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What About Drugs for Anxiety and Depression?
By
Margaret Paul, Ph.D.
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As a counselor, I am often
asked, “Can drugs be helpful for anxiety and
depression?” The answer I give is “Yes” and
“No.”
Yes, drugs may be useful for short-term help. No, drugs
are not a good long-term solution.
Anxiety and depression are not caused by a lack of drugs.
Drugs do not heal the underlying causes of anxiety and
depression. However, when drugs are temporarily used to
give a person a window of relief to do the inner work
necessary to heal the underlying causes, they can be
useful.
Anxiety and depression generally have two major underlying
causes - emotional and physical.
THE PHYSICAL CAUSES OF ANXIETY AND DEPRESSION
Our bodies go into imbalance when we do not eat well or
have enough healthy exercise. Our bodies are not made to
handle the unnatural substances found in processed food.
When we overload our bodies with chemicals, pesticides,
sugar, and devitalized foods, our bodies become depleted
of vital nutrients and go into stress. Anxiety and
depression can be the result of this physical depletion
and resulting stress.
Our bodies are designed to thrive on the food and water
that God gave us – pure, clean, organic, unaltered food
and water. If you take drugs for anxiety and depression
and do not clean up your diet and get proper exercise, you
are just using a Band Aid for a gaping wound.
THE EMOTIONAL CAUSES OF ANXIETY AND DEPRESSION
Emotionally, anxiety is caused by dysfunctional thoughts
– thoughts that are not true. For example, if you tell
yourself that you are not good enough or you have to be
perfect, you will likely feel anxious. Thoughts of not
being good enough and having to be perfect are generally
focused on our outer qualities of looks and performance,
rather than on the inner qualities of kindness,
compassion, and gratitude. When we choose to be kind,
loving and compassionate with ourselves and others, we
feel good about ourselves. When we choose gratitude for
what we do have rather than dwell on what we don’t have,
we create inner peace. Kindness and gratitude are
wonderful antidotes to anxiety!
Anxiety is always a sign that we are telling ourselves a
lie. The truth creates peace inside, while lies create
fear and anxiety. This is a sure-fire way of knowing what
is true and what is not true!
Emotionally, depression is caused by not taking good care
of ourselves. If we ignore our needs, don’t speak up for
ourselves, judge ourselves, and make others responsible
for our feelings, the result may be depression. If you
have a child whom you ignore and judge, that child will
likely be depressed. The same occurs on the inner level
when we ignore and judge our own inner child. Putting
yourself last and taking care of everyone else but
yourself may cause you to feel unworthy and depressed.
There is little point in taking drugs for anxiety and
depression without attending to your dysfunctional
thinking and to how you are treating yourself. However, if
you take drugs for a short time and give yourself the
opportunity to do your inner work, they may be helpful.
Many of the people I work with find that as soon as they
start taking good care of themselves, they don’t like
the effect of the drugs. They don’t like the fact that
the drugs take the edge off their feelings. They find
that, rather than wanting to be numbed out, they want to
feel all of their feelings deeply, both the highs and the
lows. The more they learn to take responsibility for their
feelings by attending to their thoughts and needs, the
more they want to feel all of their feelings. They
discover that, while drugs may take the edge off pain,
they also take the edge off joy.
Most of the people I work with can avoid drugs completely
by learning to take loving care of themselves, both
physically and emotionally. Many of the people who
practice the Inner Bonding process that we teach find
Inner Bonding to be far more powerful in healing anxiety
and depression than drugs.
If you are a person who does not want to learn to take
personal responsibility for your pain and joy, then drugs
may be a way out for you. But if you want to feel true
peace and joy, drugs are not the answer.
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About
The Author
Margaret
Paul, Ph.D. is the best-selling author and
co-author of eight books, including
"Do I Have To Give Up Me To Be Loved
By You?" She is the co-creator of the
powerful Inner Bonding healing process.
Learn Inner Bonding now! Visit her web
site for a FREE Inner Bonding course: http://www.innerbonding.com
or mailto:margaret@innerbonding.com.
Phone sessions available. |
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