Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy (50 page)

BOOK: Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy
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SUMMARY: If you are suicidal, it is of great importance for you to evaluate these impulses in a matter-of-fact manner, using your common sense. The following factors put you in a high-risk group:

    1.   If you are severely depressed and feel hopeless;

    2.   If you have a past history of suicide attempts;

    3.   If you have made concrete plans and preparations for suicide; and

    4.   If no deterrents are holding you back.

If one or more of these factors apply to you, then it is vital to get professional intervention and treatment immediately. While I firmly believe that the attitude of self-help is important for all people with depression, you clearly must seek professional guidance right away.

The Illogic of Suicide

Do you think depressed people have the “right” to commit suicide? Some misguided individuals and novice therapists are unduly concerned with this issue. If you are counseling or trying to help a chronically depressed individual who is hopeless and threatening self-destruction, you may ask yourself, “Should I intervene aggressively, or should I let him go ahead? What are his rights as a human being in this regard? Am I responsible for preventing this attempt, or should I tell him to go ahead and exercise his freedom of choice?”

I regard this as an absurd and cruel issue that misses the point entirely. The real question is not whether a depressed individual has the right to commit suicide, but whether he is
realistic
in his thoughts when he is considering it. When I talk to a suicidal person, I try to find out why he is feeling that way. I might ask, “What is your motive for wanting to kill yourself? What problem in your life is so terrible that there is no solution?” Then I would help that person expose the illogical thinking that lurks behind the suicidal impulse as quickly as possible. When you begin to think more realistically, your sense of hopelessness and the desire to end your life will fade away and you will have the urge to live. Thus, I recommend joy rather than death to suicidal individuals, and I try to show them how to achieve it as fast as possible! Let’s see how this can be done.

Holly was a nineteen-year-old woman who was referred to me for treatment by a child psychoanalyst in New York City. He had treated her unsuccessfully with analytic therapy for many years since the onset of a severe unremitting depression in her early teens. Other doctors had also been unable to help her. Her depression originated during a period of family turbulence that led to her parents’ separation and divorce.

Holly’s chronic blue mood was punctuated by numerous wrist-slashing episodes. She said that when periods of frustration
and hopelessness would build up, she would be overcome by the urge to rip into her flesh and would experience relief only when she saw the blood flowing across her skin. When I first met Holly, I noticed a mass of white scar tissue across her wrists that attested to this behavior. In addition to these episodes of self-mutilation, which were not suicide attempts, she had tried to kill herself on a number of occasions.

In spite of all the treatment she had received, her depression would not let up. At times it became so severe that she had to be hospitalized. Holly had been confined to a closed ward of a New York hospital for several months at the time she was referred to me. The referring doctor recommended a minimum of three years of additional continuous hospitalization, and appeared to agree with Holly that her prognosis for substantial improvement, at least in the near future, was poor.

Ironically, she was bright, articulate, and personable. She had done well in high school, in spite of being unable to go to classes during the times she was confined to hospitals. She had to take some courses with the help of tutors. Like a number of adolescent patients, Holly’s dream was to become a mental-health professional, but she had been told by her previous therapist that this was unrealistic because of the nature of her own explosive, intractable emotional problems. This opinion was just one more crushing blow for Holly.

After graduation from high school, she spent the majority of her time in inpatient mental-hospital facilities because she was considered too ill and uncontrollable for outpatient therapy. In a desperate attempt to find help, her father contacted the University of Pennsylvania because he had read about our work in depression. He requested a consultation to determine whether any promising treatment alternatives existed for his daughter.

After speaking to me by phone, Holly’s father obtained custody of her and drove to Philadelphia so that I could talk to her and review the possibilities for treatment. When I
met them, their personalities contrasted with my expectations. He proved to be a relaxed, mild-mannered individual; she was strikingly attractive, pleasant, and cooperative.

