T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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309.1 | How I see it | RICKS::KRAVITZ | Terrapin | Wed May 13 1987 16:09 | 7 |
| This says to me that: The world sucks; those who recognize this
are depressed. Those with a less firm grasp on reality (or a
prescriptive vision) manage to do the positive things in life.
I'm only contented when I'm depressed. :-)
Dave
|
309.4 | Buyin my rose colored glasses :-) | MANTIS::PARE | | Wed May 13 1987 16:39 | 4 |
|
Psychology Today (a month or two ago) discussed this same thing.
Similar research has been done with the same results previously.
It looks like "creative denial" is the way to go folks.
|
309.5 | | GEMINI::CIPPUB | Mail Node REAGAN::CORTIS | Wed May 13 1987 17:03 | 9 |
| Re: .3, Bob
!!!! Touche' !!!!
The real sad thing is those people who read such nonesense and believe
it. Those are the people who have no sense of reality. (but it has
to be true, it's in the news, and done by psychology big wigs).
Barry
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309.6 | Do not take this too seriously :-) | VIDEO::HOFFMAN | | Wed May 13 1987 17:26 | 18 |
|
This is telling me what I have known all along: if one is realistic,
one can't help but notice what a lousy world we have chosen to live
in. However, most of us also realize that there is nothing we can do
about it, which leads to consolation, which, in turn, leads to
refusal to take anything seriously, which is almost like being
cheerful - just like the people who knew from nothing in the first
place.
Two collaterals which comes to mind:
o You do not have an inferiority complex. You ARE inferior.
o Just because you are paranoid, doesn't mean they are not
after you.
-- Ron
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309.7 | | VINO::RASPUZZI | Michael Raspuzzi | Wed May 13 1987 18:20 | 5 |
| Re .0:
How depressing.... obligated :-)'s
Mike
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309.8 | three optimistic collaries | REGENT::MERRILL | Glyph, and the world glyphs with you. | Wed May 13 1987 18:24 | 13 |
| o If you can keep your head in the midst of all this confusion,
-- you must not know what's going on!
o Compare yourself compulsively with others, and you'll always
wind up on the short end of the stick -- that would depress
anybody!
o Unless you trust like a little child, you will not know
love.
Rick
Merrill
|
309.9 | | ERIS::CALLAS | So many ratholes, so little time | Wed May 13 1987 19:52 | 10 |
| Sounds to me like the people who decided what "reality" is are
themselves depressed and are patting themselves on the back for their
clever judgement.
One of the great problems philosophers have discussed for millennia is
if there *is* an objective reality and if so, what is it. I'm certainly
glad to know that these folks have solved it so that the rest of us can
move on to weightier issues like truth, justice, and the nature of Art.
Jon
|
309.10 | Depressed people are simply depressed | ORION::HERBERT | Walk in the sunshine | Wed May 13 1987 20:07 | 50 |
| I think it's deluded to put people into catagories. You can find
similarities in almost anything to prove a point, but it really
doesn't mean anything other than you're_focusing_on_similarities_
in_order_to_prove_a_point. It's just a narrow view and an attempt
to put something in a box so you can claim you understand it. But
all you understand is that narrow view.
The questions I asked about this article were:
> Depressed people have a more accurate view of reality than
happy people,
What is "accurate"? What is reality? WHO THE HELL KNOWS, anyway?
> Sadder is wiser,
Oh, so is this saying that the many happy wise people and spiritual
leaders of various belief systems and cultures are more stupid than
someone who is depressed? No, I think some of those happy people
have just learned how to focus on the good things in life and get
the best from it.
> challenge theories that depressed people suffer from a "learned
helplessness",
If you set out to prove the opposite of something, chances are, you
can. But how many other possibilities are there for understanding
the mental accuracy of a depressed person? Infinite. Because it
depends on the person.
There are people who are unaware and happy.
There are people who are happy and aware.
There are people who are unaware and depressed.
There are people who are aware, but depressed.
This article suggests to me that some people will do anything to
make up excuses for themselves and prove that the world is horrible.
We blame our bad attitudes on other people, our jobs, our financial
status, our education, our location, our history, our future, and
the devil. So now, someone is actually saying that being depressed
is WISER. Oh, so THAT'S what it's good for!! ;^)
Well then, while all of those wise depressed people are out killing
themselves and each other, and WORSENING world conditions (that they
are so wisely aware of), the stupid happy people will be enjoying
what they think are the good things and having a good time!
