For panic attacks it always helps me to go into a meditative-type of state wherein I "go" somewhere else where I have been happyat some point in my life. This in conjunction with breathing techniques learned in meditation classes have worked wonders. I would highly recommend seeing if there is a meditation or Yoga class locally to see if this will help you. What have you got to lose?As for depression, I definitely think there is a chemical or hormonal imbalance which leads to some, and not all, depression. Studies have shown depression can run infamilies. Women have been shown to have monthly fluctuations related to hormone changes in relationship to their menstrual cycles.Women also can have depressionat Menopause when their hormones significantly change. I, myself, suffered unbearable depression when I contracted kidney disease (Dah, who wouldn't), and noticed significantchange because my body started functioning in a lowered state. It's hard to describe the difference in my "before" and "after" functioningdue to ESRD except to say my nephrologist explained it was because my body is now out of balance. No matter how hard we try to keep our bodies in balance with medicine or vitamins, the fact remains that with Renal Disease we are NEVER normal. It makes complete sense to me that the imbalances caused from Renal Disease can contributeto depression or panic attacks. After all, the whole human body functions from chemical reactions firing away within.So why wouldn't it be possible that some of thesechemical reactions are mis-firing?
I enjoy being depressed, as paradoxical as that may sound. If I see something in the world that affects my intellect in such a way as to arouse my anger, disapproval, disappointment, or regret, then I find it perfectly healthy and pleasurable to be able to feel the appropriate and corresponding emotion to the full, which is depression. What I hate is having to pretend to feel something I really don't, either because I am hiding the truth from myself or from others. The pleasure of self-realization in feeling depressed when you encounter intellectually depressing things is enormous, and it is the pleasure of enjoying the harmony between the negative stimulus in the outside world, the assessment of it in the mind, and the mood in the emotions.To take a pill to destroy that harmony is to make yourself insane by destroying the unity of emotion, perception, and thought. The term 'schizophrenia' was coined by Dr. Manfred Bleuler in 1911 to describe a condition in which patients' moods did not match their thoughts, so their drives ('phrenia' in Ancient Greek) were split and opposed to each other ('schizo' in Ancient Greek). In terms of this etymology, giving anti-depression pills to people who are experiencing realities in their lives which would make any normal person feel depressed amounts to turning them into schizophrenics!
I'm just trying to destroy the unity of vomit that flies out of my mouth before a procedure.