No depression but former gambler here... Gambling is a quick reward (produced by) and for the brain, even when you loose. It is not always about money. This video is the closest thing I found to properly explained what was going on :
you are probably smart, know the odds are against you, but like any other drug, want/need that quick fix. I am no brain scientist, but I would guess that the drug induced gambling manage to mask your depression temporarily... but the down after a loss makes you go even lower.
I managed to quit gambling when I realized that what I had to loose (in life) was greater than any chance of winning. So think about the things that are already making you a winner, find some other drug inducing activity less nefarious (but also less rewarding) (exercice, coding whatever) and do not hesitate to see a psychologist and perhaps meds if needed.
I would tell you you can message me privately, but did not figured how to do that on HN yet...
Find a professional to help. Well-meaning people on HN can give you support and compassion, which you need and deserve, but not advice. You wouldn't ask amateurs about fixing a broken bone; this is much more important.
A well-meaning perspective, informed by reading professionals: Damaging habits are driven by healthy, legitimate needs; the habits are just bad coping strategies, usually chosen without realizing what the need was. Become concious of the need, have compassion and love for it, and find healthy ways to cope instead of gambling. The need isn't going anywhere but if you take good care of it, it will be fine. Think of it like a child: If the child is tired and hungry and acting out, you can feed it candy bars, you can yell at it, or you can care for it, give it a healthy meal in a safe place, give it love and peace to sleep. You would be aghast at someone who treated the child with candy bars and abuse; that's what bad coping strategies are.
When you're in the hole, the hardest thing to realize is that you're there, so you've already made a huge step forward.
I know it sounds cliche, but have you sought professional help? Therapy and/or a combination of the right medication can go a long way make at least some of the immediate symptoms manageable overnight...
Thanks for the "step forward" comment. I want to get better. I haven't put serious effort into professional help, so that's on my NY resolution list for next week. I have a mental health program available to me from my employer, so I want to try that out and see what it might bring for me.
Addiction is a form of cyclic preferences... you love/crave/indulge X then you hate/feel-the-repercussions-of X then you love/crave it again, over and over.
Often the X is not quite what you think it is. It's not the alcohol, but the joy of going out and having a wild night and losing control and escaping from the voices that haunt you. Or you might be addicted in a sense to food, eating it because you want to feel something during a dull or pained existence.
Hard drug addicts report that they started using the hard drugs to feel special, but then they had to take them to feel normal... The fallacy is, the body, including your brain, does not have high-water marks—fixed notches in its chemical feedback loops saying “that is okay, but if it goes over this level then that will be too much.” No, the body adjusts what it thinks is normal based on what it normally sees. Every moment you spend above the high-water mark, the body adjusts the high-water mark upwards.
Good addiction recovery protocols, even 12-step, do not rely on self-control. You should also not rely on self-control. It's like being tired while driving, the faculty that monitors the problem is being impaired by the problem. “I’ve got this!” you say as you nod off. You need to build a wall that would actually be harder to climb over. “Don't even buy the sweets—when you crave chocolate you should be faced with the dilemma, I could go all the way to the store, or I could eat a banana right now.” It sounds like nothing, going to the store is such a little thing... but that is often enough. Delete accounts. Delete credit card numbers from your phone and browser. Lock cards up in a physical box and put the key on the other side of the house.
But most importantly, understand your pain. Seasons change in life. Every change of seasons requires grieving the outgoing one before you can celebrate the incoming one. Have you properly grieved? Have you given yourself space? Can you talk to yourself like you would to a ten-year-old? No “I’m so awful, I’m so stupid”—you wouldn't say that to a kid who made mistakes!—but just “hey, that sucks, we are gonna fix this together, I have your back.” Understand that you are probably gambling to feel things... find happier things to feel. “I love getting out with fresh air... Whenever I feel those urges, maybe I can get out into the fresh air first.”
Be especially suspicious of people and places that can pull you back in. One of the biggest things that 12-step programs do is give you friends who are outside of that scene that you were in. People who understand and aren't judgy, but who somehow still you don't want to disappoint. It's not too late to build up community around yourself, or at least to find it. Old friends, neighbors, coworkers... even like some folks playing D&D weekly! Some weekly routine that is just for you and speaks to your deeper connection to community. Be very suspicious if there are others in your life who “can't believe you're spending time with them instead of me!”—if that happens you are in codependency and you need that external community in those boundaries more than you can possibly imagine right now.
Sorry. This is like my second long rant on HN, I probably need to take a break...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNWz8rcQtSI&feature=related (non-gamblers may look at this video and not understand at all)
you are probably smart, know the odds are against you, but like any other drug, want/need that quick fix. I am no brain scientist, but I would guess that the drug induced gambling manage to mask your depression temporarily... but the down after a loss makes you go even lower.
I managed to quit gambling when I realized that what I had to loose (in life) was greater than any chance of winning. So think about the things that are already making you a winner, find some other drug inducing activity less nefarious (but also less rewarding) (exercice, coding whatever) and do not hesitate to see a psychologist and perhaps meds if needed.
I would tell you you can message me privately, but did not figured how to do that on HN yet...