''The loss compares well with grieving for someone we loved and lost''. Reading and concentrating on part of what was said and not all of it is problematic, isn't it?! And that's what happened here. I went on to say that "It felt so true to me'' which was missed by some of you. Concentrating on part of what was said and meant can give a different impression and that's what happened here. Pulling out just a bit out of what was said and getting emotional about it or putting it down to a difference of opinion isn't helpful. It's about how well that difference of opinion is expressed, in a kind and mindful way or in a harsh and unpleasant way.
The reality of those suffering from anxiety and depression differs from the reality out there in the real world held by what is considered 'normal'. What's considered as a 'small' pain or loss or event or just a thought by those not suffering from anxiety and depression may look as big as a catastrophe, and these are the sort of things that mental health professionals recognise and treat until the patient's reality becomes closer to the reality out there in the world. The realities considered as 'normal' because most of us see it that way. What's seen and considered as normal, reasonable, natural, understandable, sensible, a fact of life ... to you and me, the 'normal' people often doesn't appear so to those with anxiety and depression. our responses and reaction to them can make a world of difference to them. That can be the key to their recovery or making it worse. If only a mental health of this kind could be as visible as any physical health problems like a broken leg or a tumour! How differently many of us would react to it! But it isn't and that causes the person with anxiety and depression not seen, understood, and even more sad, lonely, useless, isolated, unimportant, ... Then they may feel so irrelevant to the lives of others that they may conclude that no one would miss them if they weren't there. To stop further pain and hurt to themselves, they may walk away. This is not out of selfishness but out of our natural self preservation for survival and desperation. They need TLC and not a stick, just like our grand kids when they wake up in the middle of the night screaming that there's a monster in the room! We know there isn't but we empathise and help them. Just because we grow old and grey doesn't mean we can be free of monsters! Only their shapes are different.
I do not know silvercat to say she's a nasty, selfish, ... person or not! Just because I may have been successful in some areas of my dealings with life challenges doesn't mean the same formula would sound applicable to her in a similar situation. I'd offer what worked for me and leave it to them to see if it can be applicable to them or not. I would not judge her, or be harsh in my treatment of her. I wouldn't compete over which pain's greater than another either because everything's relevant and our reactions to various pains are different too. Neither do I believe that others have to suffer my challenges in life including my anxiety and depression in the past to be qualified to say they can understand what it's like or vice versa. Empathy is a gift so many humans do have.
If you're looking, silvercat, please check if you're suffering from anxiety and depression. Something like %20 of adults in the UK suffer depression sometime in their lives. I found the following link for you and anyone interested to see how big this problem is:-
www.telegraph.co.uk/news/nhs/12101811/Almost-half-of-adults-have-suffered-mental-illness-NHS-stats-suggest.html