Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: TUESDAY, November 2, 1993 TAG: 9311020059 SECTION: EXTRA PAGE: 1 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: DATELINE: LENGTH: Medium
identified 14 strategies that people rely on most consistently to cheer themselves up. Seven are effective short-term cures, two are less effective and five are self-defeating.
The seven most effective short-term cures:
PROBLEM-directed action - actually doing something to solve the problem at the root of the depression.
REAPPRAISAL - "reframing" the situation, to understand what may be good as well as what may be bad about it.
THINKING about other successes - reminding oneself of the other things in one's life that are going well.
REWARDING oneself - going on a shopping spree, for example, or out for dinner.
RESOLVING to try harder - "It turns out that just thinking about the future, and how to avoid a similar problem in the future, makes people feel better immediately." DOWNWARD comparison - thinking about other people
whose problems are even worse than one's own. "It may not be the nicest thing to do. ... But it actually works."
SELF-comparison - comparing one's current situation to one's past situation.
\ Two strategies that probably won't work
Socializing and drinking. Both may immediately elevate people's moods, but feeling better "doesn't last," Larsen said.
\ Five ways to keep yoru bad mood bad
"VENTING" - crying and shouting. "Crying when sad, shouting when angry - what Freud called `catharsis' - in the short term, does not appear to be effective."
DISTRACTION _ trying to escape sadness with diversions. SOLITUDE.
Being alone is "a bad idea. We've found people's moods go down ... even in the short-term future."
FATALISM. People who believe there is nothing to be done about a problem "tend to stay in a bad mood."
BLAMING failure on others - "a nasty form" of reappraisal, in which one reinterprets events in order to lay their failure at someone else's feet. "That just perpetuates a bad mood."
by CNB