How I see a depressed life

This is a whole new philosophy I have written on a depressed life. It is about living with depression:
http://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=188698

Have you read what others who are depressed have to say? I agree with you that you can’t “think your way out” of depression. However, there are actions you can take, and actions are a result of thoughts. Your theme is something like my friends who say they can’t do yoga because they aren’t flexible. True, they can’t do the poses with as much ease as a full time yogi, but anyone can begin doing yoga and grow into flexibility.
The step is getting out of your own head and finding out what has worked for others.

This is a whole new philosophy I have written on a depressed life. It is about living with depression: http://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=188698
Haven’t we been through this with you several times. Mozart? Have you not yet sought professional help? There is nothing people on an Internet blog can do for you. As far as I know there are no psychiatric or psychological experts here. If you had fallen and broken your leg would you ask for help from a non-professional Internet blog? We can’t help you beyond suggesting you seek professional help and intensive therapy. If anyone needs it, it’s you.
This is a whole new philosophy I have written on a depressed life. It is about living with depression: http://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=188698
Haven’t we been through this with you several times. Mozart? Have you not yet sought professional help? There is nothing people on an Internet blog can do for you. As far as I know there are no psychiatric or psychological experts here. If you had fallen and broken your leg would you ask for help from a non-professional Internet blog? We can’t help you beyond suggesting you seek professional help and intensive therapy. If anyone needs it, it’s you. Mozart Link's posting is just as old as it has ever been: 29 September 2015. Just because a spammer brought this thread up, nothing has happened here since Lausten's reaction.

Yes, we have carelessly used the earth’s natural resources, without regard for the eventual consequences.
Comes a point where our technology changes the Earth’s natural ability to correct itself and has created a natural global instability, which will take us back a few thousand years in the evolution of a a self correcting system.
As Carlin says, the earth has undergone much worse global corrections than us, but it has survived them all.
But there is a good change that we will disappear, a failed mutation, a surface nuisance, which the earth will shrug off.
Pack your bags folks, the earth will survive us, but we may not.