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Home » How To Recognize Perfectly Hidden Depression: Margaret Rutherford (Transcript)

How To Recognize Perfectly Hidden Depression: Margaret Rutherford (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Margaret Rutherford’s talk titled “How To Recognize Perfectly Hidden Depression” at TEDxBocaRaton conference.

In this TEDx talk, Dr. Margaret Rutherford, a therapist for over thirty years, discusses the phenomenon of individuals who appear successful and content, yet secretly struggle with significant emotional pain and depression. She explains how such individuals often mask their true feelings behind a facade of perfection, making it challenging for therapists and loved ones to recognize their hidden struggles.

Rutherford highlights the importance of looking beyond conventional diagnostic criteria, as many with perfectly hidden depression do not exhibit typical symptoms such as sleep disturbances or loss of pleasure in activities. She emphasizes the need for a shift in how mental health professionals approach and assess depression, advocating for a more nuanced understanding of individual experiences.

Rutherford shares personal anecdotes from her therapy practice, including the story of a patient named Natalie, to illustrate the potentially life-threatening nature of unrecognized hidden depression. The talk stresses the importance of creating a culture where expressing feelings of despair and vulnerability is not seen as shameful but as a step towards healthy self-acceptance. Rutherford’s ultimate message is the need for greater awareness and understanding of perfectly hidden depression in order to provide appropriate support and prevent tragic outcomes.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Let me tell you about Natalie. Natalie came into therapy almost apologetically. She giggled as she told me about what sounded like panic disorder, her heart racing, difficulty breathing. Maybe she wanted to run out of the room when she felt pressured.

Otherwise, she was very successful. She had friends galore, a good marriage, and she loved her kids. She said, “My life’s almost perfect. I just need to calm down.”

Recognizing Hidden Struggles

I’ve been a therapist for about eight years when I saw her and I thought, “You know, this is a pretty common anxiety disorder. I need to help her find out what’s making her anxious and what she can do about it.” But one afternoon, I got a call from her husband, Jeff, and he said, “Something’s wrong. I got this weird message from Natalie asking me to pick up the kids when I get back into town and take them to her mother’s.”

I thought about our last session and nothing really strange had happened. She’d even said therapy was helping, but I heard Jeff’s tone and my gut said differently. So I listened to it and I drove to their home and let myself in with the garage code that Jeff had given me. I walk into the kitchen, I see recently washed dishes and towels neatly folded by the sink.

There is no sound, just silence. I started calling Natalie’s name, hoping that she’d come around the corner, being embarrassed that she’d have another panic attack and wanting to know why and how I was getting in her house. But instead, I found her lying in bed, an empty vodka bottle and several stray pills laying on the table. I called 911 with her saying, “Oh don’t call, I’m fine.”

When the paramedics rushed her out, I just stood there, stunned. I’d had no idea that Natalie was suicidal, none. I felt to blame and not to blame. What had I missed?

The Hidden Depths of Perfectionism

What if I had listened to my gut? What if I hadn’t called Jeff back? But the fact remained, I diagnosed her with panic disorder and mild depression because that’s what Natalie had allowed me to see. We all have secrets and it’s not always the secrets themselves that get us into trouble, but the feelings about the secrets that can darken and deepen over time.

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Some of those feelings can be terror, fear, shame, self-loathing, and worse. Unfortunately, many of us learn that it’s not okay, or we’re just never taught that it’s okay to express those feelings, so we deny their existence. On the outside, we’re fine, while on the inside, there can be immense feelings of despair, loneliness, and hopelessness. Natalie had secrets, but it was her secret feelings that nearly killed her.

Can you imagine a world where talking about these secrets is not shameful? Is it possible to create a culture where expressing those feelings is not shameful, but actually can be seen as healthy self-acceptance and even personal strength? Sixteen years and hundreds of patients later, I wrote a blog post. I was describing people like Natalie and what it might be like to live their lives day in and day out.

I just wrote about successful looking people who were hiding their struggles. I didn’t think it was particularly profound, but that post went viral because I had called it and defined it, “Perfectly Hidden Depression.” My email was swamped with messages from people who said, “I have these feelings and no one knows. It’s like they’re in my head.”

The more I wrote and received feedback, I began to understand how trapped people can feel in this cage of rigid emotional control. With fear and shame keeping them terrified of discovery. So I put two and two together and said, “Oh, a perfect seeming life can serve as camouflage.” But there’s an obvious problem.

Challenging the Medical Model of Mental Health

How can we identify that someone needs help if they don’t tell us, feel like they can’t tell us, or don’t know how? For example, let’s say someone like Natalie goes to, makes a tentative trip, maybe goes to the doctor or a clinician’s office. The professional would do what they were taught to do, which would be to assess the presence of mental illness using the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. The DSM, as it’s called, offers internationally recognized psychiatric symptom checklists, some of which are then required to earn a certain diagnosis.

This is based on the medical model of mental illness, which many believe overemphasizes the biological aspects of depression.