Thank so much for posting your husband story, WGU. Very telling. Hope he is taking his meds.
It makes me wonder if some of us aren't in some way pre-disposed to depression just because of how our brains are wired in the first place.
I would say this is a very good possibility. It does not mean a person who born with such a brain wire would had to always have a depression but that the person would be more susceptible to it, Especially under adverse circumstances.
Again, down to poor coping skills. But it makes you wonder when his sister grew up in the same circumstances and doesn't have any issues like this.
The poor cooping skills are a personal thing. Your husband sister is different from him. Growing under the same circumstance will not affect two people the same way. Also, a person could have had good cooping skills and, at a point, because of some trauma/problem/circumstance stop having them.
I wonder how much of this is learned (or rather not having been learned), and how much is chemical?
Hard to say, I think. Unless we all had detailed brain scans from our spouses since they were born and until know there is no way of knowing how much is learned (not learned) and how much of the not learned is so because of chemical issues of the brain. Again, all may had been great for years and, at a point, something altered the brain chemicals.
His sister has told me he has always been a "depressing person". How did I not see this when we were falling in love?
Maybe because most of the time “depressing person” does not translates into the image we normaly have of a depressed person. Depression has many forms, many degrees. Also, when we are falling in love with someone, unless the depression is very showing, we will not notice it. We’re focussed on other things.
Geez, sort of "depressing" to think about. Is there any hope?
Yes, big hope. The more we know about the brain/depression, the bigger the hope. It may never be possible to cure certain types of depression but it is certainly possible to have it treated, stabelised, mitigated and learn to live with it. In my opinion, MLC is more like drug addiction. The brain of the MLCer, once the crisis is gone, and, if needed, with the help of medicines, will go back to normal. Even if the person was depressed it will be possible to look after the depression.
Also, we are having a ton of helful info in this board that will allow us to deal better with our spouses depression, or our own. So, again, yes, there is hope.
Sometimes good things fall apart so better things can fall together. (Marilyn Monroe)