Woman holding white paper sheet labeled word Depression in hand.

Sharing – Anhedonia: New study provides insight into an overlooked but very common symptom of depression

I’m glad someone is studying this. It has always been the defining symptom for me to distinguish between feeling sad or angry about events that should make anyone feel that way, and true depression:

Anhedonia is defined as the reduced interest or pleasure in all – or almost all – activities a person previously enjoyed. If a person has anhedonia for an extended period of time (at least two weeks consistently), they can be diagnosed with depression – even if they may not feel sad or low.

I know when I’m fighting off depression when nothing sounds fun. You could offer me free tickets to see my favorite band and grab dinner in my favorite place with a group of my favorite people, and I won’t be interested. It’s not that I don’t realize that I should enjoy that, but I know I somehow won’t.

That’s depression. That empty feeling that nothing matters and the inability to feel anything because it doesn’t matter. But, it’s hard to express that. It’s difficult to come up with a header image that displays that when we talk about depression. I’ve said before, our default image to use when talking about depression is the young, white woman lying or sitting looking sad.

That’s not what depression looks like for millions of people. It’s not just that we don’t physically look like the person in the image, we also don’t necessarily look sad and weepy. We just look disinterested, because it doesn’t matter.

https://www.psypost.org/2023/08/anhedonia-new-study-provides-insight-into-an-overlooked-but-very-common-symptom-of-depression-167911

Similar Posts

  • This Week’s Links (weekly)

    Convicted Sex Offender Advice to Keep Children Safe tags: CA 4 Ways To Reach Out When Depressed | World of Psychology tags: CA What Parents Need to Know About Web Filtering and Parental Controls tags: CA Sexual Abuse Survivors Need Disclosure, Exposure, and To Get Closure tags: CA Identifying Potential Victims tags: CA Love Is…

  • This Week’s Links (weekly)

    Adrian Peterson’s 2-year-old son dies after assault: report This is just so shocking, and sad. Proof that child abuse can happen anywhere, and even being a pro athlete doesn’t protect your kids from abusers. tags: Sports CA Royal Commission into child sex abuse prompts partners to speak out tags: CA NFL won’t let Brandon Marshall…

  • |

    Links I’m Sharing (weekly)

    A support group in your phone. Healing for mental illness comes one text at a time Colleges Expand Their Reach to Address Mental Health Issue Avon photographer shares exhibit about mental illness America has a Mental Health Problem and Schools can Help Fix it Read Michael Gerson’s sermon sharing his struggle with depression Teaching Mental…

  • This Week’s Links (weekly)

    10 Signs of Child Abuse tags: CA ChildAbuse 9 Ways to Help a Friend or Family Member With Depression tags: CA Depression How to Help Your Partner Cope with Male Sexual Abuse tags: CA ChildAbuse Announcing The #NoMoreShame Project tags: CA ChildAbuse 10 Ways to Support Someone with Mental Health Challenges tags: CA Depression Posted…

  • Link – How Mental Illnesses Affects Everyone Differently

    I have often said that just because something worked for one person in overcoming a mental health issue, or healing from abuse, doesn’t mean it will work for you. I love reading about what has helped others because it shows that there is hope,  not because I expect things they did to always work for…

  • Link – Does Non-Verbal Mental Health Stigma Exist?

    I’ve seen and experienced the things Laura talks about in the first paragraph, but don’t really recall anyone giving me odd looks. “I see unspoken mental health stigma primarily as people’s behaviors toward those with mental illness. While many wouldn’t argue that avoidance, discrimination, and bullying can all factor into stigmatizing behavior, there is one type of…

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)