Clinical Depression Symptoms
Clinical Depression Symptoms
The symptoms of clinical depression range from high to low, from suicide attempts to persistent feelings of depression. Everyone feels sad sometimes, but there is a difference between feeling sad sometimes for reasons that make a person sad and being depressed consistently for no real reasons.
The biggest and most obvious symptom of clinical depression is becoming overwhelmed with depression and staying sad and depressed for long periods of time (weeks, months, years at a time.) Depression can keep a person from growing as a person and moving forward in life. Depression seems to keep a person stuck in the same place.

Symptoms of clinical depression are: decreased energy, persistent sadness, anxiety, empty thoughts, empty feelings, sleeping all day, not wanting to wake up or get out of bed, restlessness, fatigue, headaches, migraines, or tension headaches, feeling guilty, feeling worthless, feeling hopeless, trouble with concentration, difficulty making decisions, irritability, extreme depression, no interest in hobbies, loss of interest in activities, loss of interest in friends, decreased libido and loss of interest in sex, overeating, hoarding, loss of appetite, abdominal pains, cramps, negative thoughts, pessimism, insomnia, feelings of helplessness, and suicide. Those are only some of the possible symptoms of clinical depression. One of the biggest worries with clinical depression is the symptom of suicide.

It is very common to become suicidal when someone is very depressed. That is why it is important to ident  clinical depression within yourself or a loved one and treat the symptoms in healthy and positive ways. Use caution when using antidepressants as they are addictive and are highly prone to making suicidal thoughts worse. When someone is depressed, try to do something that makes them happy. Sometimes, clinical depression’s symptoms can take over a persons mind, their thoughts, their actions and their feelings.

Talking to a counselor can be very beneficial for someone experiencing the sometimes painful emotional symptoms of clinical depression. If someone is demonstrating the following symptoms of clinical depression, they should be watched very closely or taken to a cessation center, hospital or doctor: always thinking or taking about dying, talking about feeling hopeless, talking about suicide, talking about how they don’t want to be here anymore, feeling worthless and useless, abrupt switch from being very sad and depressed to being or appearing happy, worsening clinical depression, taking life threatening risks, losing complete interest in everything including hygiene, and suddenly changing a will or anything else that may demonstrate a person’s wish to die.

These are the reasons why clinical depression and the symptoms that come along with it, need to be taken very seriously and dealt with in a delicate way. Suicide is permanent and it can be avoided, no matter what it takes, it can be avoided. If the person needs to spend a few months at a cessation facility, then that is where they should go to focus on how precious every breathe of life is. When someone is depressed they may not see the light, they may only see the dark. Through recognizing symptoms of clinical depression; it is possible to bring a person out of clinical depression and far away from the thoughts of suicide and sadness.
Read more about ...
Depression Side Effects
Help For Depression
Read more about Clinical Depression Symptoms
Go to next article on Depression Side Effects
Go to top of article onclinical depression symptoms.
Clinical Depression Symptoms