Anyone believe it's true? Because I personally don't believe in that saying.
Depression might make you strong in some ways, but emotionally you get weak. Physically, you get weak. And mentally you become tired. So do you agree with that phrase?
Anyone believe it's true? Because I personally don't believe in that saying.
Depression might make you strong in some ways, but emotionally you get weak. Physically, you get weak. And mentally you become tired. So do you agree with that phrase?
I don't believe in that phrase also, I think its bulls***
"What doesn't kill you makes you stronger"
This saying is a pre-christian Germanic saying often attributed to just the Vikings. It was made famous by Nietzsche in his books encouraging Germans to abandon Christianity and become Pagans again. Anyway, Nietzsche started out as a shy college student being made fun of because he was still a virgin. So he went to a whorehouse and got Syphilis the first time he got laid and Syphilis drives you insane and he was also being driven insane by knowing what a bad decision he made. His ideas are messed up I have no idea why he is so highly regarded. So if you take this advice your listening to a guy who got laid once ever and then went insane. Makes listening to Dr. Phil seem like an act of genius in comparison.
Depression is, in my view, a nasty piece of work.
It's one of the "monsters" of the psychological disorder world. It tends to shut off things like sensory acuity and access to your emotional cycle making feeling a range of emotions difficult. If you feel you have depression, see your doctor about it as soon as possible.
I believe it, but I've survived my life on motivational quotes. They've helped me out of many pits of despair.
What doesn't kill you will make you want to kill yourself.
I used to think that until my wife left 3 years ago. I am still going through depression over that very much. I have suffered depression as long as I can remember. But Distraction is a good way to fight it.
http://youtu.be/zSgiXGELjbc
"A still more glorious dawn awaits
Not a sunrise, but a galaxy rise
A morning filled with 400 billion suns
The rising of the milky way"
"The sky calls to us
If we do not destroy ourselves
We will one day venture to the stars" -Carl Sagan
I truly believe the saying. I've gone through a lot and well, what gives me the drive to accomplish, the drive to fight back, the drive to now bow down to anything is my past experience. I take all that energy and funnel it to things that will make positive changes. I'm like a rabid chihuahua when it comes to helping kids and teens and it was the experiences in my life that give me that drive. I know when life beats you down it's hard to see the benefit, but in my experience, it's made me stronger.
The Hokey Pokey IS what it's all about
Yes, I believe in the saying. Obviously the saying cannot be applied to physical problems. Example: you might survive a heart-attack but definitely wouldn't be as physically strong as you were. The saying can be applied to the mental experiences you have, the situations you tackle in life, no matter how hard/embarrassing they are. Speaking for myself, every new experience I've had in life has taught me something. A particular experience made me better equipped mentally to tackle the same problem if it presents itself again. And as long as you're alive, you always have another chance.
No. It makes you weaker. Somebody posted a link, which... I don't have the attention span to read right now, but I know the gist of it anyway. Basically research has shown that people who go through a lot of traumas and hardships tend to have poorer health outcomes / higher rates or morbidity and early mortality. Suffering wears down your resilience on a neurobiological level especially in people with biologically sensitive dispositions (people like say... us, with anxiety disorders etc). So whatever causes distress should be minimised wherever possible to protect your future health and wellbeing.
What does 'suffering' do to people who don't have biologically sensitive dispositions? I personally know people who have suffered tremendous hardships and traumas but have turned out to be exceptionally strong-willed and level-headed individuals.
It depends on your perspective -- on what you're willing to take from the experience.
People who turn out okay after tremendous hardship usually have a lot of resilience in the first place. It's genetic, they were born to be that way. On the other hand, sensitivity brings it's own unique perspective and advantages to certain areas of life, but it's just a lot easier to get ravaged by hardships when you are this way.
it is a silly phrase if you take it literally because it's obviously not true since humans are not one dimensional; things that make them suffer make them suffer. it's just a motivational quip some people can apply to certain instances, like "survival of the fittest" which isn't true either but a neat little coined phrase that's lost its original function when people use it. they're obsolete but rattle around the public consciousness
UGH
I TOOK THINGS LITERALLY AGAIN WHY CAN'T I THINK OUTSIDE THE BOX
POINTS, THINK IN POINTS. EVERYONE HAS A POINT, IT'S NOT ABOUT THE WORDS THEY SAY