For a while I used to live with Aboriginal Australians. I was involved with a project that had to do with the improvement of Aboriginal livelihood in the Northern Territory of Australia. The area is very remote and quite dangerous, but it taught me many things — especially about depression.
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Based on three different livelihood indexes, two Australian and one from the UN, aboriginal people are the happiest people on earth even if their average lifespan is just about 43 years.
Government funded incentives to 'assist further' remote communities in NT never worked. All that Aboriginal people ever wanted from the government was their old plundered trees. They find us weird because we have to live and sleep in cage houses while they only need a tree.
They do not view the world like we do. They do not have the monotheistic fear of death that has been ingrained in everything in our society. They do not even experience the world based on past, present and future. Their perception is completely different, as if time does not exist — everyone and everything is connected through circles or relative connection. They do not even abide to psychology (or what I call, social engineering) in order to see if they are 'normal' in respect to their peers.
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It's a hell of a trip to walk in their shoes day by day. I did it for some months and it was one of the best experiences I ever had. It makes you realise a lot about life, especially things we all take for granted.
Living with them, I soon realised that we, as westerners, are extremely conditioned from our culture. It is almost as if we have spawned from a cult. We follow crazy rituals on a daily basis basis just to get by and not resort to insanity. It blows my mind how many times we change masks in order to be able to function in so many different situations. We never realise it because everyone is doing the same exact thing.
Our societies need a tremendous amount of rules to operate. They are unwritten ones most of the time, but they take a toll in each and every thing we do. From the people we love, to the people we work with, the way we perceive wealth, death. Aboriginal Australians are way passed that. They follow the rules of their own self as it reflected through nature. They are individuals unbounded by the judgment of their peers. They are truly free.
Western Civilisation is making itself sick with depression. Don't get me wrong. Aboriginals get depressed. They also do get panic attacks and everything else we experience. The difference is that they consider them part of life and something that the individual has to go through, as a rite of passage, in order to be a proper human being. We forgot how to do this. Aboriginals almost never report depression. It also explains why their happiness index is through the roof; their medicine is 100mg of Man The Fuck Up instead of $200 /per hour to your local ‘therapist’.
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As westerners we have become extremely brainwashed and softies with normality. We are constantly evaluating each other based on what other people do —ending being constantly unease with ourselves. There is massive pandemic with western psychosis.
We have replaced religion with psychology as if it is going to solve our problems. We invented psychology as a modern escape from Religion, a coping mechanism. We get accepted into a therapy group, a 'church', a 'community' where we are all 'equal'. The groupies are there to 'treat' us everytime we deviate from the norm. Our best friend we pay by the hour—talk about prostitution...
We ended up fearing life. We get 'depressed' because our lover left us; or because we didn’t get a raise at work; or because we lost friends on facebook. First World Problems, that are really no problems at all. White whine because, hey, there is nothing really important to complain about.
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We forgot how to get a real hit and stand up. We are 'offended' and 'hurt' and need 'therapy'. We teach our kids to be vulnerable because we only promote positivism and wishful thinking. We have been completely cut off from reality and so our bodies rebel against us— in the form of depression as if they want to reset. We have fallen down and we are still waiting for someone else to pick us up. The only problem is that almost all of us are lying down on the floor and no amount of pills can pick us back up.
We are not depressed. We are just fooling ourselves so much, even our brains have given up on us.
In tribal, ancient civilization depression simply doesn't exists.
This lead us to think that it is an illness connected to our society, so the individuals are not responsible for that, society is.
The idea to solve depression using pills and drugs is quite controversial, I think.
In fact, how can some chemical solve a society problem?
@andrew0
Indeed. I have seen acquaintances and friends popping pills like M&M's. Pills never really solve problems unless we are talking about genetic issues that dehabilitate the individual in a severe degree.
The brain adopts eventually to whatever substance it receives. The homeostasis of the body also changes and things like neurotransmitters and hormones start going rampant.
I believe more than half the medicine outhere are things out bodies can take care of, if we let it long enough. Pills are a product. Many people tend to forget this. They think that is just something benevolent. There are people who profit from these, people who have invested billions in order to get them approved.
I totally agree and unfortunately I also have some friends doing that.
The profit factor is too evident and makes me think that it's just another business, only sometimes may be really effective and useful, otherwise is only a way to escape real problems and become dumb.
is it pretty much a legalised drug trade. People who do "illegal" drugs are also medicating themselves, trying to cope.
it makes the notion of drug regulation even more ridiculous. at the end of the day is all about supply and demand___ and where there is no demand, you create some...
What a piece! Yes, I am following you after this and yes I would like to support you.
And I found this amazing article after you tweeted something on Twitter of mine. That action led me to finding @kyriacos' genius post, which I shared there and now upvoted......
@stellabelle so in this case it truly turned out to be a support! Many thanks for sharing the path and of course for taking it ;).
I am glad to see that my little twitter promotion experiment indicates potential. Thanks for the motivation/tailwind!
I'm very active on Twitter and probably always will be. I need serious help in finding the genius posts! I pay attention to those paying attention.......but i am much better when I find a trusted curator, so people bugging me to read their posts don't really work.....
