121: When Antidepressants Aren’t Enough with Dr. Stuart Eisendrath
Posted: December 23, 2019
“Antidepressants can be life-saving for some people and be very helpful, but unfortunately, they’re not a panacea.”
In this episode, I talk with Dr. Stuart Eisendrath about how to treat depression when the antidepressants just aren’t enough. He walks through the definition of depression and anxiety, how they distort time and how we experience the present moment, and then finally how to align ourselves back to the present moment. Specifically, Dr. Stuart Eisendrath talks about mindfulness-based cognitive therapy, which teaches people a different way to respond to their depressive state, and how to take action in the moment.
Take a listen to learn more about mindfulness practices and cognitive therapy, and how these techniques can shift one’s relationship with depression to finally experience healing.
About Stuart Eisendrath:
Dr. Stuart Eisendrath is the founding Director of the University of California San Francisco Depression Center. He has treated a full range of depressive disorders, from mild to the most severe over the last 40 years using multiple modalities. His lectures on Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for the University of California TV has been viewed over 1.5 million times, and he’s rapidly developing MBCT as a modality for individuals currently in episodes of depression.
Some Questions I Ask:
- What drew you to writing this book? (2:14)
- What is mindfulness and cognitive behavioral therapy? (5:57)
- How does anger play into depression? (19:52)
- How can someone stop the process of rumination? (25:16)
- How does mindfulness-based cognitive therapy affect the brain itself? (37:38)
- What some first steps people can take to bring mindfulness into their life? (39:26)
- What alternatives Dr. Stuart Eisendrath uses to treat depression and anxiety. (3:45)
- How to change your relationship to cumbersome depressive thoughts. (9:38)
- The key to shifting out of a depressive state. (14:31)
- How to use the RAIN technique to decenter from the anger that coincides with depression. (21:16)
- How Dr. Stuart Eisendrath’s personal experience with depression has informed in his work. (30:43)
- How to prevent relapses of depression without continued use of medication. (34:34)