Prairie dogs talking. Credit: Wikimedia
One human language is much too small
to convey the ever unfolding meanings at play in the world.
By Will Falk
I am an environmental activist. I have depression. To be an activist with depression places me squarely in an irreconcilable dilemma: The destruction of the natural world creates stress which exacerbates depression. Cessation of the destruction of the natural world would alleviate the stress I feel and, therefore, alleviate the depression. However, acting to stop the destruction of the natural world exposes me to a great deal of stress which, again, exacerbates depression.
Either, the destruction persists, I am exposed to stress, and I remain depressed. Or, I join those resisting the destruction, I am exposed to stress, and I remain depressed.
Depressed if I do, depressed if I don’t. So, I fight back.
I will always struggle with depression. I know it sounds like the typically fatalistic expression of a depressed mind, but accepting this reality releases me from the false hope that I will ever live completely free from the guilt, hopelessness, and emptiness that are depression. Accepting this reality, frees the emotional energy I spent clinging to false hope. Instead of using this energy searching for a cure that never existed, I can devote this energy to activism and to managing depression in realistic ways.
Coming to this realization was not easy. It’s taken me five years since I was first diagnosed with a major depressive disorder, confirmation of the diagnosis from three different doctors in three different cities, two suicide attempts, and more emotional meltdowns than I can count to finally accept my predicament.
***
Uintah Basin drilling at night. Credit: Wikimedia
A recent drive through the oil fields in Utah’s Uintah Basin reminds me why depression will haunt me for the rest of my life.
The drive east on U.S. Highway 40 from Park City, UT to Vernal leaves me nowhere to hide. In my rearview mirror, melting snow sparkles as it dwindles high on the shoulders of the Wasatch Mountains. Climate change threatens Utah’s snowfall and Park City may be bereft of snow in my lifetime. Pulling my gaze from the mirror to look through my windshield, tall thin oil rigs rise from drilling platforms to pierce the sky after they’ve pierced the earth. Next to the platforms, well pumps move lethargically, doggedly up and down. The wells are mechanical vampires, stuck in slow motion, sucking blood from the earth.
The swathes of destruction betray addiction as surely as track marks.
While the rigs inject poison and the pumps extract oil, it’s hard not to think of the addict’s needles. Scars form on the basin floor where once-thick pinyon-juniper forests and rolling waves of sagebrush are piled in heaps around the fracking operations. The swathes of destruction betray addiction as surely as track marks.
I pass countless tanker trucks parked next to round, squat oil storage containers. The trucks are filling up with yellow crude before hauling the oil to refineries in Salt Lake. From there, the oil will be shipped all over the West to be burned. Each oil platform, each rig, each well I pass strikes a blow to my peace of mind. Each truckload of oil burned pushes the planet closer to runaway climate change and total collapse.
My intuition is infected with a familiar dread. Looking around me, I am met only with trauma. So, I look to the future. I see sea levels rising, cities drowning, and refugees fleeing. I see oceans acidifying, coral reefs bleaching, and aquatic life collapsing. I see forests burning, species disappearing, and topsoil blowing away.
I don’t see a livable future.
My hands tighten on the steering wheel, the muscles in my face cramp, and I feel nauseous. My left foot is restless. My right foot, though it is busy with the accelerator, is restless, too. I am speeding. My body is confused. It has no evolutionary reference for being trapped in the cab of a car while traveling at highway speeds.
If you could see through my flesh and bone to the organs forming my stress response system, what would you see? You’d see my adrenal glands pumping out stress hormones. You’d see the stress hormones preparing my body and brain to fight or flee. After a few minutes, you’d see my shrunken, damaged hippocampus trying to signal my adrenal glands that the threat has passed and to stop flooding my frontal cortex with stress hormones. You’d see my hippocampus fail, my adrenal glands continue to pump out hormones, and my risk for sinking into a full-blown episode of depression rise.
Oil well in Duchense County, Utah. Credit: Wikimedia
***
Neurobiological research suggests that the highly recurrent nature of depression is, in part, linked to the way stress hormones can produce brain damage. Advances in neuroscience unveil a conception of depression as a vicious cycle in the body’s stress response system. In a healthy system, adrenals produce hormones in response to stress. The stress passes and the hippocampus signals the adrenals to stop hormone production.
