National Post

A hidden despair

DOES A VIRAL VIDEO REVEALS THE SIGNS OF ‘HIGH-FUNCTIONIN­G’ DEPRESSION?

- Teddy Amenabar If you or someone you know is in immediate crisis or has suicide-related concerns call or text 9-8-8. The Washington Post

Mental health counsellor Jeffrey Meltzer sees clients nearly every day who suffer from “high-functionin­g” depression, so he posted a video about it on Tiktok. It now has more than eight million views and more than 5,000 comments

Meltzer, who meets with clients in-person and virtually in Bradenton, Fla., said it’s not always obvious if someone has depression. “There’s a myth” that somebody with depression can barely get out of bed in the morning, he said. “They can function, they can go to work, they can do all these things. But deep inside, they’re feeling really down, they’re feeling quite empty or lonely.”

The response to Meltzer’s video is “a huge signal about unmet mental health need,” said Jon Rottenberg, a psychology professor at the University of South Florida who has studied the course and prognosis of depression.

The term high-functionin­g depression “is really resonating with the fact that depression can be quite hidden,” Rottenberg said. “People can harbour it for a long time before they get help.”

High-functionin­g depression is not a diagnosis or a recognized clinical disorder, and it doesn’t appear in the Diagnostic and Statistica­l Manual of Mental Disorders, the authoritat­ive guide to mental health disorders.

Where the term started isn’t clear, but “high-functionin­g depression” is a popular topic on Tiktok and Youtube that attracts millions of viewers. It gained traction on social media in 2022 after Cheslie Kryst, a former Miss USA, died by suicide. In statements to the media, Kryst’s mother said her daughter was dealing with high-functionin­g depression, “which she hid from everyone.”

Some health profession­als say the term could be misleading, but others say it has helped people realize that depression isn’t always obvious.

“There is no one-size-fitsall depression,” said Vaile Wright, a psychologi­st and senior director of health-care innovation for the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n. “In children and adolescent­s, it looks much more like irritabili­ty. Same with men; it looks a lot more like anger and substance abuse.”

In the viral Tiktok video, Meltzer offers seven signs that he said may signal high-functionin­g depression. Other mental health experts say Meltzer’s video does identify many of the feelings that could be symptoms for depression.

“The doctors that I work with and others, even myself sometimes, can feel those things,” said Srijan Sen, a professor and the executive director of the University of Michigan’s Eisenberg Family Depression Center.

The seven signs of high-functionin­g depression in Meltzer’s video include the following:

❚ Isolating from friends and family

❚ No longer finding joy in the activities you loved

❚ Persistent­ly criticizin­g yourself

❚ Frustratio­n with small irritation­s or setbacks

❚ Turning to mindless habits for hours on end

❚ Always feeling low on energy

❚ Managing day-to-day tasks but feeling empty inside

Depression is “a collection of symptoms” with some degree of sadness or melancholy, said Wright. Sleeping too much or too little, an inability to concentrat­e, eating too much or too little, and “a sense of hopelessne­ss” can all signal depression.

Pankhuri Aggarwal, the Madigan Family Clinical Research Fellow at the Family Institute at Northweste­rn University, said she doesn’t want people to self-diagnose based on a list of symptoms they find online. “It’s really important for them to come and talk to a mental health profession­al,” she said.

She noted that there are two criteria that are “considered the crux of depression.” Either you’re feeling low or you’re not finding joy from activities you once considered fun.

“You keep doing the same activity. It just doesn’t bring you the same level of excitement, energy, that it used to,” Aggarwal said.

Aggarwal said the term high-functionin­g depression refers to people who feel depressed but who aren’t displaying signs to friends or family — they may suppress their depression because “they don’t want to place this burden on other people.

“Maybe it’s not safe for you to express depression in the setting, or the community or the group that you’re in,” she said. “You can’t necessaril­y go walk up to your boss and say you’re depressed.”

Isabella, a 25-year-old graduate student who was diagnosed with depression a decade ago, said she first heard of high-functionin­g depression in high school while watching videos on Youtube. Now, she uses the term to explain her diagnosis to friends and therapists. She asked that her full name not be used to protect her medical privacy.

“The whole aspect of being high-functionin­g, it gave me a lot of hope,” Isabella said. “I can be this normal person who goes through their life, and has their successes, and the depression is, kind of, the afterthoug­ht.”

Sen said he recommends people seek help from a clinician when stress, depression and anxiety start to affect daily life. Wright said, “for most people,” that’s going to start with their primary care physician.

Social media videos can be useful to help people recognize their symptoms and realize that depression “isn’t just one thing,” Rottenberg said. Self-diagnosis through watching videos on Tiktok could be “an important first step” to seeking profession­al help, he said.

“Two different people can have depression, and they can look very different,” Rottenberg said. “From the person who’s flat on their back to the person who can report to work and put out a first-rate product, they’re both depressed. They’re both struggling.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Those with so-called “high-functionin­g depression” can accomplish daily tasks, such as going to work. But inside, they feel empty.
GETTY IMAGES Those with so-called “high-functionin­g depression” can accomplish daily tasks, such as going to work. But inside, they feel empty.

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