| IMPACT ON THE COMMUNITY While many
manage to function at some level of competence, their difficulties
"connecting" and "attending to task" often
limit them to minimum-wage positions although they may, under
normal circumstances, be highly competent workers.
Heddi reports that her income dropped from nearly $3,000 per
month to less than $800 a month while she was working much longer
hours. A significant number of others have found themselves homeless.
Evidence of this can be seen at the DuPage PADS site, where a
striking number of clients are middle-management professionals
who have lost their jobs.
The June 1995 county reports indicate that there are just over
884,000 people in DuPage County. Of those, the Labor force in
DuPage numbers 492,169. If we calculate just 15% of those and
figured that 73,800 people lost just $10,000 in earnings during
the course of a year due to depression we're talking about the
kind of losses that would be considered intolerable in business.
It's a vicious cycle. Stress, illness or financial difficulties
strike sapping the individual and breeding a sense of hopelessness
which aggravates the situation. Meanwhile, the sufferer must cope
with others who are frequently equally depressed and stressed
with their own problems. At the same time they have to deal with
others who haven't the foggiest clue about what severe depression
does to a person. In all cases misunderstanding and the inability
to communicate the real pain lead to further hopelessness.
Stress continues to build in today's society where people dealing
with stressful situations attempt to find solutions. When people
dealing with any kind of stress or depression try to resolve difficulties
or get answers to problems and get trapped into voice mail and
mechanical phone menus or are put on waiting lists. When they
feel treated like number, taken advantage of or overwhelmed constantly
by circumstances they can't change, depression mounts.
In a society where both parents in a dual income family may hold
down two or more jobs just to keep the bills paid, a person's
value is equated with how much money they bring into the household
rather than unconditional love and appreciation. One, or both,
can slip easily into depression. The situation is much worse for
single heads of households.
Barbara Hayes, a Family Service DuPage Licensed Clinical Social
Worker, believes that "role strain" is a major contributing
factor in the higher incidence of depression in women. Not only
are women parenting or grandparenting a younger generation, while,
frequently caring for elderly parents; but, they are also required
to cope with the challenges of maintaining a certain level of
career growth in an uncertain economy -- frequently as sole support
of their entire family structure. To meet the demands of each
of these roles, a woman must maintain an exterior facade of strength.
For many there is precious little time for attending to personal
needs. All too frequently, functioning on far too little sleep
and nutritious food, they cave in.
Meanwhile, the media, particularly women's magazines, focus on
introspection, self analysis, poise and youthful figures, mounting
anxiety, anger and insecurities. At the same time they juxtapose
these weaknesses that turn us inward upon ourselves, with idealistic
reports of the affluent life that many of the population will
never achieve.
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