depression warriors
8 Jun 2004 08:20 amYou wrote "fighting depression," and I suddenly had a flash of understanding of why I identify with warrior characters/archetypes, even though I am not particularly warlike in any standard sense. I frequently feel like I'm wrestling with a motivation- and appreciation-suppressing force that lives in my brain but isn't really me. And I really do need to use a lot of warrior-type tools to deal with it (the tools that are about keeping going even when you are scared or hurting, the tools about conserving your energy when you can, the tools about waiting for the right moment...)It's a bit more melodramatic than usual for me, but somewhat apropos.
Hm, maybe it belongs on my interest list.
Warrior model in depression
Date: 8 Jun 2004 08:23 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 8 Jun 2004 10:47 am (UTC)I don't know if the stuff I've been working on on learned hopefulness is useful to you or not.
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From:Re: depression warriors
Date: 8 Jun 2004 11:00 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 8 Jun 2004 04:12 pm (UTC)you can amend or not to identify me, it's friends locked, so no one not on my list can see it anyway...
i think it's a good image though.
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Date: 9 Jun 2004 03:10 pm (UTC)If a writer is able to sway public opinion on a matter, simply through words, can the satirist be said to have fought a battle (or a war), and won it?
I'd call a writer who was determined to sway public opinion, and who tried to do so, a warrior... a person who was struggling to accomplish something, and fought it with the tools s/he had available.
Maybe "warrior" isn't the best word, but I can't think of a better one. (Admittedly, I haven't tried very hard, because I *like* a broad definition of what it means to be a warrior.)
But even if it's not the right word, there are a lot of similarities between fighting depression (an internal battle) and fighting an external battle.
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