logo
I was a high-functioning depressive – take this quiz to find out if you are too

I was a high-functioning depressive – take this quiz to find out if you are too

Telegraph12-05-2025

On paper, Dr Judith Joseph's life had never been going so well.
During the Covid pandemic her psychiatric research lab was the only one in the building which had been allowed to remain open, so important was her work on helping people cope with the effects of the pandemic. She'd just received an offer to join an elite female medical board at Columbia University, her Ivy league alma mater, from which she had graduated with honours. The psychiatry practice she had built was so well-respected she was invited to give talks about coping with the lockdowns. She was a regular expert speaker on high-profile television programmes, The Today Show and Oprah Daily. At home, she was happily married and had just welcomed a daughter.
Yet one night, sitting alone in her glossy office in Manhattan, Dr Joseph, now 44, had her head in her hands and the admission came bubbling out of her: ' I'm depressed.'
'For me to admit I was depressed was initially a feeling of shame,' Dr Joseph says. 'I thought 'How did this happen? How did this sneak up on me? I'm a psychiatrist and should have known better than to let myself get here. I come from a history of scarcity, from the Caribbean to the US, where we didn't have very much and I felt like I was letting everyone down; like admitting I was depressed was somehow saying that I couldn't handle it.'
Yet what Dr Joseph was going through didn't fit the typical definition of depression.
'Clinical depression is characterised by low mood, anhedonia (the lack of ability to feel joy), low concentration, changes in sleep, changes in appetite, low energy, physical agitation or sluggishness, and sometimes suicidal thoughts,' she explains. 'But the key thing is that those symptoms have impaired your functioning.
'I was experiencing all the symptoms, but I wasn't losing function,' she says. 'In fact, I was coping with those symptoms by becoming overly-productive. I felt empty when I wasn't busy. I took on other projects to avoid having to sit still with my thoughts.' Post-lockdown, she separated from her husband.
As she began to research her condition, Dr Joseph discovered people online were using the term 'high-functioning depression' to describe similar feelings and soon stumbled upon a hidden world of people suffering in silence.
'I began to wonder, how many people were like me – appearing fine on the outside but wearing a mask of pathological productivity and busying themselves, being the rock, being the entrepreneur, being the parent, in spite of what's happening on the inside?' she wondered.
Dr Joseph began to create social media videos about the concept, hoping a handful of fellow psychiatrists might be interested, but soon 'millions of people were responding, telling me they were going through the same thing. That was when I knew I was onto something'.
Though high-functioning depression has similarities with workplace burnout, the conditions are distinct. ' Burnout is where work causes people to feel unmotivated, irritable, with low-energy, mentally exhausted,' she explains. 'High functioning depression is the opposite: people feel internal stress and work extra hard to distract themselves from it. Even if you remove the person from the workplace, they're doing something on the weekend, they're taking on other people's problems, they have a packed social schedule, they're cleaning obsessively, they're keeping their brains busy by doom-scrolling. Being busy is how they avoid the problem.'
In her research Dr Joseph sees three outcomes for untreated high-functioning depression: clinical depression, physical stress, or people's lives coming apart because of their inability to cope.
'There is the case where someone looks put together and happy, but they fall into a period of hopelessness or even die by suicide,' she says. 'In those who don't dip into clinical depression, their bodies give out. They get diagnosed with odd autoimmune conditions or out of control blood pressure, because the mind-body connection is overwhelmed. The third outcome is people trying to find other ways to run from their pain: I see substance abuse, excessive gambling, obsession with technology; anything to stay busy.' All of this in high-achieving, professional clients or students.
