So since nobody answered the last question I raised, I am left to assume that everyone on this site has other concerns besides simple Major Depression, that it is a side effect of prolonged suffering of some type or another, correct? Therefore, Major Depression should be considered curable, if one can determine what problems started it happening, or are keeping it happening? I believe mine started with a horrible family life, add to that negative thinking because of all I've experienced; and in combination of deep rooted family problems that go back for generations. The damage to my autonomic nervous system was somewhat permanent; and although thinking about and dealing with panic attacks and social phobias can help; I will never have a perfect nervous system unless an act of God occurs, correct? Until then, I must rely on medications, along with the (illusive for me) therapy which is supposed to all make the past wash away? I know there are people out there who have been comforted somewhat by various methods of therapy, but has anyone been completely cured? Is that possible? I guess based on your lack of responses to my question that everyone has other issues they are working on, and therefore this subject is just too complicated to pin down to one illness, or nerve problem such as clinical depression or major depression; am I right? If sensitivity, intelligence, emotional I.Q., personality types have also been a burden to a person, how are they to cope? The main theme for me that I keep running through my head is "I am alone out there" "there is no one like me" "no one will ever understand me completely but God", "I'm lonely, lonely, lonley"..."I cannot get out of this place I am in". I tend to feel more comfortable around those who are highly gifted; they also feel lonely, because no one can come up to their level of intelligence. I am not that gifted, but I realise that they are lonely lonely lonely too! Isn't that the center of the matter? "Nobody has gone what I have gone through feeling?" My biggest problem started since I was a young teen, blushing my way through school and my life for the next 37 years. But actually it started before that; in my childhood, although I wasn't blushing as much, I was often very depressed and afraid of pe