I administered several psychological tests to Holly. The Beck Depression Inventory indicated severe depression, and other tests confirmed a high degree of hopelessness and serious suicidal intent. Holly put it to me bluntly, “I want to kill myself.” The family history indicated that several relatives had attempted suicide—two of them successfully. When I asked Holly why she wanted to kill herself, she told me that she was a lazy human being. She explained that because she was lazy, she was worthless and so deserved to die.

I wanted to find out if she would react favorably to cognitive therapy, so I used a technique that I hoped would capture her attention. I proposed we do some role-playing, and she was to imagine that two attorneys were arguing her case in court. Her father, by the way, happened to be an attorney who specialized in medical malpractice suits! Because I was a novice therapist at the time, this intensified my own anxious, insecure feelings about tackling such a tough case. I told Holly to play the role of the prosecutor, and she was to try to convince the jury that she deserved a death sentence. I told her I would play the role of the defense attorney, and that I would challenge the validity of every accusation she made. I told her that this way we could review her reasons for living and her reasons for dying, and see where the truth lay:

H
OLLY
:

For this individual, suicide would be an escape from life.

D
AVID
:

That argument could apply to anyone in the world. By itself, it is not a convincing reason to die.

H
OLLY
:

The prosecutor replies that the patient’s life is so miserable, she cannot stand it one minute longer.

D
AVID
:

She has been able to stand it up until now, so maybe she can stand it a while longer. She was not always miserable in the past, and there is no proof that she will always be miserable in the future.

H
OLLY
:

The prosecutor points out that her life is a burden to her family.

D
AVID
:

The defense emphasizes that suicide will not solve this problem, since her death by suicide may prove to be an even more crushing blow to her family.

H
OLLY
:

But she is self-centered and lazy and worthless, and deserves to die!

D
AVID
:

What percentage of the population is lazy?

H
OLLY
:

Probably twenty percent … no, I’d say only ten percent.

D
AVID
:

That means twenty million Americans are lazy. The defense points out that they don’t have to die for this, so there is no reason the patient should be singled out for death. Do you think laziness and apathy are symptoms of depression?

H
OLLY
:

Probably.

D
AVID
:

The defense points out that individuals in our culture are not sentenced to death for the symptoms of illness, whether it be pneumonia, depression, or any other disease. Furthermore, the laziness may disappear when the depression goes away.

Holly appeared to be involved in this repartee and amused by it. After a series of such accusations and defenses, she conceded that there was no convincing reason she should have to die, and that any reasonable jury would have to rule in favor of the defense. What was more important was that Holly was learning to challenge and answer her negative thoughts about herself. This process brought her partial but
immediate emotional relief, the first she had experienced in many years. At the end of the consultation session, she said to me, “This is the best that I have felt in as long as I can remember. But now the negative thought crosses my mind, ‘This new therapy may not prove to be as good as it seems.’” In response to this she felt a sudden surge of depression again. I assured her, “Holly, the defense attorney points out that this is no real problem. If the therapy isn’t as good as it seems to be, you’ll find out in a few weeks, and you’ll still have the alternative of a long-term hospitalization. You’ll have lost nothing. Furthermore, the therapy may be partially as good as it seems, or conceivably even better. Perhaps you would be willing to give it a try.” In response to this proposal, she decided to come to Philadelphia for treatment.

Holly’s urge to commit suicide was simply the result of cognitive distortions. She confused the symptoms of her illness, such as lethargy and loss of interest in life, with her true identity and labeled herself as a “lazy person.” Because Holly equated her worth as a human being with her achievement, she concluded she was worthless and deserved to die. She jumped to the conclusion that she could never recover, and that her family would be better off without her. She magnified her discomfort by saying, “1 can’t stand it.” Her sense of hopelessness was the result of the fortune-telling error—she illogically jumped to the conclusion that she could not improve. When Holly saw that she was simply trapping herself with unrealistic thoughts, she felt a sudden relief. In order to maintain such improvement. Holly had to learn to correct her negative thinking on an ongoing basis and that took hard work! She wasn’t going to give in that easily!