Depression and happiness do not determine wisdom.
Jerri
|
309.11 | Psychologists: depressed or unrealistic? | INFACT::GREENBERG | | Wed May 13 1987 20:35 | 35 |
| I am bothered by the fact that "scientific" studies like this are
reported in very "unscientific" ways by newspapers trying to attract
readers. I am also bothered by the somewhat unscientific conclusions
researchers allow to be drawn from very limited studies.
From what I have read of this study (limited I admit), it indicated
that depressed people more readily recognize their own failures and
shortcomings. So what else is new? It is not a new idea that denial
helps us through hard times. This does not mean that non-depressed
people dont know as much about reality as depressed people. Nor does
it mean that there aren't some very realistic non-depressed people.
I would like to see a study that measured how both groups evaluated
positive events, like being complemented perhaps. I think this study
used events like failing a test.
How about a study to determine if depressed people as readily recognize
opportunities for success as non-depressed people? Of course this
would be limited by the fact that depressed people sometimes eliminate
the possiblity of success from their lives. But then if depressed
people always predict failure and it always results are they more
realistic or just more limited?
Maybe I am selling this study short, but I seen reported results from
so many onesided, underpopulated, inconclusive studies. Where are
the scientists involved who sould be telling us what this study does
and doesnt mean based on its own limitations.
Even worse, is that when these are reported on TV, in newspapers etc
the focus is always on making the results sound as shocking and
definitive as possible. The headline for this story in the Indianapolis
Star was a slightly subdued version of what the National Enquirer would
have run.
|
309.12 | | FAUXPA::ENO | Bright Eyes | Thu May 14 1987 12:53 | 7 |
| This study reminds me of my favorite cartoon -- the little engine
that could steaming up the hill saying "I think I can, I think I
can", never realizing that just over the crest, the track breaks
and disappears into a bottomless chasm.
My SO says I'm negative -- I say I'm realistic. But I'm not
depressed and not needlessly disappointed, either.
|
309.14 | I'm more cynical than depressed... | BCSE::RYAN | Relatively human | Thu May 14 1987 15:56 | 29 |
| which is how I can agree with Bob (.3) and .0 at the same
time:-). Actually I thought of most of his points, but it
still sounds like a plausible theory (if you replace
"depressed" and "happy" with "pessimistic" and "optimistic").
The thing that fascinated me about the conclusion, though, is
that pessimistic people win both ways on the conclusion - they
can get the satisfaction of knowing they really do know what's
going on, plus the downer of realizing that knowing does them
more harm than good! Meanwhile, the optimists only get the
positive side of being better off, but an optimist needs less
positives to feel they've come out ahead. Everybody wins with
this theory:-)!
The source of my pessimism and cynicism, I think, is a
lifetime as a Red Sox fan. Would anyone disagree that for them
pessimism is a better reflection of reality?
I've always felt that it was better to be pessimistic than
optimistic, because any surprises a pessimist gets are likely
to be more positive than the surprises an optimist gets.
Witness the Red Sox last year... The surprises the pessimists
got were the division and league championship. The surprise
the optimists got was Game 6. I'll spare any RED_SOX noters
out there from turning me in on charges of hypocrisy - last
season I turned into an optimist in June and stayed that way
until Stanley's wild pitch... Just another reason for me to
stay a pessimist!
Mike
|
309.15 | From a happy pessimist... | CSSE::CICCOLINI | | Tue May 19 1987 14:39 | 64 |
| >Depression and happiness do not determine wisdom.
I'm sorry, I forget which reply that came from. I believe the opposite
is true - wisdom DOES determine happiness or depression.
The most common factor in depression is the helplessness - the loss
of control. If you are wise, you can recognize that factor in your
depression and then choose to let it eat away at you or not.
Is depression the result of recognizing the grim realities or is it
the result of plodding along optimistically and being hit with the
grim realities time and time again?
There's a blurring here of pessimism and depression. I've always
felt, (like the Red Sox fan!), that only pessimists can be pleasantly
surprised. On a scale of naive to cynical, which would you rather
be?