In her new book on the subject, High Functioning: Overcome Your Hidden Depression and Reclaim Your Joy, Dr Joseph says: 'Most people with high-functioning depression don't realise they have it. They're not aware that the joy has been removed from their life.'
There are many reasons why we may resist the label of high-functioning depression.
One is our cultural norms. In the UK, manners encourage us to prioritise the happiness of others over our own, leading to us create even more stress for ourselves in our bid to help others.
'With the good manners which are so highly prized in the UK, people-pleasing is normalised and celebrated. If you're bending over backwards and constantly being told your joy doesn't matter as much as someone else's, you end up feeling a lack of joy in life and become overwhelmed.'
High-functioning individuals facing this depression find it difficult to step away from the things that are causing it. 'Those who have trauma put themselves back into traumatising situations,' says Dr Joseph. 'It's our brain's way of trying to control the situation and prevent the same outcome: combat veterans who sign up for additional tours of duty, people who have sexual traumas who throw themselves into chaotic relationships, people who are overloaded at work take on additional work to prove they can handle it.'
But if we're so used to high-functioning depression that we can't even realise it, is this just another example of medicalising, or putting yet another mental health label on something that many of us go through?
'I hear that a lot, but feeling joyless all the time is not normal,' asserts Dr Joseph. 'People think happiness is an ideal and it's not, it is vital to our ability to live. We were built with the DNA for joy: there's a reason we have dopamine [a chemical which incites feelings of happiness] in our brains, you are supposed to get pleasure from life.
'So much research shows that being joyful leads to better health outcomes, better salaries, better relationships. It's up to you: you can say that joy isn't important but science begs to differ.'
Five years since Dr Joseph admitted to struggling with high-functioning depression, she says her life has changed beyond all recognition. Instead of overloading herself with more projects to cancel out her fear of failure, she has focused her energy back to helping others and feels a joy she hasn't experienced in decades. In 2023, she received a Congressional Proclamation from the US house of representatives for her social media advocacy and research in mental health and has given talks on high-functioning depression at the White House, Ivy League universities and Fortune 500 companies across the US and Europe.
'I want people to know that they have the capacity to increase the amount of joy in their lives,' she says. 'If you deal with your high-functioning depression, everyone will feel it.'
High functioning depression: How to break the cycle
High-functioning depression is a behavioural pattern, asserts Dr Joseph, and like all behavioural patterns it can be broken. To do that, she recommends following 'the five Vs'.
1. Validation
Acknowledging and accepting how you feel. For me, that was when I admitted to myself I was depressed. I'd pushed out those feelings for a long time and when I did that I pushed out my ability to feel joy.
2. Venting
Expressing how you feel. Talk to someone, write things in a journal, make art, or even cry.
3. Values
I wanted to become a doctor due to my love for patients. Over time I lost sight of those values and my motivation became 'not failing'. Think about your values and remind yourself of why you're functioning so highly.
4. Vitals
Sleep, nutrition, movement, but also your relationship to technology (are you doom-scrolling all the time and sapping your energy?); relationships to other people (are you prioritising others over yourself?), and work-life balance – people with high-functioning depression have a hard time separating their work role from who they are personally.
5. Vision
How do you plan things that make you happy? Make the time to celebrate your wins, instead of always being onto the next thing. It's important to acknowledge when you do things that you're proud of: that gives you a natural dopamine hit. Celebrate these wins and plan joy in the future otherwise it won't happen.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kara Tointon: Why I had a double mastectomy at 39
Kara Tointon: Why I had a double mastectomy at 39

