How William Styron Helped Save Me From Depression

I suppose that I could say that I am a "depression survivor." I don't mean that I survived the years that followed the stock market crash of 1929, of course. I do mean that I suffer from chronic depression and that some years ago, before I realized what I was up against, I almost succumbed to it.

Aside from my hope in Christ, the faithful, patient love of my wonderful wife, and the eventual medical therapy I received, there were two things that "saved me" and helped me to diagnose myself accurately. The first and most important of these two things was William Styron's little autobiography of his own struggle with depression called Darkness Visible - A Memoir of Madness, in which he graphically described his own descent into depression, an account that almost perfectly reflected my own.

Styron's eloquent and honest writing style chilled me to the bone. He was, it seemed, describing me from the inside. Perfectly. In even the details. Unless I dealt with this matter I might well be doomed to a constant cycle of suicidal thoughts and physical/emotional exhaustion.

The second help was a book by Dr. Archibald Hart entitled Unmasking Male Depression. Here I discovered that the symptoms of depression in men were generally quite different that those in women (who had provided most of the case studies and diagnostic models for symptoms of depression).

Dr. Hart's book taught me that in men, anger (and often violent response to things... not true in my case, fortunately) was a prime indicator for depression. In women, depression generally causes anger or emotion to be directed inwardly towards oneself. In men, the tendency is for the anger or emotion to be directed outwardly towards others — especially those emotionally closest such as a wife or girlfriend.

Bingo! I was depressed and I now knew it without any doubt. I knew I needed help and I was desperate enough to seek it out. For me, medication was the path that eventually helped me to recover a functional emotional stability. Over the past few years I have attempted a small variety of medications and, more recently, I have actually quit one of the two I was taking and have reduced the dosage of the one I am still taking by half.

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  • 1 - Charles E. Donovan, III

    Nov 07, 2006 at 11:23 am

    William Styron was a true pioneer in giving the public a personal glimpse in to the misery and utter despair of depression, for which I thank him.

    I was rescued from "Darkness Visible" thanks to vagus nerve stimulation therapy. It saved my life five years ago and thankfully is now FDA approved.

    God speed to Mr. Stryon. Best wishes to all

    Charles E. Donovan -Author "Out of the Black Hole: The Patient's Guide to Vagus Nerve Stimulation and Depression"

  • 2 - dave

    Oct 13, 2011 at 3:57 am

    You are lucky you have a wife..Part of my depression stems from being 48 and single..My parents are dead and I feel very alone..

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