Depression
Grief Is Not Depression, It’s Honoring Sorrow
Let's not confuse grief with something as serious as depression.
Posted April 13, 2023 Reviewed by Lybi Ma
Key points
- Honoring your sorrow is a healthy way to move forward after a loss.
- Grieving well reduces the risk of spiraling into depression.
- The stages of grief are not meant to be an orderly stair-step model to healing.
People so often confuse grief with depression.
The field trip I organized to visit artist Amanda Filippelli’s public art installation in Pittsburgh, The Remembering Room had fewer participants than expected. The exhibit honors the loss of her father a couple of years ago. It was described as “a communal healing space for people to process feelings of grief, experience growth, and find connections.” Several people backed out because of the weather, but one woman changed her mind at the last minute because “it seems like it’s gonna be too depressing.” There it is again, I thought. Grief is not depressing. It’s honoring sorrow, which can have profoundly positive consequences.
Part of what has confused people is what I’ve come to call, the “stair step” model of Kubler-Ross, which has been continually replicated since she introduced it in her 1969 book, On Death and Dying. Initially illustrated as five ascending steps, each with a feeling: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and on the top step, acceptance. She labeled these the five “stages” of grief, with a parenthesis indicating that she did not see these as ordered stages, though little attention has been paid to that detail. I often draw a line through the word “depression” and replace it with the word “sorrow,” which is missing entirely from this list and to me, defines what grieving is — the experiencing and honoring of sorrow.
Both grief and depression involve changes in the brain that can cause feelings of sadness, exhaustion, angry outbursts, and sleep disturbances, (too much or too little), and can occur in either situation. But in depression, a person often experiences a lack of feelings, an indifference to life, and little to no interest in what they normally would find enjoyable or pleasant. Both share the stigma, shame, and negative judgments our culture is quick to dispense to those who can’t seem to just be happy and move on when life hands them a difficult challenge.
Sure, it’s possible to have depression when you are grieving or experience grief when you are depressed, but grieving well may prevent the downward spiral that can bring on an episode of major depression. As I was thinking about this issue and how to differentiate these two conditions, CBS Sunday Morning, provided the most articulate example of both, and how they can interact.
The journalist, Jane Pauley, interviewed Pennsylvania’s newest senator John Fetterman, who was just being released from the hospital after six weeks of treatment for major depression. He admitted that this was the first time in his life that his depression, which he had struggled with for years, was in remission.
As a resident of Pennsylvania, I was aware of the back story of how Fetterman had gone from resurrecting Braddock, a depressed steel town near Pittsburgh when he served as its mayor, to statewide office as Pennsylvania’s Lieutenant Governor, to becoming a candidate for Senator. Last May, a few weeks after winning the nomination, Fetterman experienced a stroke at age 51 that left him with an auditory processing disability that required him to use a closed captioning device to debate his opponent. Despite the debate not going well for him, he won the state senate seat.
In the candid and intimate interview with Jane Pauley, he revealed that after the race he could not get out of bed. “I wasn’t thinking of self-harm,” he said, but more indifferent to life. His 14-year-old son reminded him that he had them, and “we won!” Though it was true it did not match how he felt.
One in three stroke victims experiences major depression. Eight minutes into the video, Fetterman’s facial expression changes showing the sorrow he feels about the day he went into the hospital; it interrupted the celebration of his son’s 14th birthday. “I hope that for the rest of his life, his birthday won’t remind him of his dad going into the hospital.”
Jane skillfully reframed this for him, reminding him that that was the day that his renewal began. “That’s a good way to look at it,” he says. When Jane asks about his long-range political aspirations he pivots to aspiring to “take my son to the restaurant we couldn’t go to," and adds “to be the kind of father, husband, and senator that the people of Pennsylvania deserve.”
Experience the difference for yourself. Watch John Fetterman’s interview here.