Ten Keys to
Successful Coping
9:
Honor Your Emotions
By Bruce Campbell
Strong emotions like fear, anger,
grief and depression are normal reactions to having chronic illness.
Such emotions are a normal response to being in a situation that
isolates, creates tremendous uncertainty, brings loss and imposes
limits. Unfortunately, CFIDS and fibromyalgia seem to make emotional
reactions even stronger than before and harder to control. This reaction
seems part of the physical basis of the illness. The strength of
emotions can create a vicious cycle. Emotions can intensify symptoms,
which in turn may increase worry and depression. This process applies
even to positive emotions.
But, just as in other aspects of
illness discussed in this series, self-help can play a role in managing
the emotional aspects of chronic disease. We will discuss two in this
article: depression and anxiety. The final article treats grief.
Depression in Chronic Illness
Depression is a common and normal
reaction to chronic illness, an understandable response to the losses,
dislocation and uncertainties produced by illness. It is not surprising
that depression would occur in people who have an illness as disabling
as CFIDS or fibromyalgia. In addition, sometimes depression may be part
of our illness, with real physical causes. Prolonged stress may alter
the biochemistry of the body, causing depression.
Depression is often divided into two
types: situational and biochemical. Both may apply to people with CFIDS
and fibromyalgia. Situational depression, which means depression that
occurs as a response to a particular set of circumstances, lends itself
to self-management strategies such as those described below. But not all
depression is best handled this way. If you are deeply depressed about
your illness or you have biochemical depression, which has its roots in
the chemistry of the brain, medication and professional help are
indicated. Self-management strategies may also be helpful.
Depression can be particularly
invidious because it may intensify illness symptoms, creating in a
vicious cycle in which symptoms and depression reinforce one another.
There are many things you can do to improve your situation. If you are
depressed, you may not want to try, but remember that depression feeds
on itself. Your attitude becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. If you
believe you can get better, you will take actions such as the twelve
listed below that have a good chance of helping. If you’re like most
people, some may appeal to you but not others. I suggest you try what
you think fits your situation. The important point is that there are
usually actions we can take to help improve our mood.
Rest: Some
depression seems to be associated with physical symptoms such as fatigue
and pain. Resting to reduce these symptoms can also improve mood.
Reach Out to Others:
Simple human contact is often very soothing. Calling a friend or getting
together to talk, share a meal or see a movie counteracts the sense of
isolation, preoccupation with problems and the low mood often associated
with chronic illness. Just explaining yourself can often give you
perspective. Fellow patients can be very helpful.
Get Out of the House:
Just like contact with others, getting out of the house counteracts
isolation and boredom, provides stimulation and can reduce depression.
Consider Medications:
Tranquilizers and narcotic painkillers intensify depression. If you are
depressed, it may be in part a medication side effect. Check with your
doctor. On the other hand, if your depression is bio-chemical in origin,
you may be helped by an anti-depressant.
Exercise:
Exercise is a natural anti-depressant. It relieves tension, lessens
stress and improves mood. Most exercise also involves being out of the
house, thus bringing the adding benefits of a change of scene.
Practice Problem-Solving:
Taking action to solve a problem lifts the spirit as well as having
practical benefits. Doing something counteracts the sense of
helplessness and replaces it with a sense of control and power.
Change Your Thinking:
Being ill over an extended period of time can be associated with a sense
of helplessness. Changing your habitual ways of thinking to be more
positive can change your mood. You can help yourself by celebrating your
successes. Notice what’s going well and what you have accomplished.
This shift in perspective can raise your spirits.
Do Something Pleasant:
Pleasurable activities counter depression and help create a good mood.
Doing something in which you can become absorbed distracts from bad
moods and puts you in touch with positive forces. Such activities might
include reading, playing or listening to music, sitting in the sun,
solving jigsaw puzzles, doing needlework, spending time with friends,
being out in nature and laughing.
Get Help: If
you are seriously depressed, suicidal or have been depressed for some
time, get help now. Phone a suicide prevention center, talk to your
doctor, see a psychologist or call a friend. If your problems are less
severe, consider seeing a psychotherapist. Look for one who has
experience working with people who have chronic illness. If you have
family tension because of illness, you might also consider couples or
family counseling.
Establish Good Daily Habits:
Keeping to a daily routine regardless of how you feel can help
counteract depression. Your daily round of activities will depend on the
severity of your illness, and might include things like getting dressed
every day, making the bed, cooking meals, taking a walk and watching a
favorite TV program. Forcing yourself to do these things even if you don’t
want to counteracts the inertia of depression.
Help Others:
Get involved with something larger than yourself to counteract the
isolation and preoccupation that often accompany illness and to rebuild
self-esteem. We usually feel better if we do something for another
person.
Manage Your Stress:
Controlling stress can help you manage your emotions, because stress
tends to make emotions more intense. Living within your energy envelope
and managing the stresses in your life will make emotions more
manageable.
Fear and Anxiety
Fear and anxiety often accompany
chronic illness. These reactions are common in situations in which we
feel an increased vulnerability in combination with a decreased sense of
power. You will find below eight strategies that are often helpful with
fear and worry reactions. For more suggestions, see “Fifty Tips on the
Management of Worry without Using Medication” in the book Worry
by Edward Hallowell.
Use Problem-Solving:
Taking action to solve a problem has a double payoff. You reduce or
eliminate a practical concern that is bothering you. Also, the process
of taking action often reduces worry.
Practice Stress Reduction:
Learning relaxation and other stress reduction techniques can help
reduce the intensity of your emotional reactions and, by doing so,
reduce the echo effect in which emotions and symptoms amplify one
another. A regular stress reduction practice can also lower “background
worry,” the ongoing anxiety that results from long-term stresses like
chronic illness.
Change Your Thinking:
If you have a tendency to think of the worst that might happen, you can
take steps to short-circuit the process in which your thoughts increase
your anxiety. One antidote is to retrain yourself to speak soothingly
when worried, saying things like “I’ve been here before and survived”
or “this is probably not as bad as it seems.”
Connect with Other People:
Feeling that you are part of something larger than yourself
counteracts worry. Also, contact soothes worry, distracts you from
preoccupation with problems, and provides reassurance.
Exercise:
One of the best treatments for worry, exercise is both relaxing and
distracting.
Pleasurable Activity.
Reading, music, good conversation and other activities in
which you can become immersed help change mood.
Don’t Worry Alone:
The act of sharing a worry almost always reduces its size and emotional
weight. Discussion may help you find solutions, but almost always makes
the worry feel less threatening. Putting a worry into words translates
it from the realm of imagination into something concrete and manageable.
Medications:
Just as drugs can help with depression, some people find that
medications help them deal with anxiety. A drug will not be a complete
solution to problems of anxiety, but it can be an important part of a
comprehensive response.
Panic
About 10 percent of people with CFIDS
experience an especially severe and frightening form of fear called
panic attacks. These are brief episodes of terror in which a person may
feel he or she is about to die. Symptoms may include chest pain, heart
palpitations and dizziness. In spite of overwhelming fear, people
survive but may live a life of dread, apprehensive about when the next
attack may occur. This kind of fear is treatable. For discussions on how
to conquer panic, see Edward Hallowell’s book Worry or Martin
Seligman’s What You Can Change and What You Can’t.
Summary
In sum, you aren’t crazy to
experience strong emotions in reaction to having your life turned upside
down. It would be surprising if you didn’t respond that way. Emotions
like fear, anger, grief and depression are common responses to
situations of loss and uncertainty. But there are many things you can do
to reduce the strength of the emotions associated with chronic illness.