Times

time2 hours ago

  • Times

Kara Tointon: Why I had a double mastectomy at 39

Last year I made one of the biggest decisions of my life. I chose to have a double mastectomy and have my fallopian tubes removed. I didn't have cancer, but my decision was driven by it. Six years ago, my mother, Carol, underwent chemotherapy for ovarian cancer. During that time, she was tested for the BRCA1 and 2 gene alterations, which put you at greater risk of breast and ovarian cancers, because we know they run in our family. It was suggested that my sister, Hannah, and I also take a test. We did so in our own time, when we felt ready. My result came back positive. Hannah's, thankfully, came back negative. She had convinced herself that we would enter the process together and so it took a moment for her to be able to talk about it, but she has been a rock for me and has been with me every step of the way. Finding out about the gene alteration gave us all a clarity and an explanation of the generations of women we'd lost in my family, all too early, to cancer. My mum had lost her mother to cancer at the age of 13. In 2002, my Auntie June died lost a ten-year battle to both ovarian and breast cancer and in 2019, two and a half years after her initial diagnosis and three months after my first son, Frey, was born, cancer claimed Mum's life too. For the next five years after my test I was put under 'surveillance' — I had mammograms and MRIs once per year. Doctors had told me about the option of having a mastectomy when I first took the BRCA alteration test in 2018, but I was hoping to have a second child before I went through any major surgery. The first scan showed a benign lump. When tested, this wasn't cancerous, but the risk suddenly felt a lot more real. When these lumps showed up again in a few more scans, it was enough to convince me that I wanted the double mastectomy. The process was surprisingly straightforward. After attending various meetings where everything was explained to me, I waited for the date of surgery. In April last year, I went into the Royal Marsden hospital for one night and returned home the next day with drainage tubes, two mesh layers under my skin where my breasts used to be, and implants underneath. The procedure usually takes up to three hours. My surgeon told me that, although some patients' are able to use fat from their abdomen and buttocks to reconstruct, this wasn't an option for me at this time, hence us choosing implants. Within a few weeks I was up and about; within two months I was able to lift things. The operation did take a mental toll — I found myself surprisingly tired for about three months, but to a certain extent that was overridden by the overwhelming sense of relief. I still have some procedures to complete but I'm very happy with the results and the decision I've made. Five months later, when I had just turned 40, I had a second surgery to remove my fallopian tubes, which reduced my risk of ovarian cancer without me needing to go into an early menopause. When I am closer to a natural menopause, I will have my ovaries removed to further reduce my risk. The procedure and my recovery was relatively quick, and again I only spent one night in hospital. One of the biggest fears people have around this type of surgery is the physical scars it leaves and, while I do have those, I don't worry about them. How you look becomes far less of a concern when you've seen your body heal from two potentially life-saving operations. I now live a peaceful life in Sogne, southern Norway, with my partner, Marius, and our two sons, but I hope I can use my experience to spread awareness of the tests and operations that can help defend against breast and ovarian cancer. Many people are afraid to speak about cancer; Mum certainly was. My childhood growing up in the picturesque Westcliff-on-Sea in Essex was joyful and I'm lucky to have such a close family, but there was one thing Mum would never speak about: her health. For me, speaking about my procedures with other women and hearing their stories makes me feel less alone. That's why I decided to share my experience on Instagram last month. I'd seen a video on my feed of somebody else sharing theirs and it gave me such comfort. At first I felt nervous posting something so personal, but the kind messages I received from other women, many of them going through the same thing, really moved me. Having the BRCA alteration test and preventive surgery is a personal decision and one with many different considerations, but it was the right one for me. I was able to take back some autonomy — cancer once dominated my family but I feel like I am no longer controlled by it. I will always grieve that more treatment options were not available to my mum, but I know that she would want me to give other women a message: don't ignore your body; confronting your health head-on could save your life. Kara is an ambassador for The Eve Appeal — the leading gynaecological cancers charity, which funds research and raises awareness for the prevention and earlier diagnosis of all gynae cancers. You can find information on BRCA gene alterations, genetic testing and preventive options at

Futurist who predicted the iPhone reveals date humans will cheat death
Futurist who predicted the iPhone reveals date humans will cheat death

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Futurist who predicted the iPhone reveals date humans will cheat death

