The
Wisdom Within Depression
Is there
Wisdom within
Depression? If
it
can be said that there is
wisdom to
be gained through hardship or
suffering that we would not freely choose, then it can also be said
that there is deep learning and truth to be gained through the
experience of
depression in all its
many forms. As with all
experiences that are painful and that create limitation, the deeper
self or soul can bring out of this, something valuable for the heart
and for the spirit. Though this may not immediately be apparent to the
self in the midst of pain, grief, or sorrow, what has limitation on the
one side, offers the possibility for learning and for greater life on
the other.
This paradox is hard for the human self to grasp, because the human
response to many form of suffering or
severe depression is to want it to end, and
the human
heart cannot
help but believe that what feels bad - what deprives it of joy, love,
meaning, hope, and energy - cannot be the source of something good.
However, the perceptions of the soul and the choices that the soul
makes during a time of pain or limitation are invisible, and everything
depends upon the choices that are made.
For example, it is possible, as a result of
feeling disconnected from
joy or meaning in life, to begin to seek that joy with a fuller heart,
to value life more, to hope for the possibility of experiencing one
clear and pure sunlit day without the cloud of sorrow on the mind or in
the heart. It is possible in the presence of aloneness, great or
isolation to
feel the heart longing more for love and connection. And it is possible
to feel during
intense depression, in
the presence of the wish to die,
an even greater wish to
live. These are the choices of the soul. In fact, they are more
‘orientations’ than choices and they turn the inner self in the
direction of pursuing the fulfillment that is needed and toward new
possibilities for growth. In this sense, though
major depression may be a ‘dark night of
the soul’ which we
would not choose and in which it may appear that every light has gone
out, the soul, within its own domain, continues to support the seeking
of that light and continues to radiate light toward the self that
suffers and struggles. For this reason, it would be well to look at all
types of depression
as a spiritual crisis in its underpinnings,
for although no positive movement may be visible on the mental or
emotional levels, on the level of spirit and soul a question is being
asked and a question is being answered all of the time, namely, ‘what
is this life about, what is its value, what has
depression done to me
and what am I doing in it’?
Whether flooded with feelings, or numb and experiencing merely a sense
of deadness, on the level of the soul a groping movement is taking
place during this dark and painful night - a search for a way toward
the light that is, for the moment, invisible. In the blackness, there
is a sharpening of vision as one seeks the promise of the light, and
pursues the elusive hope of an end to darkness or
prolong depression. Even on the
conscious
level, where everything may feel quite bleak, there is often a reaching
out toward that which may have seemed impossibly far away before,
namely, to the awareness, however tentative, of our Divine and holy
self, the
center of our spiritual being and the ability to achieve
wisdom.
For those for whom the higher self or soul remains a hypothesis rather
than a reality, this type of understanding may seem invented. However,
this, too, is a choice that the inner self must make – whether to
adhere to a perspective which emphasizes indifference, loss,
randomness, deprivation, and lack in life, or to believe that at all
times there is a purpose behind the manifestation of what life brings
to us, frequent
depression that
confronted us and that this purpose,
when found, can become the springboard to
a new and more vital sense of ourselves, friends and of life.
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