Conversation

i think being very depressed in grad school caused me to lose trust that if i just do what comes "naturally" or "go with the flow" then things will turn out okay. when you're very depressed you learn that what that does is keep you entrenched in your depression forever
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i suspect people with severe addictions learn something similar. to get out of depression i had to learn how to effortfully do a bunch of unusual things on purpose (feeling my feelings etc.) until one or more of them unlocked the lock to the dungeon i was in, so to speak
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every depressive phase is a new puzzle i have to solve involving a somewhat different shape of lock. in the course of solving these puzzles i have to pay attention to parts of my experience most ppl don't have to, and i think some ppl get weirded out by me talking about this
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this kind of thing is why it's so hard to give people blanket advice. everyone needs a different shape of key for whatever lock they're currently dealing with (loosely speaking), everything gets exquisitely personal and exquisitely sensitive to fine details of how you work
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Doing things "unconsciously" sometimes takes a lot of effort to learn. E.g. a pen, mouse, bicycle If a person thinks something "comes naturally" to them it may mean they learned it when they were too young, to remember how hard it was to learn Do you remember learning to talk?
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This seems very interesting and I think would be applicable to myself. Could you please give an example of such a thing (which you have to do consciously)?