How to Use Biology to Avoid Winter Depression
By Phil Dotree, published Oct 03, 2007
Published Content: 405 Total Views: 660,389 Favorited By: 28 CPs
If you have serious seasonal depression, you'll need to see a doctor for medication. However, if you just feel a bit glum during the winter months, there are biological reasons for that--and ways to feel better. Here are three tips for keeping your winters a bit brighter (as you'll see, figuratively and literally).
Get Plenty of Light
One of the main causes of winter depression is the build up of melatonin, the chemical that makes you sleepy. In large doses, it contributes to depression and of course saps your energy.
Melatonin is manufactured by the pineal gland, which is very light-sensitive. If you don't get much light, you produce quite a bit of melatonin. Make sense?
So, if you're feeling laggy and depressed, chances are you could use a bit more light in your life. Take walks at morning and at dusk to avoid the harmful UV rays that the sun emits around noon and avoid wearing sunglasses. If you've got a window in your office, keep the shades up so you can get as much natural daylight as possible. If you can't do that, there are even light boxes made specifically for this purpose. The important thing is just to make sure that your eyes are exposed to a lot of light (without reaching the level of danger, of course--never look directly at the sun, and use some common sense about the region you live in).
Exercise
It's been proven time and time again that exercise is a great cure for depression, but of course it's harder to exercise in the winter than in the summer; get a membership at a gym, though, or bundle up and go out for a run--by oxygenating your body and stretching your muscles (not to mention the additional exposure to daylight mentioned earlier), you'll start to feel better almost immediately. And, once again, exercise fights that nasty melatonin. Neat, huh?
Eat Right
How to Use Biology to Avoid Winter Depression
Winter can be depressing for biological reasons, not just the generally gloomy weather.
Credit: bcnunnery
Copyright: www.sxc.hu
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