Mermaid, if the poll is set for two weeks, I'll make a note and will not archive the thread before
it, unless it reaches 150 posts. If it reaches 150 posts, start a new one, use the same title but
put a 2 or a II ahead of it, and repeat/do a new poll. That way you will not lose the poll, and
the thread will not pass 150 posts. If a second thread with poll is started, let me know for how
long have you set the poll. Thank you.
I voted for stress/burnout. It was present before the depression. The stress and anxiety were
aggravated with the death of Mr J's paternal grandmother early Summer 2005, growing responsibilities at work, the expansion of our joint project and our plan to readjust our life in
order to have children. I think together it all become too much, his stress levels keep rising,
then, at some point, the depression hit.
By March, or April, 2006 Mr J said he was depressed. He said the same a couple of months later, when he left, a couple of months after he left and in May 2007, after I had returned home. He never mentioned it again.
The original OW was not something that I consider a relevant factor. Without the tress/burnout
and the depression she would had never existed. Of course she made things much worst, but she is just a symptom.
With my cousin, it was also stress first, then depression followed. My cousin was a wallower, he never had OW. Just fantasized about it at times.
I consider it a neurological issue because both stress and depression are neurological issues,
they impact the brain (and body, since the brain controls many functions in the body). Stress and depression are of the real of neuroscience/neurological. Depression, of course, is also of the realm of psychiatry. But, for me, psychiatry aims for the symptoms, not the causes/roots,
internal mechanisms. Nothing wrong in aiming for the symptoms, it is better that not to aim at anything, but my view is that psychiatry is often a little out of step with the times. In essence, they need to integrated neuroscience/neurobiology/biology more. Some psychiatrists or psychiatric hospitals already work that way, but still isn't the norm. I think,, in time, it will become more common.
There were some childhood issues with Mr J, but nothing that bad/serious. There were not childhood issues in my cousin's case. Adolescence, yes, from around 15 or 16. Like myself, by cousin grew up in a loving family.
Mr J is like Trustandlove's husband, he continues to look for external solutions to internal problems. For all I know, Mr J also won't see himself. Mr J knows that if stops the crazy MLC life
he will be thinking about it all. He himself had said so on occasions, therefore, at times, he has
some awareness that the issues are internal and that he has to face them. He just keeps running and running.
Sometimes good things fall apart so better things can fall together. (Marilyn Monroe)