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Healing From Depression

Healing From Depression

with Mental Health Coach Douglas Bloch

  • What is Depression
    • Types of Depression
    • What are the Causes of Depression?
    • Depression Screening Test
    • Addiction and Depression
    • When Loss Leads to Depression
    • Famous People With Mood Disorders
  • Videos
  • My Story
    • How I Was Healed From Depression
    • My Daily Survival Plan
    • How I Avoided Suicide
    • Inspiring Words That Gave Me Hope
    • How My Breakdown Became a Breakthrough
  • Depression Tools
    • Setting the Intention to Heal
    • Antidepressant Therapy
    • Electroconvulsive Therapy: Beneficial or Barbaric?
    • Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS)
    • Natural Alternatives to Prozac
    • Hospitalization: When Is It Appropriate?
    • Recovering From Depression One Day at a Time
    • Seek To Manage Your Depression, Not To Cure It
  • Suicide Prevention
    • Suicide Prevention Overview
    • When A Loved One Is Suicidal
    • Inside the Suicidal Mind
    • Preventing Teenage Suicide
    • Suicide Hotlines
    • Survival Tips
  • Self Care
    • Managing Anxiety That Often Accompanies Depression
    • Managing Depression Holistically
    • Your Personal “Brain Maintenance” Program
    • When Someone You Love Is Depressed
    • Overcoming The Stigma of Depression
    • Depression and Weight Management
  • Recovery Tools
    • The Power of Prayer
    • Healing Childhood Wounds to Heal From Depression
    • Relapse Prevention
    • Gratitude and Depression
    • Bearing the Unbearable Pain
    • How Pets Can Help Us to Heal From Depression
  • Resources
    • Depression Help Print Books
    • eBooks to Help Depression
    • Newsletters to Help Depression
    • Articles
    • Healing Affirmations
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Famous People With Mood Disorders

Despite the fact that we now know that depression is a brain disorder, many people still believe that depression is the result of a weak will or a deficit in one’s character. Nothing could be further from the truth. Some of our greatest leaders such as Abraham Lincoln, Winston Churchill, Teddy Roosevelt and Eleanor Roosevelt have suffered from lifelong depression. These examples demonstrate that a person can suffer from depression and make a contribution to family, friends and society.

Below is a list of famous people with mood disorders who have enriched our lives with their writing, art, acting and other societal contributions.

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Writers

Honore de Balzac
James Barrie (author of Peter Pan)
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Maxim Gorky
Kenneth Graham
Graham Greene
Ernest Hemingway

Hermann Hesse
Victor Hugo
Henrik Ibsen
Henry James
William James
Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain)
Joseph Conrad

Charles Dickens
Isak Dinesen
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Herman Melville
Eugene O’Neill
Boris Pasternak
Mary Shelley

Robert Louis Stevenson
August Strindberg
Leo Tolstoy
Tennessee Williams
Virginia Woolf
Emile Zola


Poets

Charles Baudelaire
William Blake
Robert Burns
George Gordon, Lord Byron
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
William Cowper

Hart Crane
Emily Dickinson
T.S. Eliot
Gerard Manley Hopkins
Samuel Johnson
John Keats – More

Robert Lowell
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Sylvia Plath
Edgar Allan Poe
Ezra Pound
Alexander Pushkin

Theodore Roethke
Anne Sexton
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Alfred, Lord Tennyson
Dylan Thomas
Walt Whitman


Artists

Paul Gauguin
Vincent van Gogh
Ernst Josephson

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Michelangelo Buonarroti
Adolphe Monticelli

Edvard Munch
Georgia O’Keeffe
Raphaelle Peal

Dante Gabriel Rossetti
Mark Rothko


Classical Composers and Musicians

Hector Berlioz
Anton Bruckner
Edward Elgar
Carlo Gesualdo

George Frederic Handel
Gustav Holst
Charles Ives
Gustav Mahler

Modest Mussorgsky
Sergey Rachmaninoff
Giocchino Rossini
Robert Schumann

Alexander Scriagbin
Peter Tchaikovsky


Non-classical composers and musicians

Lionel Aldridge
Irving Berlin
Ray Charles

Kurt Cobain, (Nirvana)
Leonard Cohen
John Coltrane

John Denver
Stephen Foster
Charles Mingus

Charles Parker
Cole Porter
Elliot Smith


Political Leaders

Winston Churchill
Thomas Eagelton

Abraham Lincoln
Teddy Roosevelt

Eleanor Roosevelt


Modern Figures with Bipolar Disorder

Robert Boorstin, writer, special assistant to Pres. Clinton
Rosemary Clooney, singer
Dick Cavett, writer, media personality

Kitty Dukakis, former First Lady of Massachusetts
Patty Duke (Anna Pearce), actor, writer
Connie Francis, actor, musician

Peter Gabriel, musician
Spike Mulligan, comic actor and writer
Charley Pride, musician

Ted Turner, entrepreneur, founder of CNN
Jonathon Winters, comedian, actor, writer, artist


Modern Figures with Depression

Buzz Aldrin, astronaut
Art Buchwald, writer
Barbara Bush, former First Lady (U.S.)
Ray Charles, musician
Eric Clapton, musician
Dick Clark, television personality (American Bandstand)
Francis Ford Coppola, director
Michael Crichton, writer
Lady Diana, Princess of Wales

Richard Dreyfuss, actor
Kathy Kronkite, writer (daughter of Walter Kronkite)
Sheryl Crow, musician
Mike Douglas, media personality
Tony Dow, actor, director
Thomas Eagleton, former politician; professor
James Farmer, civil rights activist (1960s to present)
Jules Feiffer, playwright, screenwriter, cartoonist

Carrie Fisher
John Kenneth Galbraith, economist, educator, author
Spalding Gray (monologist)
Stephen Hawking, physicist
Anthony Hopkins, actor
Salvador Luria, scientist (bacterial genetics), Nobel Laureate
Kate Taylor, musician
James Taylor, musician
Livingston Taylor, musician
Mike Wallace, news anchor

Robert McFarlane, former National Security Advisor (U.S.)
Sarah McLachlan, musician
Bonnie Raitt, musician
Joan Rivers, comedienne, talk show host
Roseanne, actor, writer, comedienne
Linda Sexton, writer (daughter of Anne Sexton)
Rod Steiger, actor
William Styron, writer

Much of this information came from the book Touched With Fire; Manic-Depressive Ilness and the Artistic Temperament, by Kay Jamison.

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