Nobody here is claiming to be a doctor. So for anyone belittling any of our suggestions, hey man, we're just chiming in with things that we do which are fun.
I will echo what BBL said here; I don't think anyone means to belittle the suggestions. Speaking for myself, I think it should be noted and appreciated when people are willing to talk about this issue, regardless of whether or not they have direct personal experience with depression or other mental illness. Silence is epidemic and any time someone breaks with that, it is a good thing.
But there is an enormous problem in our culture. We have created a society in which the pressure to be happy, positive and successful is overwhelming. How often are we told that we should surround ourselves with positive things and people and avoid the negative? How often do people use social media to present everything as wonderful and idyllic? How often are we bombarded with advertisements of people smiling and laughing? Be happy. Be positive. Be successful. Happy, positive, successful. When you are struggling with depression and have a complete disconnect from those kinds of feelings, this pressure can be suffocating. Ironically, there is plenty of evidence that depression is rampant in our society, but there is so much stigma that it is rarely acknowledged. I was recently speaking with the parents of a teen going through a bad depression, and both of them expressed how much they wanted their son to be happy. I suggested to them (while making it clear that I could not speak for their son) that their wish was of course absolutely natural, but while it was important to continue to show their care, it was likely they were unwittingly putting a lot of pressure on him to feel better, and that his inability to grant their wish was likely adding to the sense of disappointment and worsening his depression. So I think one reason I (and perhaps others here) would balk at suggestions of doing things to make us feel better is that I've already tried many such things, but I don't feel better. When you do things that "should" make you feel better but don't, it can actually make you feel a lot worse. It is a complicated problem with no easy solution. In some cases, no solution at all.
I try not to judge another person's experience or to place suffering into some kind of hierarchy. That being said, it is very common for someone in a depression to feel that no one understands what they are going through. And from one point of view, that's very true. I don't think anyone
ever really understands the experience of another. Even for myself, I've gone through periods of time in my life with and without depression, and in the times without it is very difficult to understand what depression feels like despite my history, because it's not present for me at that time. The mind simply isn't working that way and doesn't comprehend it. But again, our culture doesn't do much to help with this. I've encountered some truly asinine responses. A few years ago I dated a woman for a little while, thought there might be some possibility of a future, and decided to share a little of this. Her response was to compare me to her friend who had lost an arm but was still happy and successful--as if I wasn't dealing with a "real" problem and had no reason to have had difficulty--and end the relationship in 30 seconds flat. The kicker was this woman was a
pediatrician, whom one would think would be as compassionate a health care worker as one could find. Last year I had a therapist and was talking to him about the overwhelming anxiety that I had been constantly feeling for months, and he said he knew how I felt because he had the flu and was jet lagged from travel a few days before. The notion that the two were comparable was one of the dumbest things I'd ever heard. This was my therapist. I could describe far more experiences like this than I actually have time to write.
So, yes, the feeling that people don't "get it" has plenty of evidence. And there is no blame for that, because as I said, if your mind isn't in that place, there's no reason for you to get it. There's no reason someone could understand the pervasive sadness, helplessness, hopelessness, despair, guilt, shame, emptiness, pain, joylessness, anger, rage, hate, self-loathing, futility, uncontrollability, instability, disconnection, loneliness and complete sense of isolation.
Not long ago I heard an explanation of why people commit suicide that resonated for me. Sometimes people have been known to jump from the window of a burning building from an upper story, down to a certain death. Those watching below don't understand why, and tell them not to do it. But the person didn't jump because the fall suddenly became attractive to them. It's because the fear of the fire around them overpowered the fear of jumping. Given the "choice" between burning alive and falling to your death, you pick the fall. I don't say this as a way to insult anyone, to diminish or discount anyone's struggles, or because it is necessarily the truth, but when someone compares depression to being "bummed out" it can feel to the depressed individual that people say they understand burning alive because they once burned their hand on a hot stove.
So to wrap back to where I began, talking about this is a good thing. People showing a willingness to address this is a good thing. I've encountered far too much silence in my life, and that hurts as much as anything. But talking about it is also a very difficult process that is often met with some highly problematic responses. For myself, if I talk about this, I'm not looking for anyone to fix anything for me, but just looking for some small measure of understanding of what I'm dealing with.