A leading futurist who accurately predicted the rise of the iPhone has now set the date for humanity's most phenomenal breakthrough yet, the ability to cheat death. Ray Kurzweil, a former Google engineering director, has long been known for his bold predictions about the future of technology and humanity. His forecasts often focus on the convergence of biotech, AI, and nanotechnology to radically extend human capabilities. Now, Kurzweil claims humanity is just four years away from its most transformative leap yet, achieving 'longevity escape velocity' by 2029. While some experts remain skeptical, Kurzweil's influence in Silicon Valley ensures his predictions continue to shape the broader conversation around life extension and the future of human health. Longevity escape velocity (LEV) is a hypothetical scenario where the rate of medical advancement outpaces the aging process, leading to an ever-increasing life expectancy. Kurzweil believes that threshold is within reach because of recent exponential growth in the fields of line gene editing, mRNA vaccines, drug discovery led by artificial intelligence, and synthetic biology. He pointed to the development of COVID-19 vaccines as proof of humanity's rapid progress. 'We got the COVID vaccine out in 10 months,' he said in an interview with Bessemer Venture Partners. 'It took two days to create it. Because we sequenced through several billion different sequences in two days,' Kurzweil added. The controversial idea has long stirred debate in tech and scientific circles, with many gerontologists and longevity experts warning that the science is not yet close to achieving such a feat. In recent study, researchers noted that while some treatments have extended lifespan in animals, translating those results to humans remains a major challenge. Others, like Charles Brenner, a biochemist at City of Hope National Medical Center known as a 'longevity skeptic,' have cautioned against the hype surrounding claims of defeating aging and life-extension theories. We can't stop aging, he told the crowd. We can not use longevity genes to stay young because getting older is a fundamental property of life. But Kurzweil insists the world is on the verge of achieving it, pointing to exponential advances in AI, nanotechnology, and regenerative medicine as indicators that 'longevity escape velocity' could be reached within the decade. The concept hinges on cutting edge medicine becoming universally accessible, something many experts warn is far from guaranteed. While it does not promise immortality, it does suggest that death from old age could be delayed indefinitely, as technology advances over time. 'There's many other advances happening,' Kurzweil said. 'We're starting to see simulated biology being used and that's one of the reasons that we're going to make so much progress in the next five years.' Kurzweil has built a career on predicting the future, with many of his past forecasts coming true during the exact year he stated it would happen. He correctly foresaw the rise of portable computing in the 1990s, predicted the internet boom in the mid-1990s, and a computer would defeat a chess grandmaster by 1997. A milestone reached when IBM's Deep Blue defeated Garry Kasparov that year. Still, critics argue that forecasting a future without death, is far more complex than spotting tech trends. Venki Ramakrishnan, a Nobel Prize winning biologist, explained in his book ' ' that aging happens because of many connected biological factors, not just one cause. This makes it a very complex problem. Unlike technology, which usually improves in clear and predictable steps, the process of aging is much harder to understand and predict. Even if longevity escape velocity is technically possible by 2029, experts warn that widespread access could be limited by socioeconomic and ethical challenges. The technology needed to extend life in this way, such as genetic reprogramming, precision medicine, or nanobots, is expensive and still largely experimental. Medical advancements have significantly improved life expectancies, but achieving longevity escape velocity is not the same as achieving immortality. Kurzweil acknowledged that broad adoption is a massive hurdle. 'This doesn't mean you're going to live forever. A 10-year-old might have decades of potential, but they could still die tomorrow,' he said. There are limits. Randomness still plays a role. Cancer, for example, isn't a single disease but hundreds of mutations with no universal cure. While self-driving cars may reduce accidents, they won't eliminate them. Equally concerning is the disparity in global health care. Diseases like tuberculosis, which has a known cure, still kill more than a million people annually because treatments are unevenly distributed. The last few years have seen major breakthroughs in life-extension science. mRNA technology is now being adapted for cancer vaccines. CRISPR gene editing is being used in clinical trials to treat hereditary blindness and sickle cell disease. Meanwhile, researchers are growing entire organs in labs and experimenting with reversing aging in mice using cellular reprogramming techniques. AI is also accelerating biology. DeepMind's AlphaFold project solved one of biology's biggest puzzles, predicting how proteins fold in a feat that could revolutionize drug discovery. These advances are what Kurzweil cites as evidence that the human clock may soon start ticking backwards. Still, the idea of LEV captures something deeper, a human desire to defy mortality, to stay a step ahead of the inevitable. Kurzweil is not promising a magic pill or overnight change. He is predicting a tipping point in the near future, when medical progress starts to outpace aging in small, accumulating ways. If his timeline holds true, the early 2030s could mark the beginning of a very different relationship with aging, one in which dying of old age is no longer an assumed endpoint.

EXCLUSIVE Hidden link between cancer and guilty pleasures every American secretly indulges in
EXCLUSIVE Hidden link between cancer and guilty pleasures every American secretly indulges in

Daily Mail​

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Hidden link between cancer and guilty pleasures every American secretly indulges in

