The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

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  • Krystyan
    Platinum Poster
    • Oct 2004
    • 1049

    The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

    Sasha just retwitted this from Dj Paul Thomas. It is taken from Decoded Magazine:

    The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

    It's an interesting read, for sure.


    “My depression started when I realised that my parent’s marriage was ruined. When you go from living what you think is a perfect life to that, it ruins your faith in anything staying positive for long. On top of that I was bullied at school, a girl-repellent at best and I started drinking pretty early on. I had “friends” invite me out to parties just to ambush me and beat me up, I’d get badly drunk and people would piss on me and spit on me. I didn’t have anything to really look forward to at that point…”


    These aren’t the words you’d expect to hear from one of the most successful house artists of the last few years. His energetic sets and grinning face suggest anything other than a man battling mental health issues. British DJ Funkagenda isn’t alone in his battle against depression. Far from it. Every year, 1 in 4 people suffer from depression in the U.K. and of these,18-30 years old are most affected.
    Depression goes hand in hand with alcohol and drugs. It’s therefore perhaps not surprising, that depression is common in the world of dance music. A place to escape the banality and stress of normal life; where the music plays, the drinks and drugs flow, and your problems are locked in your drawer at work, ready to unleash once the narcotics wear off.


    So what effect does clubland have for those with depression?


    “Clubbing was a release and an escape. As time went on everything about the clubbing scene took over my life, as it was the only thing that I thought made me happy. The depression was always under the surface, and I tried my best to ignore it. The euphoria I felt for so many years was masking some serious problems for me. And decisions that I’d made whilst in that state still affect me today. ” Claire was in her teens when she first felt the onset of depression.

    There’s still a huge dearth of knowledge surrounding depression, and expectation of who, and perhaps more significantly, who shouldn’t suffer from it.
    A jet-set lifestyle, flying from country to country, playing to thousands of adoring fans night after night, earning a fortune while doing so. What could a DJ possibly have to be depressed about? Yet anyone who has the illness, knows it doesn’t work like this. Funkagenda, aka Adam Walder, has had grammy nominations and several Beatport no.1s, has DJ’ed around the globe and collaborated with megastars. Yet Adam’s suffered from the illness throughout his career. He told me; “depression isn’t about what reasons you have to be sad NOW. Despite there being no evidence that something will go wrong, you believe it so firmly that you steer your path towards oblivion.”


    Adam has always been very vocal about his depression on his social media platforms, using it as a release for his problems. “I’ve learned to be very open about it because people are a lot more accepting of me talking about it. In fact I get a lot of emails and Facebook messages commending my stance on it. I just hope that I can justify the praise with my continued airing of my struggle.” But many choose to keep their issues to themselves. A recent survey from The National Institute of Mental Health discovered that nearly half of people with depression choose to battle their troubles alone, rather than shove two fingers up at the stigma that has seemed to have attached itself to depression.


    If you are as old as me, and love progressive house (not Beatport’s definition!) as much as I do, you’ll remember a stunningly talented producer called Slacker, who created the seminal ‘Your Face’, as well as delivering some of the best remixes during the progressive house golden age. He also remixed Ascension’s ’Someone’ and Trancesetters’ ‘Roaches’. Slacker was the epitome of originality. His singles and remixes were always innovative and exciting. If a track had 10 remixes and one of those remixes was a Slacker remix, it would be pointless in listening to any of the others. Slacker’s would be the one everyone would play. Like Funkagenda, Slacker aka Shem McCauley, had battled depression from his teenage years. Sadly, Shem lost his battle with depression in early 2012, committing suicide in Thailand, where he’d resided for the last few years of his life.


    I spoke to Slacker’s sister, Una, to understand a little more about Shem’s depression. “Shem started getting anxious early on when he was in his late teens, part of that could have been linked to being a little overwhelmed by the ‘fame’ they had when they were very young. We cannot put a label on what brought about the depressions though. There is depression in our family, Shem had a number of small health problems as a child any number of things could have been the root of it or it simply could have been chemical. It probably wasn’t helped by taking ecstasy during his early clubbing days – knowing now what we know about its effects on serotonin levels.”

    But what about all that adulation, how much people loved Slacker’s music? Would that bring a release to him?

    “I don’t think that popularity can be a source of relief from depression, it seems to me that knowing how many people he inspired, how much he was loved wasn’t enough to keep the darkness at bay. He certainly felt inadequate during those dark times. When he was not down he was of course flattered but modest about success.”

    While Slacker’s case had the worst possible ending, Funkagenda is a shining example of battling the lows to get to the highs. Adam’s recent release, ‘One Day at a Time’ was borne from his battles with depression and alcoholism. Thankfully Adam has managed to get on top of his troubles, as his career again ascends following that hit single. “When I had my last relapse it was really bad. I was holed up in a hotel in Jamaica, Queens, drinking every minute that I was awake just to make myself pass out again. It was so bad. I went back to LA when my girlfriend came to rescue me. When I got back I found a guy who could explain my addiction and my depression to me in terms I could understand and it was like a huge weight had been lifted from my shoulders. ‘One Day at a Time’ was basically an aural representation of that moment. It’s supposed to represent the ascension from sadness to being uplifted again.”

