Dictionary Definition
dejection
Noun
1 a state of melancholy depression
2 solid excretory product evacuated from the
bowels [syn: fecal
matter, faecal
matter, feces,
faeces, BM, stool, ordure]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- a state of melancholy or depression; low spirits, the blues
Translations
- French: abattement
- Finnish: masentuneisuus, alakuloisuus
- Hebrew: דכדוך (dikhdókh)
- Polish: przygnębienie , strapienie
- Russian: униние
Extensive Definition
In the field of psychiatry the terms
depression or depressed are used in both the ordinary, non-clinical
sense and to refer specifically to pathology, especially when the
mood of depression has reached a level of severity and/or duration
that warrants a clinical diagnosis. The Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)
states that a depressed mood is often reported as being: "...
depressed, sad, hopeless, discouraged, or 'down in the dumps'." In
traditional colloquy,
"depressed" is often synonymous with "sad," but both clinical and
non-clinical depression can also refer to a conglomeration of more
than one feeling. Such a mixture can include (but is not limited
to) anger, fear, anxiety, despair, guilt, apathy, and/or grief, in
addition to what many people would describe as typical
"sadness."
Biology
Biological influences of depression are varied, but can include hereditary, hormonal, and seasonal factors, stress, illness, neurotransmitter malfunction, and long-term exposure to dampness and mold and to aerosol exposure via the frequent use of air fresheners and other aerosols in the home,, all of which are more fully discussed in the major depressive disorder article.Depression as mechanism of adaptation
While a depressed mood is usually referred to (and perceived) as negative, it can sometimes be subtly beneficial in helping a person adapt to circumstance. For example, physical illness, such as influenza, can lead to feelings of psychological malaise and depression that seem, at first, only to compound an already unpleasant situation. However, the experience of depression, or feeling "down," often results in physical inertia, which leads to the compulsion to rest. The fleeting helplessness and immobility of the physically ill may also serve to elicit care from others.From an evolutionary standpoint, some argue that
depression could be at least partially related to atavistic fears
that were originally based on real dangers. Marcello Spinella,
Ph.D., in his book, How Sadness Survived: The Evolutionary Basis of
Depression, suggests that, because "social support and
interdependence were important features of the [human] ancestral
environment"[,] "the [peer] group could have offered extra help to
the depressed person until the condition resolved." Further, "...a
depressed person may change the attitudes of other people around
him, making them more sympathetic to his needs and therefore giving
him a long term [social or reproductive] advantage."
Temporary depression, psychologist
Thomas Moore, Ph.D., suggests, can, in some cases, not only
"...provide a rest from the hyperactivity of the good times...,"
but can also be assigned value in the overall spectrum of human
experience, and might enrich the ways in which members of a
community relate to, and support, one another. In some cases, Moore
says, "dark times [can] leave their mark and make you a person of
insight and compassion."
Mental disorders with depression
A chronic depressed mood is usually a core feature of such mental disorders as:- manic depression (bipolar disorder)
- clinical depression
- endogenous depression
- reactive, or neurotic, depression
- atypical depression
- psychotic depression
- seasonal affective disorder
- adjustment disorder with depressed mood
See also
References
External links
- About the Brain – Includes definitions relating to depression
- beyondblue – The Australian National Depression Initiative
- Black Dog Institute – Depression and Bipolar Disorder Information Australia
- Depression at WebMD - Drug and treatment information for depression.
- Depression Research News at ScienceDaily
- Mental Health Disorders: Mood: Depression at Mozilla Open Directory (categorized links)
- National Alliance on Mental Illness – Depression support, advocacy, and education
- National Depressive and Manic Depressive Association - National Depressive and Manic Depressive Association
- Stanford Depression Research Clinic
- Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services (SAMHSA) – United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
- Care of the Soul - Website of writer/clinical practitioner, Thomas Moore, Ph.D.
dejection in Modern Greek (1453-):
Κατάθλιψη
dejection in Icelandic: Depurð
dejection in Yiddish: דעפרעסיע
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
BM,
Schmerz, Slough of
Despond, abstraction, abulia, alienation, anxiety, anxiety equivalent,
anxiety state, apathy,
blank despondency, bloody flux, blues, bouderie, bowel movement,
catatonic stupor, catharsis, compulsion, crap, death wish, defecation, dejecta, dejectedness, dejecture, depression, despair, desperation, despondency, despondentness, detachment, diarrhea, discharge, discouragement, disheartenment, dispiritedness, down
trip, downcastness,
downer, downheartedness,
drooping spirits, dumpishness, dysentery, effluent, egesta, ejecta, ejectamenta, ejection, elation, emotionalism, euphoria, evacuation, excrement, excreta, excretes, extravasate, extravasation, exudate, exudation, flux, folie du doute, glumness, grimness, grumness, heartlessness, hopelessness, hypochondria, hysteria, hysterics, indifference, insensibility, lethargy, lientery, loose bowels, low
spirits, lowness,
lowness of spirit, malaise, mania, melancholia, melancholy, mental distress,
moodiness, moodishness, mopishness, moroseness, movement, obsession, oppression, pathological
indecisiveness, pessimism, preoccupation, psychalgia, psychomotor
disturbance, purgation, purge, runs, self-destructive urge,
shit, shits, sinking heart, spiritlessness, stool, stupor, suicidal despair,
sulkiness, sullenness, surliness, taedium vitae,
tic, transudate, transudation, trots, turistas, twitching, unresponsiveness,
voidance, waste, waste matter, weariness of
life, withdrawal