Lesson 15: Course on Mood-Reactive Depression (Lessons 521-560) · Course Catalog
Symptom characteristics:
The characteristics of mood-reactive depression are "low threshold, strong reaction, and slow recovery": mild stimuli can trigger strong emotional and behavioral consequences, often accompanied by secondary shame and self-blame, and affect relationships and daily functioning.
Course Objectives:
The course follows the principle of "first the back and mind - pause if necessary - take small steps": prioritize stabilizing the threshold of the nervous system (grounding/breathing/energy outlet), then conduct cognitive de-radicalization and relational script training; reduce secondary damage by using boundaries, requests and scenario rehearsals, and form a replicable self-repair mechanism.
- Define "emotionally reactive depression": minor stimuli trigger major reactions, slow recovery, and are accompanied by shame and self-blame.
- Explaining "low threshold - overreaction" from the perspective of neurological susceptibility and learning history.
- Identify mind reading and over-interpretation, and train evidence-based re-evaluation.
- Translate the desire for control into a need for security, and use the concepts of boundaries and requests.
- Practice with delays ranging from one to ten seconds to give the prefrontal cortex time to engage.
- The three-piece set—grounding, rhythmic breathing, and gentle exercise—serves as the default recovery procedure.
- This guide will help you understand the causes and consequences of a sudden surge in emotions, and identify how specific situations, tone of voice, and inner beliefs can collectively trigger an "overreaction."
- Understanding why some people are more sensitive and easily triggered from a personality perspective can help you find coping strategies that better suit your own characteristics.
- It helps you shift from "regretting only after things have already exploded" to "being able to regulate yourself once you start being aware," and practices applying the brakes before emotions escalate.
- Learn not to retaliate immediately when provoked or offended, giving yourself a few seconds to think and make a choice.
- Understanding "high sensitivity" from the perspective of the nervous system and growth experience will help you stop feeling ashamed of your sensitivity and instead learn to cooperate with it.
- This study analyzes "reactive depression," which is easily affected by interpersonal events, and how insecure attachment amplifies feelings of abandonment and despair.
- It helps you become aware of the cycle of "getting hurt once, then getting hurt a second time by your own words and actions," and learns how to stop when necessary.
- It explains how emotional stress can manifest as physical symptoms such as headaches, insomnia, and chest tightness, teaching you to understand emotional load from your body's signals.
- Understand the learning patterns behind "always reacting this way" and learn specific exercises to break free from automatic emotional scripts.
- Train yourself to separate "what happened" from "how I interpret it" to reduce the emotional amplification caused by over-interpretation.
- Understanding the effects of suppressing emotions on the body from the perspectives of sleep, immunity, and chronic fatigue can help you deal with your emotions sooner.
- It helps you process the frustration and anger you feel when misunderstood, and practices responding with clarification and boundaries, rather than attacking or retreating.
- Explore typical reactions to indifference and perfunctory responses, and learn stable strategies that avoid self-deprecation and excessive pursuit of approval.
- Improve your ability to cope with uncomfortable emotions without immediately erupting or escaping through graded exposure, breathing, and self-soothing exercises.
- This teaches you to use a few fixed breathing steps to "slow down" your reaction when your emotions are ignited, giving you time to make better choices.
- Learn to use inner dialogue to soothe yourself, correct extreme thoughts, and transform emotions from "controlling you" to "being able to respond to and guide you."
- It helps you find your true needs behind anger, outbursts, and accusations: to be respected, understood, and seen.
- Practice transforming "Why do you always..." type attacks into expressions like "I feel... I need..." to reduce harm in relationships.
- By expanding the interval between "what I feel" and "what I react" through small exercises, you learn to stop and think first.
- It helps you become familiar with your common emotional signals and early warnings, so that you can hear your inner reminders before they "explode".
- It helps you distinguish between constructive feedback and derogatory attacks, and practices protecting your self-esteem and clarifying the facts without excessive self-blame when you are criticized.
- Focusing on the pattern of "emotional outburst followed by damaged relationships," this course teaches you how to apologize, reflect on the situation, and rebuild your sense of security.
- Through specific case studies, students can transition from "conditioned reflex responses" to a new response of "making choices consciously."
- It provides a concise five-step process to help you gradually slow down, identify, select, and integrate your reactions when emotions are triggered.
- It guides you through mapping out your recurring interpersonal triggers and designs new steps for "early exit" to avoid repeating past mistakes.
- It teaches you how to adjust your pace, reduce stimulation, and set boundaries to protect yourself and your relationships during periods when you are particularly emotionally sensitive.
- It helps you understand how the rational and emotional systems in your brain interact, and learn to balance feelings and reality in critical moments.
- Focusing on high-reaction conflicts in close relationships, we design safer communication agreements and reassurance methods to jointly build channels that can accommodate emotions.
- This article introduces commonly used psychotherapy approaches for reactive depression, helping you understand when you need professional help and possible healing directions.
- It guides you from "desperately trying to control others and the environment" to "learning to regulate your own feelings and reactions," rebuilding your inner sense of control.
- Combining drawing, writing, and simple physical exercises, it provides a non-verbal outlet for emotions, giving intense feelings a place to go.
- It helps you stop seeing strong reactions as "flaws" and instead see the hidden value, boundaries, and growth clues within them.
- The plan outlines several stages, from initial awareness to adjusting responses to stabilizing the new pattern, making long-term practice more focused and rewarding.
- Review the key exercises throughout the course to help you shift from being "led by your emotions" to "being able to guide and embrace your emotions."
- “The ”traditional spiritual mandala” originates from the symbolic expression of inquiries into the order of the universe, the meaning of life, and spirituality.
- Please complete the course evaluation to review your learning and provide suggestions. This will help you deepen your understanding and help us improve the course.
Note: This content is for self-understanding and training purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical diagnosis and emergency treatment. If you experience progressively worsening depression/anger, confusion, or any thoughts of self-harm/suicidal ideation, please contact offline professional and crisis resources immediately.