    But as Funkagenda says, the stigma around depression is still prevalent, leading many to fight their battles alone. “There is a lot of work to be done to help the public differentiate between sadness and depression. Depression is a disease. Sadness is a feeling. You can go from sad to happy, but that doesn’t mean your depression is gone. It just means that it’s hidden better. Look at some of the great artists of the last hundred years who have experienced the highest highs and still killed themselves. All that evidence cannot be ignored. People need to learn that depression isn’t just an excuse for sad people not to try in life, or turn to addiction (which in itself becomes a serious mental health issue). Isaac Asimov said “The saddest aspect of life right now is that science gathers knowledge faster than society gathers wisdom” and I think that is something that really sums up the difference between definition and understanding.”
    https://www.facebook.com/YEGworld
  • Zover
    Banned
    • Mar 2014
    • 965

    #2
    Re: The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

    Funkagenda should have just got some life coaching from Florida, it would have saved him years of sorrow.

    Comment

    • Krystyan
      Platinum Poster
      • Oct 2004
      • 1049

      #3
      Re: The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

      come on, really?
      https://www.facebook.com/YEGworld

      Comment

      • floridaorange
        I'm merely a humble butler
        • Dec 2005
        • 29116

        #4
        Re: The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

        Good read for sure. Depression affects us all in one way or another, since we all have someone in our family who has it, if we don't have it ourselves. I went through a couple waves of depression, some in middle school, some in high school and again in college as well actually. I haven't had any for almost 10 years now, much of which I think has to do with meeting the love of my life, my wife and just figuring out what works best for me in terms of habits, etc. I stopped most of the night life lifestyle once I met my wife, about 10 yrs ago, stopped doing drugs and stopped drinking as much. I continued to eat healthy and pursue natural highs (as cheesy as that sounds) through work and friendships. I also think MS has helped in some ways. Now I find it hard to believe I ever went through depression, and wish I had known then what I know now, but I appreciate life differently now for having gone through it.

        I think a lot of what makes people depressed is what people look to for happiness. There are so many things that are marketed to people that are supposed to make them "happy," when in actuality, they won't. Searching for happiness isn't a waste of time though, I feel like I found it and I definitely searched, and failed a lot. But failure is the greatest teacher.

        It was fun while it lasted...

        Comment

        • KiwiTollway
          Platinum Poster
          • Jan 2014
          • 1474

          #5
          Re: The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

          I think depression is a chemical imbalance, period. It's either brought on by a chemical change, hormonal change, brain trauma, or genetic disposition ,but clinical depression is physically/chemically based, always.

          When referring to a down cycle in life, or general sadness, or melancholy because you're working through a phase in life, none of that is really depression. If it's at all circumstantial, then it's not clinical depression. I don't believe it is the opposite of happiness, because it's physical with emotional/mental components; it hurts throughout the body and the physical pain of it can drive people to unwanted acts/behavior because they're coping with pain.

          That's what many don't understand, you can't lift yourself out of it and no one can help you alleviate it either by just relating to you or talking to you; it's chemical. You can't talk yourself out of it, get a change in scenery, or meet someone who lifts you out of it if it's really depression you're dealing with. And alcohol is a depressant so if consuming alcohol, you can't really wonder why you're depressed temporarily. Alcohol brings about a physical change until the body processes it out, brain included. That's more proof it's chemically based.

          I think depression is one of the most misunderstood illnesses.

          Comment

          • barski
            Addiction started
            • May 2013
            • 397

            #6
            Re: The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

            If it's really a disease, it should be possible to prove it, right? (blood sample, brain scan)
            Because we (humans) can get into depression, and can get out of depression it seems to me it's just being extremely sad for some reason.

            Comment

            • Zover
              Banned
              • Mar 2014
              • 965

              #7
              Re: The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

              Originally posted by barski
              If it's really a disease, it should be possible to prove it, right? (blood sample, brain scan)
              Because we (humans) can get into depression, and can get out of depression it seems to me it's just being extremely sad for some reason.
              Suffering from depression is completey different from being sad for some reason. Most people who suffer from depression never really get cured. You can have the most amazing things happening to you and still suffer from depression. Like anxiiety once it's triggered it never really goes away, people control it through coping strategies. The problem is, there is very little known about the brain and the way it works. The main treatment for depression is medicines that alter the chemistry of the the brain.

              Comment

              • DIDI
                Aussie Pest
                • Nov 2004
                • 16845

                #8
                Re: The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

                Originally posted by Zover
                Suffering from depression is completey different from being sad for some reason. Most people who suffer from depression never really get cured. You can have the most amazing things happening to you and still suffer from depression. Like anxiiety once it's triggered it never really goes away, people control it through coping strategies. The problem is, there is very little known about the brain and the way it works. The main treatment for depression is medicines that alter the chemistry of the the brain.
                So very very true.

