Most people have felt sad before. A breakup, a loss, a difficult season at work. Sadness is a normal human emotion, and it passes. Depression does not work that way. If you or someone you love has been living with what feels like a heaviness that will not lift, this article is for you.
Major depressive disorder is one of the most common and most misunderstood mental health conditions in Canada. The myth that it is simply "feeling down" stops people from recognizing it in themselves and from seeking depression treatment that could genuinely change their lives. Our clinical team at Threshold Clinic sees this pattern regularly. People arrive having spent months telling themselves they just need to try harder, sleep more, or push through.
This article explains what depression actually is, how it differs from sadness, what it feels like in the body and mind, and what your real options are for getting help in Canada right now.
Why Depression Is Not Just Sadness
Sadness is an emotion. Depression is a condition. That distinction matters more than most people realize.
Sadness has a cause. It responds to comfort, to time, to connection. It moves. Depression often does not have a single identifiable cause, and it does not reliably respond to the things that normally make people feel better. A beautiful day does not fix it. A kind word helps in the moment but does not shift the underlying weight.
Clinically, major depressive disorder is defined in the DSM-5 as a persistent pattern of symptoms lasting at least two weeks that causes significant distress or impairment in functioning. Feeling sad is only one possible symptom, and many people with depression do not describe their primary experience as sadness at all.
Some describe it as numbness. Some describe it as exhaustion that sleep does not fix. Some describe it as a kind of grey fog that sits between them and everything they used to care about. One of the most disorienting aspects of depression is that it can strip away the ability to feel much of anything, which is why the "just cheer up" response from well-meaning people lands so poorly.
Depression is also not a character flaw or a sign of weakness. It is a medical condition with neurological, genetic and environmental contributors. The Canadian Mental Health Association confirms it is among the leading causes of disability in the country. Recognizing it as a real condition is the first step toward depression treatment that works.
What Depression Actually Feels Like
Because depression is so frequently misrepresented in popular culture, many people do not recognize it in themselves. They expect to feel overtly, visibly sad. Instead, depression can show up in ways that feel confusing or even shameful.
Here is what our clients commonly describe when they first come in for an assessment:
- A persistent sense of emptiness or hopelessness that is hard to explain to others
- Loss of interest in things that used to bring genuine pleasure, including hobbies, friendships and intimacy
- Feeling like everything requires enormous effort, including basic hygiene or making a meal
- Difficulty making decisions, even small ones
- A sense of worthlessness or excessive guilt about things that objectively do not warrant guilt
- Thoughts of death or of not wanting to be here, which may or may not reach the level of active suicidal ideation
- Irritability and frustration that feels out of proportion, particularly in men and younger people
That last point is worth pausing on. Depression in men and adolescents often presents as anger, restlessness or irritability rather than visible sadness. This means it is frequently missed or misattributed to personality. If someone in your life has become short-tempered and withdrawn and is no longer engaging with the things they loved, depression is worth considering.
Many people also experience what clinicians call anhedonia, the loss of the ability to feel pleasure. This is one of the core features of major depressive disorder and one of the most painful. When activities that once felt meaningful, joyful or even just pleasant start to feel hollow, it creates a feedback loop. You stop doing the things that used to help, which reinforces the sense of isolation and hopelessness.
The Physical Side Nobody Talks About
Depression is not purely psychological. It has a significant physical dimension that is still underdiscussed and frequently leads to delays in diagnosis.
The physical symptoms of major depressive disorder can include:
- Persistent fatigue and low energy that does not improve with rest
- Changes in sleep, either sleeping far more than usual or struggling with chronic insomnia
- Changes in appetite or weight, either a significant decrease or an increase
- Psychomotor changes, meaning the body itself feels slowed down or, in some cases, agitated and restless
- Unexplained physical pain, including headaches, back pain, joint aches or digestive problems
- Cognitive slowing, sometimes called "brain fog", difficulty concentrating, remembering things or following a conversation
This physical dimension is important for two reasons. First, many people go to their family doctor with physical complaints and depression is never discussed. Second, dismissing depression as purely emotional overlooks the biological reality of what the condition does to the brain and body.
Research supported by CAMH, the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, consistently reinforces that depression involves changes in brain chemistry, inflammatory markers and the body's stress response systems. Calling it "just in your head" is not only unkind but clinically inaccurate.