At what point does the study stop in the person's thought process to
determine their state of happiness or depression? Consider the following:
I have a second interview for the job of a lifetime. I'm female and
competing against 3 males. I go to the interview and give it
my best shot but I doubt very much I'll win the job when they have
three males to choose from. That's pessimism, but am I "depressed"?
If I lose out, well, I knew I would anyway and I knew why so life just
goes on and anyway, I have another interview tomorrow. Is that depression?
Conversely, if I were optimistic and THEN lost out, I'd be stopped
pretty short. Maybe I'd go over and over all the details wondering
where I went wrong. My credentials? My hair? Could I be ready
for an interview the next day with a positive, upbeat attitude?
Would I be "depressed"?
Don't make the mistake that a depressed person is a pessimist with
constant hand-wringing and an "oh-woe-is-me" attitude. Perhaps
the study first gave its definition of a depressed person. That's
a pretty important point.
How many times must a person get knocked down before they stop trying?
Is the person who stops early and says, "forget this" more or less
depressed than the person who continually offers him or herself
up willingly for what continues to be failure?
If depression is a feeling of a lack of control, then the knowledge and
understanding of that lack can be enough of a feeling of control to
handle it. I'm not a head-in-the-sand person and I get my share
of the blues over the sad state of this world but I'm not shocked
when I find out our president feels he's above the law, when I lose
out on a job to a less-qualified male, (it's happened more than
once!), when the draize test is still administered daily to hundreds
of little rabbits and women in remote parts of India are still not
allowed to go to school and then are considered a curse when they
are born because they can bring no money to the family.
My knowledge is my protection against the depression that would
surely surround me were I a happy little person expecting things
to be fair and right and then finding out slowly what's really going
on. Ignorance is bliss? You bet! But no matter how happy "ignorant"
people are, I cannot be that kind of person. Give me the truth and prepare
me for the world as it is and I'll take care of myself and I'll make
myself as happy as I can in spite of it. Is that depressed,
pessimistic, realistic? Dare I say happy?
|
309.16 | hope for the best, but plan for the worst | DEBIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Tue May 19 1987 15:25 | 48 |
| One mistaken assumption of the original study is that the degrees of
optimism and pessimism constitute a spectrum of attitudes when in fact
it's much broader than that.
For the sake of argument, let's accept the premise that optimism equals
naivete (sorry, my old VT1xx doesn't make fancy characters) and cynicsm
equals pessimism. It's true that there is a scale from naive to
cynical, but the most starry-eyed naive young thing (of either sex) and
the most hardened, cynical, world-weary person about town have one
thing in common: they all believe in the same basic set of unchallenged
assumptions.
The innocent believes that romantic love will conquer all. The cynic
has been around enough to know that lack of money and in-law conflicts
can kill almost any romance. Neither stops to think that maybe the
conventions of what this society calls love might be wrong.
The innocent believes in the Golden rule -- if you do the right thing,
the good will win in the end. The cynic believes in the golden rule,
too: them that has the gold, makes the rules. Neither of them thinks
about taking a good look at the society that produced rules to see
whether they can, or should, try to change it or themselves.
When you can step back from your reactions to look at the assumptions
underlying the problem, you can begin to realistically assess the
situation and determine what you can do about it. The cynic and the
innocent are equally helpless in the face of the kind of situation
described in .15. The innocent is going to be stunned when she doesn't
get the job and the cynic is going to say "I knew those sexists
wouldn't give the job to a woman," and they're both going to be
miserable.
The person who can step back from the situation can see that the
prejudices of society mitigate against her getting the job in those
circumstances. But she can also see that SHE can influence her
own success or failure. She can practice for the interview, present
herself in her best light, and so on. Then, if she doesn't get
the job, she's not going to be crushed.
I always liked the saying my grandmother passed on: Hope for the
best but plan for the worst.
If you plan for the worst, you can be prepared to cope with it if
it happens. If you didn't even think about it, you're likely to
be crushed.