                I think depression is something we really don't know about. Only 40 % of people respond positively to antidepressants. And some respond very badly. . Of those 40% they don't all respond to the same antidepressants. Which seems to me to very hit and miss. Maybe we haven't found the right chemicals.
                Originally posted by TheVrk
                it IS incredible isn't it??
                STILL pumpin out great set after great set...never cheesed out, never sold out, never lost his touch..
                Simply does not get any better than Hernan
                The 'club spirit' is in the soul. It Never Dies

                Comment

                • DIDI
                  Aussie Pest
                  • Nov 2004
                  • 16845

                  #9
                  Re: The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

                  Originally posted by Zover
                  Funkagenda should have just got some life coaching from Florida, it would have saved him years of sorrow.
                  Originally posted by TheVrk
                  it IS incredible isn't it??
                  STILL pumpin out great set after great set...never cheesed out, never sold out, never lost his touch..
                  Simply does not get any better than Hernan
                  The 'club spirit' is in the soul. It Never Dies

                  Comment

                  • Illuminate
                    DUDERZ get a life!!!
                    • Aug 2009
                    • 5152

                    #10
                    Re: The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

                    Originally posted by DIDI
                    So very very true.

                    I think depression is something we really don't know about. Only 40 % of people respond positively to antidepressants. And some respond very badly. . Of those 40% they don't all respond to the same antidepressants. Which seems to me to very hit and miss. Maybe we haven't found the right chemicals.
                    A majority of anti depressants when first prescribed have a almost russian roulette with placebos, there is somewhat a hit and miss attempt by doctors to figure out what's going on. It amazes me how complex our bodies can defend to external pressures such as diseases, viruses, but fail to comprehend our own inner demons.

                    The One contains the Many, and the Many contains the One:
                    Sbando
                    - You Will Be Missed.

                    "Mankind has the propensity to fuck itself up on anything it lays its hands on."
                    Feather

                    "Who moderates this forum and makes these decisions? Stevie Wonder?"
                    Bob
                    "i'd give her a muscle she doesn't have "
                    the banned1

                    "I love you Illuminate... that's divine/creator/God in me loving the origin of you."
                    KiwiTollway



                    Comment

                    • sbando
                      Going back to Romford
                      • Apr 2008
                      • 11667

                      #11
                      Re: The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

                      Originally posted by barski
                      If it's really a disease, it should be possible to prove it, right? (blood sample, brain scan)
                      Because we (humans) can get into depression, and can get out of depression it seems to me it's just being extremely sad for some reason.
                      You don't have a fucking clue, man. When you wake up sorrounded by nurses and police officers and various humanity screaming at you, you'll get it, but just perhaps. If you think that "bipolar" is just a buzz word for hipsters then you're welcomed to my world.
                      ╔══╗............/\_¸_/\
                      ╚╗╔╝...........(=•_•=)
                      ╔╝(¯`v´¯).......ღ***ღ.*
                      ╚══`.¸. ...:::.(¯`•\|/•´¯) ☆*゚

                      Comment

                      • floridaorange
                        I'm merely a humble butler
                        • Dec 2005
                        • 29116

                        #12
                        Re: The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

                        Well, for what's worth Kiwi, I was told I had a chemical imbalance and I'm no stranger to meds either. But it's been 10 yrs since all of that. I do believe one can get passed "depression." Bipolar disorder is another story. I still think humans can be very resilient though. Not saying it's up to individuals to just pull themselves out of their depression but circumstances I do believe can play a role. It's unfair to exclude all environmental factors IMHO, but tell me I'm wrong all you want .

                        It was fun while it lasted...

                        Comment

                        • sbando
                          Going back to Romford
                          • Apr 2008
                          • 11667

                          #13
                          Re: The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

                          Wishful thinking. It depends on the state of your disorder.
                          ╔══╗............/\_¸_/\
                          ╚╗╔╝...........(=•_•=)
                          ╔╝(¯`v´¯).......ღ***ღ.*
                          ╚══`.¸. ...:::.(¯`•\|/•´¯) ☆*゚

                          Comment

                          • floridaorange
                            I'm merely a humble butler
                            • Dec 2005
                            • 29116

                            #14
                            Re: The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

                            100% bro I know it does. Some people it's a lifetime struggle. 2 of my closest friends are bipolar and my dad as well (diagnosed). I'm no stranger to it. I don't mean to sound insensitive or what not. I personally think though that there is a possibility that a child could be susceptible to depression and then raised by a parent with let's say undiagnosed depression, and then by no fault to either party involved the child is diagnosed with depression. It's sort of the nature + nurture taking place. If the same kid is then sent across the country to say California where they learn new ways of being, it's possible they could develop enough coping mechanisms to live with milder lessor more tolerable forms of depression or perhaps outgrow it in some ways. Not saying it's possible or even likely for most people / but it has happened and does happen I am sure. "California" is just an arbitrary place that does have a consciousness movement taking place, but then again so do many other places, just saying.

                            It was fun while it lasted...

                            Comment

                            • floridaorange
                              I'm merely a humble butler
                              • Dec 2005
                              • 29116

                              #15
                              Re: The reality of depression - Decoded Magazine

                              I'm also a bit of a dreamer though, which can seem stupid to mor linear/logical thinkers.

                              It was fun while it lasted...

                              Comment

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