If you have been dealing with unexplained fatigue, chronic pain or persistent sleep disruption, and no physical cause has been found, it is worth speaking with a mental health professional about whether depression may be a contributing factor.
How Depression Disrupts Daily Life
One of the clinical criteria for a depression diagnosis is that symptoms cause meaningful impairment in functioning. This is the part that often surprises people who have been quietly struggling.
Functional impairment from depression can look like:
- Calling in sick repeatedly or underperforming at work despite caring about the job
- Withdrawing from friendships and family without being able to fully explain why
- Neglecting responsibilities around the home, finances or healthcare
- Being physically present in relationships but emotionally absent
- Struggling to complete tasks that used to feel straightforward
A common pattern we see at Threshold Clinic is what might be called "high-functioning depression." These are individuals who appear to be managing from the outside but are running on empty. They get to work, they meet their deadlines, they show up to events. Inside, the effort required to maintain that performance is enormous, and it is unsustainable.
High-functioning depression does not mean the condition is mild. It means the person has developed strong coping strategies that mask the symptoms, often at great personal cost. Exhaustion, isolation and a quiet sense of despair often sit just below the surface.
Depression treatment is appropriate and beneficial at any level of severity. You do not need to be in crisis to deserve support.
Depression Treatment Beyond Medication
When people think of depression treatment, medication is often the first thing that comes to mind. Antidepressants can be highly effective for many people, and there is no shame in using them. A conversation with your family doctor or a psychiatrist can help you understand whether medication is appropriate for your situation.
What is less widely understood is that psychotherapy is equally supported by clinical evidence, and for many people it is the preferred first-line approach or a powerful complement to medication.
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy, or CBT, is among the most studied and validated approaches to depression treatment. It works by helping people identify and shift the patterns of thinking and behaviour that maintain depressive episodes. At Threshold Clinic, our Registered Counsellors and Licensed Clinical Doctors use CBT alongside other evidence-based approaches depending on each client's unique history and needs.
Other effective therapy approaches for depression include:
- Behavioural Activation: Gradually reintroducing meaningful activities to counter withdrawal and anhedonia
- Interpersonal Therapy (IPT): Focusing on relationship patterns and life transitions that contribute to depression
- Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT): Particularly effective for people with recurrent depression, helping them recognize early warning signs
- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT): Building psychological flexibility and values-based living even in the presence of difficult emotions
Lifestyle factors also play a genuine clinical role in depression treatment. Regular physical movement, consistent sleep schedules, social engagement and nutrition are not substitutes for professional care but they are active parts of recovery. Our clinical team works with clients holistically, integrating these factors into a realistic plan that fits their life.
For people with severe or treatment-resistant depression, additional options such as structured psychiatric care or referral to a specialist may be appropriate. Your care pathway is individual, not one-size-fits-all.
Finding Help in Canada
One of the most important things we want you to know is that help exists and it is more accessible than many people assume.
If you are in distress right now, the 988 Suicide Crisis Helpline is available across Canada by call or text, 24 hours a day. The Crisis Services Canada network connects people to local support immediately.
For non-crisis support, your options in Canada include:
- Your family doctor: A good starting point for assessment, referrals and conversation about medication if appropriate
- CMHA provincial offices: The Canadian Mental Health Association offers community programmes and peer support across every province
- CAMH resources: The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health provides public education, assessment tools and referral pathways
- Provincial mental health lines: Most provinces have a dedicated mental health phone line for guidance and referrals
- Private counselling clinics: Clinics like Threshold Clinic offer individualized depression treatment with qualified professionals, often with faster access than the public system
Cost is a real concern for many Canadians. Some employer benefits programmes cover counselling services. Some provincial programmes offer subsidized therapy. Many private clinics, including Threshold Clinic, offer sliding scale fees or can help you understand what coverage you may have access to.
Reaching out for a first appointment does not lock you into anything. It is simply a conversation to understand where you are and what might help. That first step is often the hardest, and it is also the one that changes everything.
If you have been living with these symptoms for weeks or months and telling yourself it will pass on its own, we want to gently offer an alternative framing. Depression treatment works. People recover. Life genuinely can feel different. The weight you are carrying right now is not permanent, and you do not have to keep carrying it alone.