--bonnie, overgeneralizing again
|
309.17 | And yet another opinion | VAXWRK::CONNOR | Live Free or Pay Up | Wed May 20 1987 17:55 | 12 |
| Re .0
I challenge the statement that "depressed people a have more
accurate view of reality ..". They are likely to have too dark a view
to a point of possible being suicidal. If a gourmet meal is prepared
that is enjoyed by all but the depressed person, that means the meal
is really more likely lousey? The depressed person more likley finds
the darkness on the most cheerfull day. Is this reality?? It also seems
that cheerfullness is analogous to naive. Well maybe the cheerfull
person tells him/her self a little white lie and is able to get from
life punches - is that naive?
end of opinion
|
309.18 | | VIDEO::HOFFMAN | | Thu May 21 1987 00:24 | 12 |
|
RE: .17
> I challenge the statement that "depressed people a have more
> accurate view of reality ..".
Actually, this false statement will become true if you invert it:
"people that have a more accurate view of reality are [bound to be]
depressed".
-- Ron
|
309.19 | yet another exercise in futility | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Thu May 21 1987 03:33 | 18 |
|
I find the study in .0 interesting because I am one of those
people who works hard to keep as clear a picture of reality
as possible (That's one of the reasons I read this file).
The idea is that if I don't maintain this close connection
and allow myself to operate under an illusion, then I will
somehow fail to cope. Somehow I think that I need the
the clear view to function.
What the study seems to say is that if you maintain too
close a connection to reality that you will lose more
because of the depression than you will gain from having
a clear view of the world.
And yet, here I am trying to make sure I have a clear understanding
of depression as revealed in .0 ... what am I doing?
MJC
|
309.20 | Make it better | ORION::HERBERT | Walk in the sunshine | Thu May 21 1987 15:55 | 41 |
| No, no, no! I just don't believe that things are so bad that if
we see them "clearly" we'll become depressed. C'MON! We made
this world what it is. It was beautiful and it still is...it
just has lots of man-made garbage laying around. But if we can
make the garbage, we can stop making more, and we can remove the
garbage from the past eventually.
The article in the base note is just another way of saying we
are helpless and at the mercy of the cold cruel world. The world
is not cold and cruel without us. We are the problem, we help
create this reality, and we get depressed over it. So, stop
creating depressing realities.
True, there are lots of things in this world that seem to be out of
our hands...but being depressed about them is a choice, and it
doesn't accomplish anything. If this world had already reached a
hopeless condition, it would not be existing. It is existing, so
there's still hope of getting something out of it...and also giving
something back. You can only take away from something for so long
before it collapses...and we've been taking for a very long time.
Now we're getting depressed that things are starting to sag. What
do we expect? That's just the way things work.
I'm not sure that we can control everything, but I do think we can
control a lot. That knowledge alone should be enough to inspire us
to keep happily looking for ways to create better experiences for
ourselves and others. You've probably heard, "If someone gives you
lemons, make lemonade!" When we can stop crying about the sad
conditions of this world, and accept that those conditions are there,
and maybe we can fix them if we try, and we can certainly enjoy, and
be wise with, what's LEFT, then we can get a lot more out of life.
No use crying over spilt milk...clean it up!
I think wisdom is relative. You don't have to be "this way" or "that"
to be wise...
it's just what you do with what you've got.
Thanks for listening,
Jerri
|
309.21 | My two francs | CSC32::KACHELMYER | Lost in S.P.A.C.E. | Thu May 21 1987 23:43 | 8 |
| RE: .0
Sounds to me like it should be changed to:
Depressed people have a more depressing view of reality than
happy people.
Kak
|
309.22 | | TBIT::TITLE | | Fri Jun 05 1987 16:11 | 20 |
| re: .0 - garbage.
First of all, the Phoenix article and most of the responses are
mis-using the word "depression". Depression is a clinical condition
which is a lot more extreme than the ordinary feelings of sadness
most of us feel from time to time. Anyone who's spent time in
a psych ward and observed people suffering from major depression
will tell you that major depression is often (not always) associated with
delusional thinking. Many depressed people have a very warped
view of the world.
Also, it is a mistake to generalize about depression because it
is not a single illness. Depression can be caused by many
physical illnesses, by schizophrenia (which is a physical brain disease),
by drug abuse, by traumatic events, or in many cases, is
of unknown cause. It is therefore a mistake to start any sentence
with "Depressed people ..." since you are actually talking about
such a wide range of people and a wide range of illnesses.
- Rich
|
309.23 | | VAXUUM::MUISE | | Fri Oct 02 1987 12:10 | 5 |
| What is reality... but a collective hunch !
jacki
|