When the frontal cortex – especially the hippocampus and amygdala – is exposed to too many stress hormones, for too long, the frontal cortex begins to shrink. A damaged hippocampus fails to stop the adrenals which continue to produce stress hormones which continue to damage the hippocampus. Mood, memory, attention, and concentration are all affected. Problems with mood, memory, attention, and concentration create their own stresses which intensify the cycle.
Recent psychiatric findings paint a bleak picture. The American Psychiatric Association describes depression as “highly recurrent,” with at least 50% of those recovering from a first episode experiencing one or more additional episodes in their lifetime, and approximately 80% of those recovering from two episodes having another recurrence. Someone with three or more episodes has a 90% risk of recurrence. On average, a person with a history of depression will have five to nine separate depressive episodes in his or her lifetime.
There are precious few places free from civilized violence.
I have had four distinct episodes of depression which all but guarantees that depression will continue to recur for me. I do experience periods of remission where I am relatively free of the symptoms of depression. But, even in these times, depression lurks in the shadows forcing me into a perpetual vigilance, struggling to avoid relapse. Depression may fade, but memories of depression’s pain never do. I live in fear, daily, that the next episode is just around the corner.
Mainstream psychology stops the discussion, here, to prescribe avoidance of places that trigger depression, like the Uintah Basin and to conclude that a combination of improving the hippocampus’ ability to switch off stress hormones, eliminating as much stress from the depressed’s life as possible, and coping with the stress that can’t be eliminated is the key to recovery.
I have no reason to believe this wouldn’t work, in another time or another world. But, most of the planet has been turned into places like the Uintah Basin. There are precious few places free from civilized violence. While our homes are on the brink of annihilation, while horror adheres to our daily experience, while protecting life requires facing these horrors, is the elimination of stress possible? Is coping honest?
***
Credit: Gordon Haber, National Park Service
Ecopsychology shows that the elimination of stress is not possible in this ecological moment. Where psychology is the study of the soul and ecology is the study of the natural relationships creating life, ecopsychology insists that the soul cannot be studied apart from these natural relationships and encourages us to contemplate the kinds of relationships the soul requires to be truly healthy. Viewing depression through the lens of ecopsychology, we can explain depression as the result of problems with our relationships with the natural world. Depression cannot be cured until these relationships are fixed.
This explanation begins with stress and the body’s relationship with it. Stress is fundamentally ecological and can be understood as flowing through an animal’s relationship with his or her habitat. The classic example of the ecological nature of an animal’s stress response system involves the relationship between prey and predator. When a moose is beset by wolves, her stress response system produces hormones that help her flee or fight the wolves.
The relationship formed between the wolf, the moose, the moose’s stress hormones, and the moose’s stress response system is one of the countless relationships necessary for the moose’s survival. This is true for everyone. Other relationships animals rely on include air, water, and space, animals of other species, members of the animal’s own species, fungi, flowers, and trees, the cells forming the animal’s own flesh, the bacteria in the animal’s gut, and the yeast on the animal’s skin. Relationships give an animal life, and in the end, relationships bring the animal’s death. In an animal’s death, other beings gain life. The history of Life is the history of these mutually beneficial relationships.
Depression is constant pain accompanying perception.
Civilized humans poison air and water, alter space, murder species, destroy fungi, flowers, and trees, infect cells, mutate bacteria, and turn yeast deadly. In short, they threaten the planet’s capacity to support Life. Not only do civilized humans destroy those we need relationships with, they destroy the possibility of these relationships in the future. Every indigenous language lost, every species pushed to extinction, every unique acre of forest clearcut is a relationship foreclosed now and forever.
Living honestly in this reality, we open ourselves to depression. Losing these relationships, and seeing a future devoid of the relationships we need, creates unspeakable stress. Living with this stress every day can flood the frontal cortex with stress hormones, shrink the hippocampus, and push the stress response system past its ability to recover.
If this happens, you may be haunted with depression for the rest of your life.
To experience major depressive disorder is to know consciousness is an involuntary bodily function. Just like your heartbeat, you cannot turn consciousness off without chemicals, a blow to the head, or some other violence to the body and brain. Awareness is a muscle, and perceiving phenomena is how this muscle works. Depression is constant pain accompanying perception. In the civilized world, pain and trauma reflect from countless phenomena. The destruction has become so complete, consciousness finds nowhere to rest in peace, no place free from the reminders of violence.
***
Credit: Lain McGilcrest / Regent College
I know I have described a harsh reality for those of us living with depression. It is, however, the reality. For many of us, depression is a lifelong illness. In the long run, accepting a harsh reality is always better than maintaining denial. I have found that accepting this reality helps me manage my depression daily and enables me to be a more effective activist.
