She went into an emotional down spiral. She neglected taking care of herself and did not want to communicate, confide in, or trust anyone. She went into a semi-depressed state of mind and shut the whole world out. She said that she cried a lot, ate a lot and gained a lot of weight.
She started getting into a rocky and unstable marriage that had a lot to do
She had a low self-esteem and a negative view of her self. She tried to be like other
She would dwell and manifest herself as worthless. Though, if life was going good, it was never enough for her. She had low self-esteem and was often teased. Growing up, it was hard to make friends. She focused too much on how others viewed her.
after childhood, she had never been able to really understand the world. She was normally
Therefore, she could have suffered from dementia through her years of being stressed and ended up losing her mind and snapped on her husband.
There is no indication she has had a manic or hypomanic episode. Her depression may be complicated by grief due to her father’s death one year ago. Her symptoms seem to get worse after his passing.