sorry to hijack temporarily - but i think it is a combination of both ways of thinking. as it was told to me - taking medication isn't bad. especially if you find something that helps you function (work/school/friends) - but leaving everything to medication has it's drawbacks. to begin to get back into life - and exercise (which promotes certain brain hormones at least - as told to me 45 minutes 3x week) - to watch your diet (not too much sugar and things which counter your bodies production of things it needs to function) - and to have a positive outlook or train your mind to think positively instead of negatively.
Wise words, these. It is indeed an abnegation - and a potentially useless one - just to leave it all to the medics, but in order for anything to work there has to be as much proper understanding of the individual situation as possible. Certain physical exercise can often be beneficial, but, again, this needs to be undertaken by sufferers of clinical depression only under specific prescriptive medical advice and supervision, otherwise there might even be a risk of its having a negative effect on some patients. Diet is indeed an important factor, as is the timing of meals and medication. In the end, however, it has to be accepted in all cases that any clinically depressed patient has to be able to muster sufficient positive attitude actually to go and seek medical advice in the first place and then to follow it with a view to achieving an improvement in the condition.
i think parents have a huge role to play in positive reinforcement, example of exercise and discipline, and of allowing themselves and their children to express times of sadness, tiredness, frustration - without a lot of over judging. to just 'let be.' to commiserate - and not always say 'you're being childish.' sometimes depression can work on much older people - so it's obviously not childishness.
This may be the case, but you are writing here only about depression in children, whereas it occupies a far wider territory than just up to mid-'teens.
to me, this is where God comes in. we can pray for joy.
Here you go again! "For you", yes - and that's absolutely fine - but that's of no use whatsoever to anyone who does not believe in God and only limited use to those who are uncertain of their beliefs.
basically, I see God as a parent.
"You" do - we know that - but, again, this kind of stance is of no possible help to those who do not believe in Him - nor, for that matter, is it likely to be especially meaningful to orphans, whatever their beliefs may be - how can they "see God as a parent" when the entire concept of parental presence is unfamiliar to them?
letting go of past hurts instead of mulling over them (over and over as with a train track) is a more viable cure, imo, than going into detail to 'solve' a problem. some relationships will always be a problem. perhaps it is time to shorten some relationships and elongate others? to think about what makes YOU feel right and happy and balanced. some people put us off balance by being negative themselves. limit time with them.
The "track" that I notice here is the one back on which you have now gotten (as Churchill might have said, albeit with some alternative for the Americanism "gotten"); again, this makes good sense, both for believers in God, those who are unsure of their beliefs and those who do not believe in Him.
Best,
Alistair