Depression is more than sadness. You can still look functional on the outside while feeling flat, numb, exhausted, or shut down inside (which is why it sometimes goes unnoticed until it's too late).
Signs of Depression
Look out for a cluster of these symptoms, especially if they persisted for more than 2 weeks:
- Low mood, emptiness, or hopelessness
- Loss of interest, pleasure, or energy
- Poor concentration
- Guilt, worthlessness, or self-blame
- Sleep, appetite, or weight changes
- Feeling slowed down or restless
- Withdrawing from people, work, or daily life
- Thoughts of death, self-harm, or suicide
When Sadness May Be Depression
Sadness is part of life. Depression is more likely when it:
- Lasts (2 weeks or more)
- Spreads into many parts of life
- Affects your ability to function
- Makes it hard to enjoy, focus, cope, or connect constantly
When Grief May Be Depression
After a loss, grief often comes in waves and is tied to reminders of what was lost. Depression is more persistent and often comes with a broader sense of hopelessness, heaviness, and inability to feel pleasure.
Why Depression Happens
There is usually no single cause. Common contributing factors include:
- Chronic stress or burnout
- Grief or loss
- Family or relationship conflict
- Loneliness
- Bullying or discrimination
- Difficult childhood experiences
- Major life changes such as relocation or childbirth
- Multiple stressors building up over time
Sometimes depression looks sudden. Often it has been building quietly for months.
Different Kinds of Depression
Major Depressive Disorder
The more classic form. It may happen once or recur.
Persistent Depressive Disorder
A more chronic, lower-grade depression. It can last years in adults and people often normalise it because it starts to feel like their usual self.
Perinatal or Postpartum Depression
Depression that happens during pregnancy or after childbirth.
When to Seek Help
Seek professional help if:
- Symptoms have lasted more than 2 weeks
- Work, studies, sleep, appetite, or relationships are being affected significantly
- Withdrawals are becoming excessive
- You feel persistently hopeless, worthless, or numb
- Functioning is getting harder to maintain
How Depression Is Assessed
A proper assessment should look at:
- Symptom pattern
- Duration
- Severity
- Effect on functioning
- Risk level
- Whether this fits depression, a medical issue, substance-related causes, or is related to some other mental health condition
This matters because not all depression is the same, and not all low mood should be treated the same way.
How Depression Is Treated
Treatment depends on the presentation.
Therapy
Useful for:
- Understanding the problem
- Reducing avoidance
- Changing depressive patterns
- Improving coping
- Rebuilding functioning
Medication
Useful when symptoms are:
- More biological in nature
- Impair daily functioning more
- Making it hard to engage in daily life
Combined Treatment
Some people do best with both therapy and medication.
Additional Interventions
More complex or treatment-resistant cases may need more specialised treatment.
What Recovery Usually Looks Like
Recovery is not always fast or linear. Improvement may look like:
- Less emotional heaviness
- Better energy and concentration
- More interest in life
- Improved functioning
- Reduced hopelessness
- Better understanding of triggers and relapse signs
Next Steps
If this sounds mildly familiar:
- Start tracking symptoms
- Notice how long they have been present
- Monitor sleep, appetite, energy, and functioning
- Consider booking a consultation
Bottom Line
Depression does not need to look dramatic to be real. If your life is narrowing, your energy is gone, and you no longer feel like yourself, take it seriously. The earlier it is recognised, the easier it usually is to treat.