Question 2: What was going on in your life during (or before) the onset of your depression?
- Did the depression start during (or after) a stressful time or event in your life?
- Did you have a ‘break-down’?
- Were there stressful things happening? (e.g. divorce, exams, death, job change, financial stress, relationship breakup, abuse (mental, emotional or physical,)) a stressful job (fireman, policeman, doctor, nightshift, etc.)
- Were you exposed to a situation that put stress on your physical body? (e.g. surgery, accident, head injury, partying too hard with no sleep, pregnancy, exposure to a toxin (pesticide, heavy metals, etc?))
This question helps expose triggers for the depression that you have been suffering.
Stress is powerful. It is known that stressful events are one of the major risk factors for depression. Childhood trauma also plays a huge role for the development of major depression later on in life. Prolonged and/or extreme stress weakens the body’s adrenal glands. The role of the adrenal glands is to respond to and deal with stress. When the adrenal glands get wound up or worn out depression can result. There are powerful herbs, supplements, and medications that can feed and repair the adrenal glands. If your depression is caused by adrenal imbalances (or preceded by a major stressful event) these types of treatments and certain lifestyle changes can help resolve and eliminate fatigue and depression.
There’s also a biochemical imbalance known as ‘The Mauve Factor’ (formerly known as kryptopyrroles) that people with depression often have, which means they don’t deal with stress well. This biochemical imbalance seems to run in families too. If stress has been or still is one of your triggers for depression, or you have had depression from a child (or early on in life), it will be worth investigating the Mauve factor. The mauve factor can cause depression, Schizophrenia, autism and other behavioural problems.
The Mauve factor was first discovered in the 1950’s and it can be balanced (and the depression resolved) with high dose nutritional supplements. It is reasonably well-known by practitioner’s training in natural medicine and orthomolecular medicine, but it is not recognized by mainstream medicine. During the original research on the Mauve factor, there was considerable opposition by the standard psychiatric establishment against the nutritional and megavitamin therapy approach used to treat high-Mauve patients. The resistance, and therefore the Mauve Factor being relatively unknown today, is possibly due to pharmaceutical companies who produced tranquilizer drugs at the time being opposed to the research. I’ll discuss this biochemical imbalance again a little more in question 5 of this 7 part self help series.
Other physical trauma can give rise to depression in a number of ways. For example, head or neck injuries can lead to hormonal imbalances that can lead to depression. I’ve provided you with the following table below which has been copied from my recent book “Breaking Free: Exposing the biochemical causes of your depression”. It will give you a short summary and an insight into what types of stress, and physical trauma can give rise to depression and why (and hopefully reveal to you a possible physical cause for your depression).
If you have any questions or comments, please feel free to use the comment box below. I’d love to hear from you.
Sincerely
Dr Janelle Sinclair
| Your Answer | What It Could Mean | Biochemical Imbalance to Investigate Further |
|---|---|---|
| A physical ‘break-down’, divorce, exams, death of a loved one, job change, financial stress, relationship breakup, abuse (mental, emotional or physical), surgery, accident, partying too hard (no sleep), a stressful job. | Stress weakens the body’s adrenal glands whose role it is to respond to and deal with stress. When the adrenal glands get worn out depression can result. In certain individuals, stress can lead to high levels of a chemical in the body called the “Mauve Factor’. High levels of the “Mauve Factor” can cause depression. “High-Mauve” tends to run in families (especially those with a history of depression and other mental illnesses). | Chapter 3: The Mauve Factor Chapter 7: Adrenal Imbalances |
| Neck surgery | Neck surgery can cause thyroid problems which can lead to depression. | Chapter 6: Low Thyroid Function |
| Head injury or surgery | Head injury or surgery can damage the part of the brain that regulates hormone levels in the body. Low or high levels of certain hormones such as testosterone, estrogen, thyroid, and adrenal hormones (DHEA and cortisol) can lead to depression. | Chapter 6: Low Thyroid Function Chapter 7: Adrenal Imbalances Chapter 8: Female Hormone Deficiencies Chapter 9: Testosterone Deficiency in Men |
| Exposure to a toxin (pesticide, heavy metals) | Exposure to a toxin, including pesticides, lead and mercury, can affect the function of the brain, and therefore depression. | Chapter 5: Toxic Overload |
| Pregnancy | The hormone deficiencies or fluctuations that can occur after childbirth can cause depression. A growing baby needs lots of essential fatty acids (EFAs) to makes its body and brain and it gets them from you. You can become deficient in EFAs during pregnancy and that can cause depression. | Chapter 8: Female Hormone Deficiencies Chapter 13: Essential Fatty Acid Deficiencies |
To download a free report which discusses ALL of the 7 Self help Depression questions (and how to interpret them) visit http://www.breakingfreefromdepression.com



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