Following our initial consultation, Holly was transferred to a hospital in Philadelphia, where I visited her twice a week to initiate cognitive therapy. She had a stormy course in the hospital with dramatic mood swings, but was able to be discharged after a five-week period, and I persuaded her to enroll as a part-time summer-school student. For a while
her moods continued to oscillate like a yo-yo, but she showed an overall improvement. At times Holly would report feeling very good for several days. This constituted a real breakthrough, since these were the first happy periods she had experienced since the age of thirteen. Then she would suddenly relapse into a severe depressive state. At these times she would again become actively suicidal, and would try her best to convince me that life was not worth living. Like many adolescents, she seemed to carry a grudge against all mankind, and insisted there was no point in living any longer.

In addition to feeling negative about her own sense of worth, Holly had developed an intensely negative and disillusioned view of the entire world. Not only did she see herself as trapped by an endless, untreatable depression, but like many of today’s adolescents, she had adopted a personal theory of nihilism. This is the most extreme form of pessimism. Nihilism is the belief that there is no truth or meaning to anything, and that
all
of life involves suffering and agony. To a nihilist like Holly, the world offers
nothing
but misery. She had become convinced that the very essence of every person and object in the universe was evil and horrible. Her depression was thus the experience of hell on earth. Holly envisioned death as the
only
possible surcease, and she longed for death. She constantly complained and harangued cynically about the cruelties and miseries of living. She insisted that life was totally unbearable at all times, and that all human beings were totally lacking in redeeming qualities.

The task of getting such an intelligent and persistent young woman to see and admit how distorted her thinking was provided a real challenge to this therapist! The following lengthy dialogue illustrates her intensely negative attitudes as well as my struggles to help her penetrate the illogic in her thinking:

H
OLLY
:

Life is not worth living because there is more bad than good in the world.

D
AVID
:

Suppose I was the depressed patient and you were my therapist and I told you that, what would you say?

(I used this maneuver with Holly because I knew her goal in life was to be a therapist. I figured she’d say something reasonable and upbeat, but she outfoxed me in her next statement.)

H
OLLY
:

I’d say that I can’t argue with you!

D
AVID
:

SO, if I were your depressed patient and told you that life is not worth living, you’d advise me to jump out the window?

H
OLLY

(laughing): Yes. When I think about it, that’s the best thing to do. If you think about all the bad things that are going on in the world, the right thing to do is to get really upset about them and be depressed.

D
AVID
:

And what are the advantages to that? Does that help you correct the bad things in the world or what?

H
OLLY
:

No. But you
can’t
correct them.

D
AVID
:

You can’t correct
all
the bad things in the world, or you can’t correct
some
of them?

H
OLLY
:

You can’t correct anything of importance. I guess you can correct small things. You can’t really make a dent in the badness of this universe.

D
AVID
:

Now, at the end of each day if I said that to myself when I went home, I could really become upset. In other words, I could either think about the people that I did help during the day and feel good, or I could think of all the thousands of people that I will never get a chance to see and work with, and I could feel hopeless and helpless. That would incapacitate me, and I don’t
think that it is to my advantage to be incapacitated. Is it to your advantage to be incapacitated?

H
OLLY
:

Not really. Well, I don’t know.

D
AVID
:

You
like
being incapacitated?

H
OLLY
:

No. Not unless I were completely incapacitated.

D
AVID
:

What would that be like?

H
OLLY
:

I would be dead, and I think I would be better off being that way.

D
AVID
:

Do you think being dead is enjoyable?

H
OLLY
:

Well, I don’t even know what it’s like. I suppose it might be horrible to be dead and to experience nothing Who knows?

D
AVID
:

So it might be horrible, or it might be nothing. Now the closest thing to nothing is when you are being anesthetized. Is that enjoyable?

H
OLLY
:

It’s not enjoyable, but it’s not unenjoyable either.

D
AVID
:

I’m glad you admit that it’s not enjoyable. And you’re right, there’s really nothing enjoyable about nothing. But there are some things enjoyable about life.

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