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Locut0s

(6,154 posts)
Fri Nov 22, 2013, 12:40 AM Nov 2013

I have a theory that sensory overload can temporarily relieve depression and anxiety...

I don't think this is new news or anything but it's occurred to me over the past few months that sensory overload of one form or another, and perhaps sensory deprivation, can relieve depression and anxiety for short periods. One thing I often do is go for hot baths when anxious or depressed. But they have to be extra extra hot and I hold my breath underwater till exhausted. After coming out I'm tired, overheated, etc and cool off by a fan. I find this helps relieve my depression and anxiety for short periods, an hour or so at a time. I also remember being depressed on a road trip during which my father was driving. I would stick my head out the window going down the highway and let the cold air rush by my head till I was numb and my ears ringing. Again when I pulled my head back in the car I was overwhelmed but I felt better for a short period. I'm not positive but I'm wondering if this effect is due to the sensory overload in these situations. The rushing air, the cold wind, the hot water, the exhaustion, seems to temporarily reset something in my head. Perhaps this is similar to how ECT therapy works?

On a side note it's amazing how exhausting depression an anxiety is. This summer when I was happy I was walking 15 to 20 km a day. Now I find it difficult to walk around the block.

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I have a theory that sensory overload can temporarily relieve depression and anxiety... (Original Post) Locut0s Nov 2013 OP
Lots of people basically agree...the popular trinity for getting by HereSince1628 Nov 2013 #1
Yeah, it's a common form of self-medication among the depressed anxious people in my family. hunter Nov 2013 #2

HereSince1628

(36,063 posts)
1. Lots of people basically agree...the popular trinity for getting by
Fri Nov 22, 2013, 08:24 AM
Nov 2013

is (and I'm not intending a priority among them in this alphabetical listing) avoidance, distraction, and tolerance of the things we find distressing.

Of course, in invoking these things, a person has to be careful about choices that will make life even more difficult. Self-medicating with alcohol is such a thing and thrill-seeking could be.

From what I've read, it's possible to see many of the dysfunctional things we do as efforts to engage in one of those three things. And we've learned to habitually do them because, at least at some time, they did provide some relief.









hunter

(38,309 posts)
2. Yeah, it's a common form of self-medication among the depressed anxious people in my family.
Fri Nov 22, 2013, 05:11 PM
Nov 2013

Not always in a positive way...

My own experiences include riding a very big motorcycle full throttle down a desert highway by moonlight with the headlight off. 120 mph, I didn't look after that.(Newer motorcycles don't let you turn the headlight off...)

Body surfing big waves, day or night, often nude. It was a rough twelve foot surf that finally pounded some sense into me by pounding sand up my ass and into all my other orifices and nearly drowning me. That was maybe my life's most terrifying moment until my wife almost bled to death when our second kid was born. (They were giving her blood transfusions in both arms.)

Bungee jumping. Playing with rockets and explosives...

And then my most dangerous former obsession, running long distances made more interesting by very serious sorts trespassing, often onto military bases and such.

I'm paying the price for all that youthful idiocy now in aches and pains. I go to bed in the evening when I hurt too much, and I get out of bed in the morning when I hurt too much. But I'm lucky I'm not dead.

There are reasons it took me nine years to graduate from college. (I did have a head start, quitting high school...) With modern meds I think I could have easily graduated in four years and been accepted right away to grad school.

When I did graduate from university the dean of my college told me, "Hunter, I think you should go to graduate school. BUT NOT HERE!"

I did teacher training elsewhere, hoping for some kind of Welcome Back Kotter experience, but I'm really too autistic to be a good teacher. The only way I could manage my classes was by being an authoritarian and I did not enjoy that. But that's how I met wife, teaching science. My wife is among the best teachers I've ever known.

The first time I'd been "asked" to take leave from college was for fighting with one of this dean's teaching assistants. (This professor wasn't a dean then.) No violence on my part, I just used words, but the T.A. was throwing stuff at me starting with chalk and ending with fat textbooks. One of my classmates called the campus police.

Of course I was blamed, since I already had a reputation. My mom is a similar sort... 50% inheritance, judging by my siblings. Half of us can be counted on to say the worst possible things at the worst possible moments which is probably why our ancestors fled to America's Wild West.

My Senior Thesis was a gentle "Fuck You" after I'd burned through a few advisors. I did the oral presentation drunk after our college newspaper's year end wrap party. (I was a reporter-columnist.) Half the people attending my senior thesis presentation were there for their own entertainment, curious to see how I would crash and burn. I did not crash and burn, but I could have done better. I put a few transparencies on the overhead projector upside-down and I stumbled over a few words, but that was the worst of it. I was very well rehearsed. (Thanks Sally!)

As a young adult the very worst experiences I had were a consequence of steroids. I have sometimes severe asthma. Whenever the asthma got really bad doctors would prescribe oral steroids. Once the asthma was beaten down I'd feel like Super Man. I was physically fit because I often took jobs such as loading and unloading trucks and moving furniture. After a few days on steroids the psychotic aspects of my mental illness would assert themselves. During one such episode I handed an essay to an English professor that was pretty much a thousand words of gibberish neatly arranged in paragraphs. She convinced me to walk with her to her office after class. I almost ran away, which is what I always did in middle school and high school, but I liked her. We talked in her office a few uncomfortable minutes and then she took me by the hand and dropped me off in care of the student health center.

Of course the triage nurse thought I was tripping out and they put me alone in an exam room to ride it out. I amused myself looking through the drawers and cabinets, up under the drop down ceiling panels (I'd done drop-down ceiling work), playing with the blood pressure cuff and other stuff Mr. Bean style, and then I went to sleep for a few hours.

Life was simpler then, Student Health Services almost never sent students to the big hospital Emergency Room for "recreational drug" stuff. They do so now for liability reasons.

A sharp young physician figured out that it was my prescribed medicines troubling me and not any street drugs I'd taken.

I still sometimes have to resort to prednisone, but oral steroids really scare me. The inhaled steroids I take daily for my asthma put a very minimal dose just where it's needed.

It seems to me Locut0s you are a much less flammable person than I ever was.

Please, be very kind to yourself.

It took me a long, long time, a few years of therapy, and modern meds to learn how to be kind to myself.



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