A sip of wine. A craving for pizza. A full calendar. These may seem like harmless aspects of life - but a scientist has revealed how they could be putting you on the brink of developing cancer. Dr Raphael Cuomo, a University of California, San Diego medical professor, claims chronic stress, fast food and alcohol and drugs are a near-surefire way to set yourself up for a cancer diagnosis later in life. In his new book, Crave: The Hidden Biology of Addiction and Cancer, the expert noted that the body's repetitive desire to indulge in junk food and addictive behaviors drives the body to the deadly condition. The professor told 'Crave reveals how modern habits like vaping, binge-eating, and daily cannabis use hijack our biology. 'These behaviors quietly damage the body's ability to repair itself. Over time, they open the door to cancer. It is not about genetics or bad luck. It is about the choices we make every day.' Over 600,000 Americans and more than 150,000 Brits die of various cancers every year. As of 2025, The American Cancer Society estimates there are over 2million new cancer cases diagnosed annually. After studying 'millions of patient records' from across the University of California hospitals and spending months reviewing studies on cancer biology, Dr Cuomo revealed what he says are the top habits most likely to cause cancer. Fast food The expert called eating fast food 'slow poison' - noting that its effects cannot be seen immediately but can cause long-term damage. Earlier this year, researchers tested more than 300 foods sold at restaurant chains and in grocery stores across America for two microscopic toxins that have been linked to cancer, infertility and autism. They found that of all fast food restaurants, the salad chain Sweetgreen and Starbucks scored poorest. Sweetgreen's Chicken Pesto Parm Salad and Starbucks' matcha latte was found to contain the highest amount of phthalates, a group of chemicals used to make plastics more flexible and transparent. Phthalates are commonly used in food packaging materials and studies have shown they imitate the body's hormones and interfere with the production of - and response to - natural hormones like estrogen and testosterone. Some phthalates have been linked to certain cancers, particularly breast cancer and lymphoma. However, Dr Cuomo pointed towards fiber consumption as a critical part of reversing damage as it can help improve gut bacteria, reduce inflammation and keep cells healthy. Smoking and drinking Smoking causes about 30 percent of overall cancer deaths in the US and is a leading cause of lung, brain, neck and bladder cancer. Alcohol consumption has been linked to an increased risk of several types of cancer, including breast, colon, liver and esophageal cancer. About 20,000 people die of alcohol-related cancers annually. Researchers in Germany found that a combination of drinking and smoking significantly raises the risk of colon cancer in young Americans. They analyzed two dozen studies comparing regular drinkers and smokers to people who abstained from both. Just 100 cigarettes in a person's lifetime - the equivalent of one per week for two years - was linked to a 59 percent higher risk of colon cancer compared to people who have never smoked. They also found drinking alcohol every day raised the risk of developing early-onset colon cancer by 39 percent, even if it's just one or two drinks per day. Alcohol and smoking have both been linked to cancer in the past, as they release chemicals that destroy DNA and cause cells to mutate. And each can of beer or glass of wine per day further increased the chance by an additional two percent. In his book, the professor noted that deep sleep is the 'most underestimated tool' to improve damage caused by addictions, such as smoking and drinking. He explained that during consistent deep sleep, the body performs critical tasks such as repairing tissues, regulating hormones, consolidating memory and clearing metabolic waste. Stress A 2024 study presented at the United European Gastroenterology Week by a group of Chinese researchers noted that a combination of chronic stress and anxiety has been linked to colorectal cancer in young people. They explained when a body is under frequent stress, a number of healthy bacteria that live in the gut start dying off, making it easier for cancer to move in. When these bacteria die off, tumors grow more quickly, leading to more aggressive, rapidly growing colorectal cancers. Research from Trinity College in Ireland has suggested these bacteria support the body's immune system, can protect against virus and bacteria and prevent damage in gut cells. Apart from this, chronic stress can lead to increased levels of cortisol and other stress hormones in the body that can promote cancer growth and its spread to various parts of the body. A constant state of stress can also weaken the immune system's ability to effectively fight off cancer cells. However, Dr Cuomo believes that there are ways to break free from all addictions and prevent cancer development in the body. He told 'The real threat is not a single cocktail or slice of cake. It is the craving that drives you back again and again. 'That craving is what wears down your body's defenses. I tell people to test their control. 'Start with one week of abstention. Not forever. Just seven days. That short reset reveals a lot. 'You learn what your body depends on. During that time, focus on physical recovery. Sleep deeply. Move your body. Eat real food. 'Spend time with people you trust. Addiction thrives in isolation. Recovery begins with reconnection.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store