Depression

What It Is, What Causes It, and How to Start Feeling Better

Natalie Noel, LMHC | Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists | Tampa, FL

Getting out of bed feels like climbing a mountain. Things you used to enjoy feel flat and pointless. You are exhausted even after sleeping. You go through the motions work, family, responsibilities but inside it feels hollow. You tell yourself you should feel better.

 

You cannot explain why you do not. Depression is not weakness. It is not a bad attitude. It is not something you can just push through with enough willpower. It is a real medical condition that affects how the brain functions and it responds well to the right treatment.

 

Depression affects more than 21 million American adults each year. It is one of the leading causes of disability worldwide. And most people who get the right help do get significantly better.

 

At Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists, we treat depression particularly when it occurs alongside anxiety, OCD, trauma, or other conditions in Tampa, Florida, and virtually across Florida and New York.

If You Are Having Thoughts of Suicide or Self-Harm

Please reach out for help right now.

Depression is treatable. You do not have to face this moment alone.

Quick Answer: What Is Depression?

Depression formally called Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) is a mood disorder characterized by persistent sadness, loss of interest in life, low energy, and a range of physical and cognitive symptoms that interfere with daily functioning. Depression is not the same as feeling sad. It is a clinical condition that changes how the brain regulates mood, motivation, sleep, and thinking. It is one of the most common and most treatable mental health conditions.

Depression vs. Sadness What Is the Difference?

Everyone feels sad sometimes. Grief, loss, disappointment, and hard seasons of life are a normal part of being human. Depression is different from ordinary sadness in several important ways:

Normal SadnessDepression
Connected to a specific cause or eventMay have no clear cause or persists beyond a cause
Improves with time or positive experiencesDoes not lift with good news or positive events
Does not affect functioning for longSignificantly impairs work, relationships, or daily life
Person still experiences moments of joyLoss of interest in most or all activities
Sadness fades as circumstances changeLasts most of the day, nearly every day, for two weeks or more
Does not typically affect sleep or appetiteAlmost always affects sleep, energy, and appetite

The defining feature of depression is not the intensity of sadness it is the persistence, the pervasiveness, and the loss of function. Many people with depression do not even describe feeling “sad” they describe feeling empty, numb, or like nothing matters anymore.

Signs and Symptoms of Depression

Depression affects how you think, how your body feels, and how you function. The DSM-5 requires five or more of the following symptoms to be present most of the day, nearly every day, for at least two weeks:

Emotional & Cognitive SymptomsPhysical & Behavioral Symptoms
Persistent sadness, emptiness, or hopelessnessFatigue and loss of energy nearly every day
Loss of interest or pleasure in activities you used to enjoyChanges in sleep insomnia or sleeping too much
Feelings of worthlessness or excessive guiltChanges in appetite or weight
Difficulty concentrating, remembering, or making decisionsMoving or speaking more slowly than usual
Thoughts of death or suicidePhysical pain headaches, stomach problems with no clear cause
Feeling like a burden to othersWithdrawing from friends, family, and activities

Depression in Children and Teenagers

Depression in young people does not always look like adult depression. Children and teens may show depression through:

Depression in teenagers is often missed because it does not look like adult depression. A teen who seems angry, irritable, or withdrawn rather than sad may be dealing with significant depression. The emotional experience is the same the external presentation is different.

Types of Depression

Major Depressive Disorder (MDD)

MDD is the most common form of depression. It involves episodes of depression lasting at least two weeks often much longer without treatment. Some people have a single episode in their lifetime. Others have recurrent episodes that come and go over years.

Persistent Depressive Disorder (Dysthymia)

Persistent depressive disorder involves a lower-grade depression that lasts for at least two years. It is less severe than major depression in any given moment but its persistence takes a toll. Many people with dysthymia feel like being depressed is just "who they are" and never seek help. It is very treatable.

Depression With Anxiety

Depression and anxiety co-occur so often that they are sometimes described as two sides of the same coin. About 50 percent of people with depression also have a significant anxiety disorder. When both are present, treating them together produces better outcomes than addressing only one. We specialize in both see our OCD and Anxiety Disorders pages for more.

Depression With OCD

Depression is extremely common in people with OCD often as a secondary condition that develops from years of living with intrusive thoughts and compulsions. When depression and OCD co-occur, we treat both as part of the same integrated plan.

Postpartum Depression

Postpartum depression is a serious but very common condition that develops after childbirth affecting approximately 1 in 7 new mothers. It is different from the "baby blues" (which resolve within a couple of weeks) and requires treatment. See our Postpartum Anxiety page for more on perinatal mental health conditions we treat.

Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)

Seasonal Affective Disorder is a pattern of depression that follows the seasons most commonly starting in fall or winter and lifting in spring. It is thought to be related to reduced sunlight exposure affecting serotonin and melatonin. SAD is treatable with therapy, light therapy, and medication.

What Causes Depression?

Depression is not caused by one single thing. It develops from a combination of biological, psychological, and life factors:

Depression is not caused by weakness, laziness, or not trying hard enough. It is a condition with real biological roots and one that is significantly worsened by the stigma that tells people they should be able to fix it on their own.

