So you know how people are always all “would you rather be smart and unhappy or stupid and happy?” And of course you’re a genius so you’re like “I’d rather be smart and happy,” thereby answering a question that is incredibly stupid, because really, who the fuck wouldn’t take all the awesome when answering a bullshit hypothetical.
Thing is, that sometimes you really do have to choose between analytical intelligence and the alleviation of your misery. Depression hijacks critical thinking powers and uses them as a cudgel to slice and dice your psyche as well as those of other people. If you want to manage your depression and heal some of those misery wounds, there may come a time when you are truly faced with the question of whether to tune out some of your special judgmental powers. At least for a period of time. Is it worth it? And if you do relinquish some of your critical thinking, can you ever get it back or will you become one of those stupid happy people who block everything out and don’t notice the suffering of paunchy pandas or kitten genocides? Can you really give up your misery if it means sacrificing a part of your mind, and in particular, the part that makes you so critically clever?
While the easy answer is “fuck yes if it means that you aren’t in excruciating pain every fucking moment,” the less easy answer is that it really depends on what you want. There have always been people who saw pain as a necessary burden in order to see the world a certain way, and to preserve a particular viewpoint. Sometimes these people become famous authors or artists or political people or sciencey thinkers. And sometimes they just become anonymous depressed people who find value in their misery.
You may want to be like that. Or you may want to do whatever it takes to alleviate the pain. You might be willing to literally castrate your intellectual prowess for the sake of a little bit of happiness. You might think that it’s not a sacrifice at all, since you didn’t really want those judgment abilities in the first place. And of course, you might choose to experiment and just see what happens when you mellow out a bit of your mind. You may choose to intentionally ignore or accept the negative things in order to highlight the positive. And later you may choose to make yourself miserable again because you missed the pain, and the magic analytical capabilities that it encouraged.
Regardless, there will always be parts of your mind that remain sharp whether your whetting them with pain or contentment. Critical thinking may be honed by misery, but there are other parts of you that are honed by not misery. Social skills. An ability to see the whole picture. And all the mathy, sciencey, history, arty, sexy, languagey knowledge that you’ve acquired is still up there in your head whether your miserable or not. Actually, since depression can slow you down, a bit of healing may make it easier for you to learn new concepts or for you to better recall what you already know.
So there is always a tradeoff when you become less miserable. And sometimes that means exchanging some critical thinking powers for some learning powers or something else entirely. Whether the exchange is what you want or whether it is worth the effort depends on what you value and who you hope to be. Good thing is that you can always reopen the wounds and trade back for your misery if you don’t like the outcome.