Accepting that I will always struggle with depression does not imply giving up. On the contrary, accepting this struggle requires a commitment to daily discipline. Several of my doctors have compared depression to diabetes. Just like many diabetics have to monitor their blood sugar, avoid certain foods, and regular exercise, depressives must build a daily practice into their lives. For me, this means regular cardiovascular exercise that helps my body deal with stress hormones, getting eight hours of sleep nightly, drinking alcohol sparingly, limiting situations where I am tempted to ruminate, and a consistent investment in my social relationships both human and nonhuman.
Coming to grips with the lifelong nature of depression has also given me firepower against depression’s perpetual guilt. The guilt associated with depression can become so pervasive it builds layers on itself. I feel guilty, for example, when I am tired, when I can’t seem to focus on writing, when I cannot find the mental fortitude to see the tasks I’ve promised to complete through to conclusion. I remind myself that lack of energy and problems with concentration and goal-oriented thinking are symptoms of depression. Then, I feel guilty for forgetting and guilty for letting myself feel guilty.
Accepting that I will always struggle with depression is accepting that I will always struggle with the symptoms of depression like guilt, too. Knowing this, when I find myself mired in cycles of guilt, I stop trying to rationalize my way through the guilt and simply place the guilt in a corner where it doesn’t matter if I should feel guilty or not.
If we want the pain to stop one day, we must fight back.
Accepting the lifelong nature of depression relieves me of the search for a cure. The personal search for a cure is quickly converted by depression into pressure to get better. This pressure becomes a sense of failure when depression’s symptoms intensify. While the world burns, the stress causing depression is always present. I may defend myself from this depression effectively for awhile but, the violence is so total and the trauma so obvious, there will be times that the stress overwhelms my defenses. This is not a personal failing and this is not my fault. I fight as hard as I can, but I will not always win.
Most importantly, acceptance makes me a better activist. I cannot separate my experience from the countless humans and nonhumans who make my experience possible. Fortunately, ecopsychology gives me a lexicon to communicate about the relationships creating my experience. Understanding that omnipresent stress, caused by the omnipresent destruction of the relationships that make us human, causes depression frees me from the voice telling me depression is my fault.
Before I could understand this, I had to open myself to the reality of these relationships. These relationships are our greatest vulnerability and our greatest strength. We cannot change this. The ongoing loss of these relationships is incredibly painful. If we want the pain to stop one day, we must fight back. That will be incredibly painful, too.
***
Credit: Pixabay
Life speaks, but rarely in English. One human language is much too small to convey the ever unfolding meanings at play in the world. Wind and water, soil and stone, fin, fur, and feather are only a few of Life’s dialects.
Tectonic plates tell mountains where to form. Blood in the water tells a shark food may be near. Foreign proteins on the surface of dangerous cells, tell your white blood cells to attack. A single chirp, formed in a prairie dog’s throat, lasting a mere tenth of a second, tells an entire colony the species and physical characteristics of an approacher.
You may not hear Life utter the words, “Stop the destruction.” But, Life’s languages are as diverse as the variety of physical experiences. The pain of depression is a physical experience, and it follows that Life speaks through depression. That pain will haunt me for the rest of my life. Life continues to speak. It says, “Fight back.”
Credit: Pixabay
The essay’s layout looks great, SDFP! Thank you for all the extra work you put into the images and setting the fonts. Y’all are the best.
Our new team editing got noticed! (Thanks)
Je vous comprends car je suis un amoureux de la création et qui dit création dit Créateur. Pour vous réconforter il est indiqué dans la Bible que”Dieu saccagera ceux qui saccagent la terre”(Révélation je crois), par le rétablissement des conditions paradisiaques qui existaient au début de la création.Inutile d’espérer quoi que ce soit en l’homme impuissant face aux forces du mal. je vous invite pour plus d’informations à consulter le site JW.org sur la seule espérance qui s’offre à l’humanité. Cordialement
Nice article but did ecological ignorance really bring on your depression?
As well, I have been diagnosed with major depression and am a retired attorney.
I find that having lived in 3rd world countries for over 10 years, that the USA treats depression as a deserved malady and often as a civil or criminal malfeasance as do other countries.
Sorry to hear about suicide attempts, I’ve never entered that zone. But at 66, I have a 12 year old child and 41 year old green card wife I need to guide as best I can.
