Learn to fight depression from your Happy Place

  • by Asha Weir
  • 12 May, 2020
Hi, welcome to the next blog in this series on Depression. In this one I will discuss another very effective method you can use to help alleviate the symptoms of mild and moderate depression.
Each of these methods promotes healing in some way and will help keep you more uplifted and optimistic. These emotional states are very important in that they can over-ride the feelings of sadness and pessimism that are associated with depression.

This method involves your happy place ... not physically, or geographically, but mentally. So you’re not actually going to your happy place but you are visualising it in your mind. This usually involves the use of photographs, personal ones if possible, to remind you of actual places you have physically been to. If you don't have a photograph, but you have a strong memory of a place which fills you with happiness, that might be enough -- but it has to be a very vivid memory. However, I strongly encourage you to have an actual picture.

These have to be happy places; nothing questionable or controversial must have happened in that place, or it will not work. For example, if your wedding day was stressful, then that cannot be your happy place, because even though it was a happy event, you will still associate stress with it, and if you are feeling particularly low, that stress may be the only thing you remember.

I’m sure many of you will have multiple places you have been to which evoke happy memories, but try not to use all of them, because flitting mentally from one to another may not have the desired effect of cheering you up. The effect we are looking for is the tranquility you achieve by mentally exploring the different things in your happy place, for instance on a beach holiday it would be the sun and sea, water sports, seafood, etc.

The things we don’t do on a regular basis, like going to an amazing place on an amazing holiday, seeing unusual destinations and new experiences, will have a particular impact on us, and I’m looking for the places which had a positive impact.
It does not necessarily have to be a holiday you’ve been to. I know that not everyone can go on holidays or afford them, but there must be one place in your life, from your childhood, or your teenage years, for instance, which evokes happy memories. Make that your happy place. If you don’t have a picture, then your vivid memory of that place will do.

Choose a quiet place to sit or relax in, and pay attention to the picture. If it is a mental picture close your eyes and mentally explore the facets of that picture. Let the memories slowly glide over you, try to remember the smells and sounds of the place, and feel the joy or happiness associated with that image. This is why it really is better to have an actual picture or photograph, because when you look at it you are immediately associating happiness with a visual aid. Try placing such pictures around your room or house, and if you’re feeling low, go look at those pictures. They should bring a smile to your face.

If you find that one specific picture has a particularly positive effect on you, then focus on that one. If it loses its allure after a while, then find another mental picture. Remember that we are supposed to feel happy in our happy places, not sad. So use only places which really do uplift your spirits!

Stay safe, and bye for now,
Asha

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