July 20, 2020
Human rejection, a sense of worthlessness, and an introspective struggle with the central questions – Who am I? Why was I created? What is the meaning of life? – drove Frankenstein’s monster on a murderous rampage. Though the monster may simply be a work of fiction, its same issues are helping foment increasing mental health crises in this country, crises that have no physiological basis but can lead to hopelessness, depression and, particularly among the young, even suicide.
American psychiatrist Irvin Yalom refers to this angst as “existential anxiety” or “existential crisis.” In his book Existential Psychotherapy, he outlines four major life concerns – fear of death, freedom, isolation, and meaninglessness — that can create anxiousness especially among seriously ill patients, the aged and intellectually gifted children and adults who look beyond the concrete and grapple with questions for which there are oftentimes no answers.
Death, of course, is inevitable, and, if inevitable, why are we here, a person might muse. Freedom, as defined by Yalom and colleagues, is the absence of structure, making it the individual’s responsibility to create the necessary rules and guidelines by which to live. An existence that has a definitive termination without structure can promote feelings of isolation from others – an inability and lack of desire to get socially close — and a strong sense of meaninglessness. So, what is the point of being alive?
Experts say an existential crisis occurs when questions of death and life’s meaning become so overwhelming that they prompt a personal conflict, resulting in stress and anxiety. Indeed, in gifted children and adolescents, existential crises can be common. That is because gifted children have unique cognitive, social, and emotional traits that make them “deep thinkers,” with an acute sensitivity to issues in the world around them. They demonstrate strong reasoning skills, question their own roles in society and the behavior of others, are frightened by the seemingly limitless and divergent life choices, have a sense they are “different,” and tend to withdraw from normal social interactions.
The larger questions about life and death have no answers, and those who find themselves in an existential crisis must determine ways of getting past it. Ultimately, most do. But, among some, this existential questioning not only can lead to dark despair and depression but also foster suicidal ideation. Statistics released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention just a couple of years ago showed the suicide rate up about 25 percent since 1999, with suicide being the second leading cause of death among college students.
Symptoms of existential depression include feelings of disconnectedness; intense, unhealthy anxiety about world issues; increasing isolation from others; lack of motivation; and withdrawal from activities that were once a source of excitement and joy. Patients are just going through the motions. The disorder may be difficult to diagnose but approaches like psychoeducation can help one not only survive it but, perhaps, experience what some experts define as the Greek “metanoia” – a transformation of mind and heart, even a conversion of one’s life purposes. “Depression is not merely an inopportune ‘disease.’ Sometimes it is an opportunity that allows us a new and more authentic view of existence,” writes Lodovico Berra in an article in the March 2019 issue of the Journal of Humanistic Psychology. Beyond life circumstances, and psychology, it is worthwhile noting that some seemingly “existential, depression,” may fundamentally be a true depression – with a biological and hereditary basis.
With such words in mind, here are some tips for navigating through an existential crisis:
©2024 Angelina H. Rodriguez, Ph.D., LPC-AT/S, ATR-BC
4747 Bellaire Blvd., Ste. 545, Bellaire, Texas 77401 | Call 832-986-8477
Office Hours: MON - FRI 9:00 am to 6:00 pm
Privacy Policy | Site Map
Leave a Reply