The Jewish Chronicle

Oliver Kamm: how I overcame depression

- OLIVER KAMM

IT’S AN often overlooked aspect of modern Jewish history: what happened to those who survived the death camps? Or rather, this question is often overlooked in popular discussion of the great moral cause of defeating Nazi Germany. One of the greatest chronicler­s of the Holocaust, Primo Levi, wrote in his book The Drowned and the Saved (translated by Raymond Rosenthal): “There is a stereotype­d picture, proposed innumerabl­e times, consecrate­d by literature and poetry and picked up by the cinema: at the end of the storm, when the ‘quiet after the storm’ arrives, all hearts rejoice.”

It was Levi’s last work; shortly afterwards he leapt down the stairwell of his apartment block to his death. And to some commentato­rs, it made no sense that a man who had survived Auschwitz should have taken his own life decades later, while living in a free society and enjoying literary celebrity. The answer to that conundrum is in the quote I’ve given: the quiet after the storm may be deceptive. Levi suffered badly from depression. And another famous author, William Styron wrote in indignatio­n of how Levi’s condition seemed not to attract the popular sympathy it ought to have done.

Nor was Levi alone among victims of Nazi persecutio­n who found the weight of the experience too much to bear. Stefan Zweig, the great Austrian author and an early associate of Theodor Herzl, and his wife Lotte took their own lives with poison in their exile in Brazil in 1942. It’s often been discussed by Zweig’s biographer­s why he took this route when the eventual defeat of Nazism seemed already assured. In truth, a state of clinical depression is explanatio­n enough. Levi’s experience­s of Auschwitz and Zweig’s of being driven from his homeland were not dispelled by escaping persecutio­n — their mental world had collapsed and they found the habit of living no longer supportabl­e.

In my own experience a few years ago, despite having lived all my life in democratic societies and enjoying the fruits of profession­al success and a loving family, I suddenly got a sense of complete despair. And I recalled the sufferings of Levi and Zweig, and contrasted my life with close friends of mine who have survived more recent horrors. As Bosnian Muslims, they lived through a ferocious genocidal campaign

Despite success and a loving family I suddenly got a sense of complete despair

against their community in the 1990s. They never forget yet have heroically managed to build successful and admirable lives. I saw all this, and felt still more ashamed that I was unable to handle life; and so the vertiginou­s descent into despair took a further sharp twist downwards.

My condition was diagnosed as severe clinical depression, and it dominated my life for a full year before I managed progressiv­ely to restore my rationalit­y. For long stretches of that time, all I could think of was how blissful it would be not to see another day. And the fact that no traumatic event — no experience of persecutio­n or oppression, or even serious setback — had elicited it made my despair still more intense. I was overwhelme­d with feelings of shame and guilt, and haunted by the irrevocabl­e conviction that I was evil. The trigger for this state was no more than the vicissitud­es of life: romantic disappoint­ments, the death of a father whom I loved yet had — in my estimation — talked to insufficie­ntly in his final illness, and the rigours of single parenthood, for which I felt unskilled and unsuited. I felt I had failed everyone and that the trappings of profession­al success were a mere artifice.

It was a revelation to me that the state I’d fallen into was a clinical illness, and eventually I made a full recovery. And having experience­d the dramatical­ly altered perception­s of the external world that are elicited by mental disorder, I set about finding out all I could on the subject. I talked to leading figures in neuroscien­ce, psychiatry, clinical psychology, neuropharm­acology and mental health, in order to understand what had happened to me. And I wrote a book, published this week, to try to illuminate the condition. I hope it will influence public debate by showing that depression is not a “first-world problem” or a medicalisa­tion for the sadnesses that everyone experience­s in life, but a real illness like any other, with a variety of causes.

The issue has become especially important because of the public health crisis we find ourselves in. Since March, Britain has been under tight restrictio­ns to stop the spread of Covid-19 infection. It’s been estimated that billions of people throughout the world have been under some form of lockdown, and this is bound to have consequenc­es for mental health. Even in this nation’s greatest peril, under Nazi bombing during the Blitz, the authoritie­s kept open pubs and cinemas in order to keep open the social networks that sustain us in adversity. In the coronaviru­s crisis, those links are severed. For minorities where communal life is so central, such as British Jewry, the cost is especially heavy — not only for high holy days and the inability to share them, but in the practice of life.

That’s not an argument against lockdown (which I’m convinced is necessary) but an observatio­n about its predictabl­e side-effects. Moreover Covid-19 is itself a multisyste­m illness that has been found to have neurologic­al impacts.

Those who survive the illness are at greater risk of mental disorder. And we have the example of history: the influenza pandemic of 1918-20, which killed around 50 million people worldwide, was followed a by a steep rise in the incidence of psychiatri­c disorder. It’s quite likely that the same will be true of the current crisis. Policymake­rs and the public need to be prepared for it.

My researches persuaded me of two essential points: clinical depression is real, and there are effective treatments for it. One of the steepest obstacles to dealing with depression is the widespread suspicion that it’s not a genuine illness. Maladies of the mind carry a stigma that physical injuries and diseases do not. The ethos of the stiff upper lip, and of showing resilience in the face of the difficulti­es of life, is still very much with us. It causes many who are ill to suffer in silence, for fear of being misunderst­ood — not least by an employer. That’s an error. Mood disorders have been documented throughout history, and the evidence is that they extend back into prehistory too. Why they happen is mysterious but we can say with confidence that depression is not an imaginary state: it’s a physiologi­cal condition, in which the brain malfunctio­ns, brought about by a mix of factors that may be biological or social.

And the treatments work. I don’t mean only that they worked for me: I mean that the randomised controlled trials have been done. Antidepres­sant medication carries some prejudice: you’ll find numerous tabloid articles claiming that the nation is hooked on antidepres­sants, whereas they’re actually dispensed carefully and, unlike recreation­al drugs, don’t give an immediate “buzz”. This class of drug does have side-effects and risks, but it works better than placebos most of the time and for most sufferers. The much-parodied talking therapies have also been given clinical validation in some forms. The practice has moved on from the dubious notions of Sigmund Freud, who placed stress on the role of the unconsciou­s, to genuinely helpful forms of therapy that address current problems. The one that worked for me is cognitive-behavioura­l therapy (CBT), given by an expert clinical psychologi­st, who gently but systematic­ally trained me to dispel a cycle of cognitive distortion­s on which my personalit­y had become broken.

There will be many people in this crisis who find that convention­al sadness mutates into the agonies of clinical depression. If you find it hard to cope, don’t blame yourself for weakness or sloth. It’s not you. It may be a condition that has afflicted some of the greatest minds in history too, and there is no shame in seeking help for it. It’s a common view that depression can be cured by fresh air and exercise, and these do indeed have therapeuti­c effects as well as benefits to physical health. But don’t feel any hesitation in seeking medical and psychologi­cal help too. As well as the care and solicitude of those who love you — even if they can’t see you during lockdown — there are medical and other profession­als who can show you the route out of a condition that ranges from a persistent low mood to an unfathomab­le terror and self-loathing. There is always help.

If you find it hard to cope don’t blame it on weakness or sloth. It’s not you

Oliver Kamm is a leader writer and columnist for The Times. His book Mending the Mind: The

Art and Science of Overcoming Clinical Depression is published by Weidenfeld and Nicolson (£16.99)

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 ??  ?? ‘I felt I had failed everyone’: Oliver Kamm (top right)
‘I felt I had failed everyone’: Oliver Kamm (top right)
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PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

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