The Great God of Depression

William Styron Essay –

August 3, 2018 – Nearly 30 years ago, the author William Styron outed himself in these pages as mentally ill. “My days were pervaded by a gray drizzle of unrelenting horror,” he wrote in a New York Times Op-Ed article, describing the deep depression that had landed him in the psych ward. He compared the agony of mental illness to that of a heart attack. Pain is pain, whether it’s in the mind or the body. So why, he asked, were depressed people treated as pariahs? A confession of mental illness might not seem like a big deal now, but it was back then. In the 1980s, “if you were depressed, it was a terrible dark secret that you hid from the world,” according to Andrew Solomon, a historian of mental illness and author of “The Noonday Demon.” “People with depression were seen as pathetic and even dangerous. You didn’t let them near your kids.

Full Story @ NYTimes.com

Leonard Buschel

Share
Published by
Leonard Buschel

Recent Posts

Wells Fargo Employee Found Dead In Cubicle Four Days After Clocking In

VIDEO – WELLS FORGO – Aug. 29, 2024 - A 60-year-old Arizona Wells Fargo employee…

6 days ago

Heart of the Matter – Podcast

AUDIO – LADIES OF THE DAY – Sept. 2024 - Braunwyn Windham-Burke, who starred in…

6 days ago

Tastiest Non-Alcoholic Drinks According to Sober Woman

BOTTOMS UP – Aug. 30, 2024 - I stopped drinking alcohol nearly a year ago.…

6 days ago

Doctors Use Problematic Race-Based Algorithms Every Day

EVEN IN THE NORTH – Sept. 3, 2024 - As she went down the list,…

6 days ago

Exhibit Reveals Sketches of Loved Ones Lost To Opioid Deaths

JUST TOO TOO SAD – Aug. 30, 2024 - “Into Light” is a collection of…

6 days ago

Addiction Deserves Treatment at Any Age

AUDIO – OLDER NOT WISER? –                  …

6 days ago