@puffin
thank you for your support
It is my pleasure! Very much enjoyed reading your post!
Not only do I understand this post, I have radically changed myself in countless way, by detoxifying myself of many of Western cultural institutions. I place emphasis on my subconscious' ability to formulate solutions that lie outside of culture's dominance. Many times, I have real dreams that point me to taking real action in the world, as deep problem is in need of a deep answer. I would love to elaborate on this further, as I completely agree with your analysis.
I would also go so far as to say that my reliance on my subsconscious energy to both solve problems and come up with creative ideas is near total.
And I am a person who used to rely on drugs, both legal and illegal, to solve my anxiety which used to cripple me.
Now, after altering my environment to such a degree and removing myself from pathologically greedy/evil people which run rampant in most Western corporations, institutions and media, I can say that I have effectively cured myself of afflictions of all kinds. I no longer have depressive ruts, nor do I feel that my life is out of control. When a big problem arises, (as is natural for every human being), I let the problem into my thinking. Inside my consciousness for days, or for weeks or months, it stews, shows me the opposing sides, the possible solutions and the different aspects of it. It is only through this mental stewing, that a solution usually appears to my mind, quite organically and without much mental strife. It appears as if in a dream sometimes, the answer, based in truth, no matter how painful it will be for me to interact with it, it seeks a resolution. The solution appears first to my subconscious, then after I notice it, I look deeper. Then it appears in physical words, images and stories.
Now, I can no longer ignore the solution, it's time to act. I have operated this way for much of my life, many times from dreams themselves.
From a dream I decided to buy my parents house, instead of taking out a mortgage that would have indebted me several lifetimes. Our culture would never approve of an extended family situation, but my subconscious mind knew that living frugally in a large family is the better solution, for everyone. Elders need their life extended by young ones, young ones need guidance from elders.
Dreams are the most under-utilized energy sources in the Western world.
And now I will relate to you the words that came to me in a dream state that I was able to capture. I want to see what you think:
When Kings rule the land and their subjects are busy kissing their feet, both King and subject lose their night vision.
Kings who have never never lived inside the dragon's mouth can never truly lead the masses, who are limping, frail and full of holes.
Attachment based on personal gain has blinded more people than the sun.
Follow the sun, for it gives energy without expecting a return on its investment.
Aboriginal Australians do not differentiate between the dreamtime and the real world. They are one for them. Perhaps that is their secret.
Nuclear Families are a joke. Our species has been living in mix family groups for hundreds of thousands of years. It only changed 2000 years ago and only because of monotheistic religions; that are slowly fading away.
Depression exist in our western world because we have the luxury of having time to be depressed. There, they probably don't have time to even think about being depressed as everything is about nature and constant survival.
@jurisnaturalist
You nailed it
Thanks for sharing this article, I like what you posted. Thank you so much
Man the fuck up , that is right attitude , all around you can hear people just bitchin on this on that . Great writing man . When you get something like this info from first hand it's 100 times better then tv documentaries .
Indeed @iggy . Sometimes the answer is just right in front of us. We are just conditioned to look the other way.
Some good points. A lot of people call normal life experience depression when it is not. There is an attitude that there should be a pill or a treatment for everything. There isn't.
There is no pill treating out socio-cultural state of mind @thecryptofiend ...
I disagree with a fair amount of what you post. But this article is amazing and poignant.
Thank you.
Also, do you happen to have links to the livelihood indexes you mentioned? I couldnt find them.
@gregoryschneider
If you have any questions with what I post leave a commen and I will try to give you references on the subject. It seems that some links are not working properly while others are restricted from academic journals. Nonetheless I found 2 that might work.
http://webapi.prosperity.com/download/pdf/Country_FactSheets_Web_2012.pdf
http://www.ausstats.abs.gov.au/ausstats/subscriber.nsf/LookupAttach/4102.0Publication13.10.102/$File/41020_IndigenousWellbeing_reissue.pdf
Some links here: Sangha, K K; Butler, JRA; Delisle, A; Stanley, O. Journal of Environmental Science and Engineering5.7 (Jul 2011).
Wow, great post. Just read it for the second time. It is so true socially created westernized depression. As a therapist, I recognize this pattern of people never fully "healing" or moving themselves into alignment; Always coming back and putting full responsibility on the therapist to fix them. Something Im trying to move past when working with people. The truth is that depression and disease are what connect us to humanity, not something to fix but something to inspire us to grow beyond what we were before.
Just being nit picky here and speaking from no personal experience but I don't think they would think or say "man the fuck up" to another person. More like that is just there being, correct? I assume this phrase is portraying the westernized perspective of how they live for the purpose of writing.
@ballinconscious
No really, people should man the fuck up or better "assume responsibility" and stop whining about their problems. part of the problem of depression is the fact that people seek help elsewhere instead of themselves.
no, no that wasn't my point. I agree with that. I was asking more from the Aborigines perspectives. Me not having connected personally with one gives me a lack of knowledge about it . Do they think in that same way or are they more in themselves and think less about what other should and shouldn't do.
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