I am not sure what my point is, maybe I don’t have one. But taking care of my family under a republican/trump regime is hard enough without tackling the environment although I very much respect your writing.
Thanks,
Brian
SoCal
Thanks for your note, Brian. And, I’m sorry to hear about your diagnosis. I know how horrible depression can be.
I’m not sure what you mean by “did ecological ignorance really bring on your depression?” If you mean, did my failure, itself, to see depression as ecological produce depression? No, not directly On a cultural scale, ecological violence produced, in part, by ecological ignorance certainly brings on my depression. When I witness a clear-cut, for example, the trauma produces stress which produces depression. In a personal sense, ecological ignorance (especially in my time as a public defender) caused me to forget that spending time with healthy parts of the natural world counteracts depression. The anti-depressant qualities of sunshine, for example, are well-researched and documented. On a deeper personal level though, ecological ignorance encouraged me to forget that there are those in the natural world to build relationships with, and those relationships can be equally anti-depressant…In another way
No, I wasn’t clear, I don’t believe you failed at all. Sometimes there are forces that want to impede protest by threatening self and family.
Solidarity, brother. I’ve spent years studying psychology and now believe some of the most potent healing comes in the form of activism. Good luck on your journey.
You really have to watch out in certain jurisdictions, they may go after you AND family.
In Vista, CA the ACLU was available to protect demonstrator rights. Don’t count on that help as an individual.
I hope it’s ok to speak up here. I am an environmental activist who has been working to protect the environment in numerous ways since I was a teenager, and I have faced similar challenges.
One of the biggest solutions I have found is studying natural medicine, i.e. herbalism. This subject hasn’t been thoroughly taught or understood by the current consensus. Here on the West Coast there are a number of schools who teach about herbs, as we have a number of remedies that grow here in North America! Most people just don’t know how to properly prepare, or administer herbs, so people don’t think they are effective. However, I bet if you took a holistically prepared herb, like Lemon Balm, Chamomile, or Lavender, (and better yet, if you find a teacher that trained in holistic herbalism) you would find that there is an answer to our collective “eco-depression” and it can be found in the Earth.
I recommend checking out The School of Traditional Western Herbalism, The School of Forest Medicine, and The School of Evolutionary Herbalism. All based out of Oregon. These schools may be on the alternative side of things. But it’s never too late for humans to start learning that we live on a creative and intelligent planet that has much more medicine to offer us than we even know.
Without bashing the current pharmaceutical industries too much, I encourage you to shift your attention to the natural solution. ;)
Dear Aaron, one point I’m trying hard to make (and maybe not very well) is that its more important, as depressives, that we stop climate change and other processes destroying the planet than we find solutions, natural or otherwise to our depression. Natural solutions are urgently threatened by climate change, for example. So, it won’t do much good if Lemon Balm, Chamomile, and Lavender help our collective eco-depression, if the ecological conditions which Lemon Balm, Chamomile, and Lavender require to survive are destroyed. By all means, use natural solutions if they help you, but use them to alleviate your personal depression so you can use your life to protect those natural solutions that give you your life. I guess what I mean is, I don’t want the end goal to be utilization of natural solutions as resources. I want the end goal to be protection of those non-human others like Lemon Balm, Chamomile, and Lavender because they have lives as valuable to them as yours is to you and our fates are bound together.
beautiful!
Are you ready to go up against Issa and his lawyers?
I’m a bit surprised you believe “right vs might” will prevail.
Look around!
Your article helped me understand my own ups and downs of my depression and I find it well articulated! I can absolutely understand what you are saying and I’ve come to a similar conclusion after years of trying to heal my depression. But whatever I did, moving into the sunshine, eating lots of fruits, giving up my former job, going to therapy, it didn’t cure me. Instead I found out, just like you, that the stress I felt all the time could not be stopped because the demise of our planet affected me so heavy. And I wonder why nobody cares about that fact. What does all the destrucion of nature and killing of other species on a large scale do to us? Anyway, I admire that you are still an activist and helping to mend :)
I’m pondering the unity of the personal internal and the cosmological external and every thing, every one, in between. Thank you so much for this. And to the commenters.
Thank you my friend. I am grateful that the Ggods led me to your article. I wrote for a couple of years on my depression. It was in a “different” context but the result ended me up in a very similar place. Suffering. If you are interested it is at shoe1000.WordPress.com
Again thanks
Jim