Stay Happy: Avoiding Seasonal Affective Disorder

By: Vicki Santillano (View Profile)

The onset of fall brings beautiful foliage, crisp days warmed by hot cider, and holidays celebrating the great pumpkin. Unfortunately, this season’s arrival also means shorter days and therefore fewer daylight hours, which can make everyone a little SAD.

SAD, or seasonal affective disorder, is characterized by feelings of depression or lethargy as a result of infrequent access to light. Symptoms include sadness, weight gain, an inability to focus, constant fatigue, and feeling “under the weather” without a direct cause. Though there isn’t a specific reason for why SAD strikes certain people as the seasons turn darker, there are a few possible instigators. For example, melatonin production rates (a hormone that makes us sleepy) tend to rise in the winter. Serotonin, a mood-elevating hormone, is connected to sunlight—with less sunlight comes a decrease in serotonin, which might cause drops in mood.

Luckily, there are simple steps we can take to avoid SAD. In fact, if we start incorporating the following tips into our daily lives now, before the days become even shorter, perhaps we can avoid the winter blues altogether.

Try Light Therapy
This is the one of the more common treatments for those afflicted with SAD. Individuals are placed in front of boxes that emit bright, fluorescent lights (which can range from 2,500 to 10,000 lux, or level of brightness) for a scheduled amount of time each day. However, those of us trying to avoid the mood disorder rather than eradicate it can try simpler methods, such as being outdoors as much as possible during daylight hours and letting light in through windows. If your daytime hours are confined to a cubicle with no nearby windows, make it a point to spend a few minutes outside or near natural light every hour or so. If your home hosts the same problem, try using brighter light bulbs. Even small bursts of access to the light, which can be as simple as taking a ten-minute walk break, can improve one’s mood.

Sweat It Out
Recently, a study was released claiming that exercise alone does not cure depression. However, doctors have been prescribing exercise as a potential mood booster for years, and there’s no denying that most people feel a little better after a good walk or jog. When we work out, oxygen is pumped into our brains and the result is increased feelings of alertness. Exercise is a great way to wake ourselves up from the tired feelings that come when the days get shorter. When it’s cold and getting darker much earlier, many of us just want to crawl into bed. Instead of reaching for our comforters, we should try reaching for our gym bags. We’ll feel better about ourselves, focus better, get a nice endorphin lift from the adrenaline surge that comes with exercise, and stave off those SAD feelings.

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posted: 10.14.2008
Fran
Good article. My sister suffers from depression and it always gets worse in the winter months. The advice given in this article was similar to what doctors recommended for her.
posted: 10.08.2008
Robin Richter
I am bipolar and don't know if it makes me more susceptible to SAD, but it impacts my life, too. I hope Mark never has the opportunity to understand it. I certainly don't see the identification and treatment of mental illness as people having too much time on their hands.
posted: 10.02.2008
Piglet
As a long time sufferer of depression and the SAD variety as well, I find these types of articles helpful, thank you. I am trying to get through the periods of depression without pharmaceutical intervention and am always on the lookout for prevention measures and remedies that help my body do it on its own. My case is quite severe so doing these things doesn't usually keep it away but it does help to lessen the intensity and the hopelessness. Mark - I'm sorry you feel that giving it a name over complicates the issue but it very much does exist - it's not a new disorder that someone invented - people actually suffer from this and having a name and some suggestions helps those people and hopefully reduces the chances of those people committing suicide. Understanding the disorder is key to saving lives. Stop being so cynical.
posted: 10.02.2008
Mark Roddey
'Twas a simpler time when we just called the seasonal blues "melancholy". Kind of over complicates the issue at hand. Whom ever creates these new disorders has too much time on their hands.
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