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Anxiety vs Depression-Which One Sounds Like You?

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When it comes to anxiety vs depression, there are a lot of similarities.

Both anxiety and depression can:


  • involve negative thinking and distorted thinking
  • leave you feeling hopeless and out-of-control
  • uninterested in your usual hobbies and activities
  • can cause sleep problems and burnout
  • can leave you feeling unable to cope
  • Impact your self worth
  • Impact your functioning in life
  • May lead to addiction or other mental health issues


So how can you tell the difference when there is so much crossover?

What is anxiety? 


Anxiety is not just stress, anxiety involves an ongoing sense of unease or fear, and out-of-control stressful thoughts. These symptoms will leave you feeling powerless, and make daily life more difficult. 
Thoughts produced by anxiety are negative, and often dramatic, black-and-white thinking, or tinged with doom and gloom.
Anxious thoughts are also often future-based. Even if they are about something that has already happened, the anxiety will be over what will now take place because of it, i.e., he or she will think bad things, I will lose my job, my life will be ruined, etc.
Anxiety triggers the fight and flight response, which releases a cocktail of chemicals into your blood, including cortisol. This means you might often feel wired and buzzy.
The stress that anxiety causes often has physical affects, which can include:
  • a racing heart and/or breathlessness
  • sleep problems
  • what you eat or lack of good nutritional intake
  • muscle tension including teeth grinding
  • stomach upset
  • feeling edgy and ‘wired’
  • [For a complete breakdown of anxiety and its symptoms, visit: www.camh.ca/anxiety]

Depression

Depression can have many symptoms and manifests differently in different people.
It’s not just being sad.
Some people become very emotional, whereas others feel numb. Some people might act out by things like binge drinking, or picking fights with those they love, while others might become very passive.

But the main things to look for with depression are feeling increasingly unable to feel joy or contentment , feeling constantly bad about yourself, and losing interest in the things that once mattered to you.

Your thoughts will be negative, distorted, and include doom and gloom. They might even be self-destructive.
Your thoughts will often be past-based. Depression thrives on dwelling on the things we cannot change, in ways that make us feel hopeless, guilty, and worthless.
Energy wise, some may find they manage to continue on despite feeling empty inside, referred to as ‘walking depression’.
But many find depression leaves them feeling drained. As for thinking, it can feel like your brain is full of cotton wool.
Depression also has physical symptoms, which tend to be:
  • fatigue
  • feeling weak in your body
  • sleep problems or a change in sleep patterns
  • possible ongoing flues and colds
  • unexplained medical symptoms
  • a change in appetite.
[For a complete breakdown of depression and its symptoms, visit: www.camh.ca/depression]

anxiety vs depression  – the differences

So let’s summarize the differences.
Depression tends to drain your energy vs. anxiety can put you on a cycle of buzzy highs and then lows.
Depression makes it hard to think vs. anxiety can leave you overthinking about the wrong things.
Depression can see you having self destructive thoughts vs anxiety leaves you having illogical thoughts.
Depression tends to be more past-based vs. anxiety tends to be more future-focused.
Depression is more prone to leave you feeling sad and guilty vs. anxiety is more prone to leave you feeling fearful, paranoid, and/or panicky.
Often it’s the physical symptoms that mark the clearest difference when it comes to depression vs anxiety – a racing heart and feeling edgy tend to be anxiety, whereas feeling really tired and hopeless all the time tends to be depression.
And yet, if you are worried about the future which you are, sure you will feel overwhelmed and then feel hopeless, are you depressed, or anxious?
The answer is that you might be both.

Can you be both anxious and depressed at the same time?

It’s entirely possible to have symptoms of anxiety and depression at the same time, or what is called ‘co-morbidity or co-occurring’ in psychology.

Here’s the thing – many people seem to have experienced anxiety disorder before developing depression, and continue to have anxious thinking while they are depressed. So while there is no study that ‘proves’ anxiety causes depression, it is seen as a leading symptom.
This is why it’s important to take your anxiety seriously. Anxiety can be easier to treat than depression, not least because the low interest in doing anything depression brings can also make seeking help feel harder. Plus you do not value yourself and your wellness, or minimize its impact or say "I don't need help, I'm doomed, what's the point". Investing in your wellness is the key to your overall health and quality of life. Psychotherapy has helped many people and can help. Give yourself a chance to heal, you deserve it!

CAN I BE TREATED FOR BOTH ANXIETY AND DEPRESSION?

The good news about anxiety and depression is that they both respond well to talk therapies.
And yes, many forms of talk therapy deal with both. Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), for example, is evidence-based to help with both and is often recommended and backed up by research for its effectiveness in treating anxiety and depression.

Invest in your wellness and reach out for help. You Deserve to Be Happy. Re-claim your life!

Still have a question about anxiety vs depression? You can ask it in the form below and I will get back to you. Your information will remain confidential.



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