Hi Stressedout and Josie,
This issue is a lot more complicated, in my opinion, than keeping lists and staying organized.
Many, many workplaces are simply not healthy environments for depressed people. People are downright cruel when to do so is rarely if ever justified in the circumstances. They'd get better results by asking and working WITH, than demanding and doing TO, but try and tell that to your average manager with no training in mentorship skills, let alone how to deal with people with mood disorders.
Even if the stuff they say is not true, when you are depressed YOU BELIEVE IT ANYWAY. Frankly sometimes I wonder if the ones who are capable of taking this kind of emotional abuse aren't the ones with the mental illness!!
A couple of points.
1) Heres the catch-22. When you are in the wrong job, you get depressed. When you are depressed, your work performance often decreases as a result, affecting your ability to get a good reference for your next job.
EVEN THOUGH poor performance in a job youre not suited to has, in my opinion, no relevance to how well you will do at a job that suits your skills and personality, it seems the recruitment community is still under the Paleolithic delusion that there are two kinds of people, Motivated and Unmotivated, and motivation is an independent trait that has nothing to do with whether you like what you are doing!
2) As I said, when you are depressed, your work performance suffers. When your work performance suffers, managers do not think Oh, this person is faltering, I should ask her what we can do to help her maximize her potential, they think Crack the whip! Threaten and criticize until she shapes up. Its entirely her responsibility to improve.
And I dont know about you, but after Ive had all my shortcomings pointed out to me in this way, I dont exactly feel like I deserve any help or support from my manager. They dont initiate the offer to help, I dont feel like I deserve any help, so I dont ask.
I live in Ontario. We have a law called the Ontario Human Rights Code by which employers cannot discriminate in employment because of mental illness, and are obligated to make reasonable accommodations for employees except where to do so would cause undue hardship to the employer.