"HOW SHALL WE THEN LIVE?" Francis Schaeffer

Wednesday, July 06, 2005

"'snapping' under immense pressure, mental collapse or mental and physical exhaustion."

Periodically I meet with people who have undergone a "nervous breakdown." Actually, as you can read below, "nervous breakdown" was abandoned as a diagnosis 35 years ago. But, in my own sphere, I've brought it back. I find it so much more descriptive than "major depression." I don't think that term really conveys the richness and depths of a nervous breakdown.

My oldest cousin and I suspect my grandmother had a "nervous breakdown" when her boys (my father and my uncle) were in their teens. Apparently she went into her bedroom and did not come out for about 2 years. I don't know a whole lot about her history but I now she had 3 still births. I suspect a lot of women might "snap" under those circumstances.

The agony and fear some people experience can be horrific. Years ago, a baseball player named Jimmy Piersall wrote about his "nervous breakdown" while he was still playing. The name of the book was FEAR STRIKES OUT! In my dim memory I remember him saying he continued to play baseball but basically lost track of time, memory and circumstances for about 9 months. He gradually came back.

The good news seems to be; they all come back. And that is the hope you attempt to convey when you're meeting with someone in the midst of a "nervous breakdown."

What is a nervous breakdown? (From howstuffworks.com/question653.htm)


In the Middle Ages, it was called melancholia. In the early 1900s, it was known as neurasthenia. From the 1930s to about 1970, it was known as a nervous breakdown. "Nervous breakdown" is a term that the public uses to characterize a range of mental illnesses, but generally it describes the experience of "snapping" under immense pressure, mental collapse or mental and physical exhaustion.

"Nervous breakdown" is not a clinical term. There is no psychiatric definition of a nervous breakdown, and it has nothing to do with nerves. "Nervous breakdown" is an inexact and unscientific term that is no longer used in psychiatry. Much as modern medicine breaks down diseases into more specific definitions (not just "cancer," but "stage 1 ovarian cancer"), modern psychiatry is breaking the term "nervous breakdown" into more precise diagnoses.

The diagnosis that most closely resembles what the public calls a nervous breakdown is major depression. Depressive episodes may be caused by genetic and biological factors and are often triggered by social and environmental circumstances. Depression is defined as the "loss of interest or pleasure in nearly all activities" and "sustained fatigue without physical exertion." Depression is characterized by a lack of energy and motivation along with feelings of guilt or hopelessness. It is often brought on by stressful situations, such as relationship difficulties, health problems, the aftermath of an accident or the death of a loved one.

The mental illness known as a "nervous breakdown" may also be something like panic attacks, schizophrenia, post-traumatic stress disorder or acute stress disorder.

Surveys show that about one-third of Americans feel on the verge of a nervous breakdown at some point. Studies estimate that 50-million Americans suffer some form of mental illness in their lifetime.

Depression is treated through medication and psychiatric counseling.


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