How Is Depression Treated?

Depression is one of the most treatable mental health conditions. With the right approach, most people see significant and lasting improvement. At Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists, we use evidence-based therapy and we treat depression in the context of the whole person, including any anxiety, OCD, or trauma that is contributing to it.

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

CBT is the most researched and most effective psychotherapy for depression. It works by identifying the specific patterns of thinking that maintain depression and helping you develop more accurate, balanced ways of responding to them.

In depression, CBT targets three interconnected problems:

These three patterns sometimes called the cognitive triad are the engine of depression. CBT dismantles them directly and builds skills that produce lasting change.

Behavioral Activation

One of the most powerful parts of CBT for depression is behavioral activation deliberately re-engaging with activities and experiences, even when motivation is low. Depression creates a withdrawal cycle: you feel bad, so you stop doing things, which makes you feel worse, which makes you withdraw more. Behavioral activation breaks this cycle by acting first and waiting for motivation to follow rather than waiting to feel better before doing anything.

Addressing Underlying Conditions

At our practice, we treat depression in the context of the whole picture. When depression co-occurs with anxiety, OCD, PTSD, or other conditions which it very commonly does we address all of them as part of the same integrated plan. Treating only the depression while leaving the anxiety or OCD untreated rarely produces lasting results.

Medication

We are therapists, not psychiatrists, and do not prescribe medication. However, for moderate to severe depression, medication alongside therapy often produces significantly better outcomes than either alone. Antidepressants particularly SSRIs and SNRIs are safe and effective for most people. We can refer you to a trusted psychiatrist and coordinate care when medication may be appropriate.

Depression and the Motivation Problem

One of the cruelest features of depression is that it removes the motivation to get help. Everything feels pointless including therapy. Making the phone call, scheduling the appointment, showing up for the first session all of this can feel impossible when you are in the depths of depression.

 

This is not weakness. It is a symptom of the illness itself.

 

We understand this. Our first appointment is low-pressure and focused on understanding where you are not on what you need to do. If the only thing you can do today is read this page, that is enough. When you are ready, we are here.

What to Expect When You Work With Us

Most people with depression begin to feel meaningfully better within 6 to 8 weeks of consistent CBT including Behavioral Activation. A full course of treatment typically takes 12 to 20 sessions. Many people see results faster when co-occurring conditions are also addressed.

In-Person and Virtual CBT-I

In-person

730 S Sterling Ave, Suite 306, Tampa, FL 33609

Virtual:

Available throughout Florida and New York

Virtual therapy is especially well-suited for depression because depression itself makes leaving the house harder. Being able to attend sessions from home removes one of the biggest barriers to getting consistent care.

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Sadness is a normal human emotion that comes and goes in response to life events. Depression is a clinical condition that persists regardless of circumstances, affects nearly every area of daily functioning, and does not lift with ordinary positive experiences. Many people with depression do not even feel sad they feel numb, empty, or disconnected. If symptoms have lasted more than two weeks and are affecting your work, relationships, or daily life, it is worth talking to a specialist.

Mild depressive episodes sometimes resolve on their own over time. But moderate to severe depression rarely does and the longer it goes untreated, the harder it becomes to treat and the more damage it does to relationships, careers, and quality of life. Depression also has a tendency to recur. Treatment not only helps you feel better now it gives you skills that reduce the risk of future episodes.

It is never too late. Long-standing depression including persistent depressive disorder that has been present for years responds to CBT and medication in the same way as shorter episodes. Many people who have lived with depression for most of their lives describe therapy as the first time they have felt truly like themselves. The length of time you have been struggling does not predict your outcome. Treatment does.

Burnout is a state of exhaustion from chronic stress particularly work-related and it shares several features with depression: fatigue, reduced motivation, and a sense of emptiness. The key difference is that burnout typically improves significantly with rest, reduced stress, and changed circumstances. Depression does not. If you have taken time off, reduced stress, and still do not feel like yourself, depression is worth evaluating. The two can also co-exist.

Yes this is extremely common. Anxiety and depression co-occur in about 50 percent of cases. Living with chronic anxiety is exhausting and demoralizing, and over time it often develops into depression. When both are present, treating only the depression without addressing the anxiety leaves a major driver of the problem unresolved. We treat both conditions together as a standard part of our approach.

Not necessarily. CBT alone is highly effective for mild to moderate depression and produces results that tend to last longer than medication alone because it addresses the thinking patterns that drive depression, not just the symptoms. For moderate to severe depression, the research suggests that medication alongside therapy produces the best outcomes. We will discuss what makes sense for your specific situation at your first appointment.

Depression Is Not Your Fault and It Is Not Permanent.

Depression lies to you. It tells you nothing will help, that you do not deserve to feel better, that this is just who you are. None of that is true. Depression is a treatable condition, and most people who get the right help feel significantly better and stay better.

 

Our team at Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists is here to help. We understand depression especially when it comes alongside anxiety, OCD, trauma, or the pressures of everyday life in Tampa and beyond.

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