When You No Longer Feel Like Yourself
Depression: You’re Still Functioning – Somehow
It might feel as if something heavy is pressing down on you – or as if you are somehow… disconnected.
If This Feels Familiar
It’s often not a clear thought, but a persistent feeling.
You wake up in the morning – and everything already feels heavy, even before the day has begun. You sleep enough, yet you’re still exhausted. Things that used to be easy now feel draining. And some things… don’t feel like anything at all anymore.
Perhaps you notice yourself pulling back. Wanting less contact.
Or lying awake at night while your thoughts circle endlessly.
And then comes that doubt: “Is something really wrong with me… or am I just overreacting?”
Others experience it differently. Not as heaviness – but as emptiness. As if something essential is missing, though you can’t quite name it.
Emotions feel muted or barely accessible. Your connection to yourself seems further and further away.
The Gap Between Functioning and Inner Emptiness
On the outside, it’s often not immediately visible.
You might still go to work, get things done, and remain “present” in some way.
Yet, at the same time, something is missing inside.
Many describe it like a glass bell jar.
A sense of distance – from yourself, from others, and from your own life.
Even your own drive can shift.
Small things suddenly take immense effort. And although you know exactly what needs to be done, simply starting feels incredibly difficult.
Terms like burnout or winter blues come up quickly. Sometimes they fit; sometimes they fall short.
What many share is a common thread:
- Access gradually fades.
- Access to energy, to joy, and to everything that once felt natural.
A Mind Full of Questions
Eventually, questions arise:
What exactly is depression?
How does therapy work?
Will I need medication — and what will it do?
How do you even tell those around you?
Why do others pull away when you need them most?
No simple answers exist. But these questions show you’re beginning to pay attention.
What Can Play a Role
Depression shifts more than mood – drive, energy, and perception change too.
Medically, these states involve nervous system processes and whole-body responses. Thoughts, feelings, and physical reactions intertwine.
Some feel everything slowing down. For others, simple things become unreachable. Withdrawal, exhaustion, and distance feed each other in a reinforcing cycle.
A Possible Path: Hypnotherapy & RTT®
Hypnotherapy is about gaining clearer insight into what might currently feel diffuse or overwhelming.
Often, unconscious patterns operate in the background – thoughts, judgments, and inner reactions that have built up over time.
In a calm, protected space, it becomes possible to move closer to these inner connections. This isn’t done with pressure, but through gentle, precise attention.
Some find that things begin to fall into place more clearly, or that a new way of accessing their own experience emerges. This happens step by step, at your own pace.
Hypnosis can be a supportive element here — as one possible path forward.
Who This Professional Support Is For
You might be at a point where you realize things simply cannot continue this way.
Perhaps you are even doubting whether your situation is “serious enough” to seek help – wondering if this is truly depression, or just a phase.
Supportive work can be meaningful when you are ready to understand your situation more clearly – without needing to immediately label or categorize it.
Not every challenging phase requires instant clinical therapy. Sometimes, a safe, professional space is enough to recognize initial patterns and regain a sense of orientation within your own experience.
When Additional Help Is Essential
If symptoms intensify, persist over time, or increasingly limit your daily life, it is important to seek medical or psychotherapeutic support.
This applies especially if thoughts of self-harm or suicide arise. In those moments, please seek help promptly – through your primary care physician (GP), a psychotherapeutic practice, local crisis services, or by calling 112 in an acute emergency.
Important: Hypnotherapy can be used as a supportive adjunct, but it is not a substitute for medical or psychotherapeutic treatment for clinically significant depression.
You Don’t Have to Go Through This Alone
If you’d like, we can explore in a complimentary call whether this type of support feels right for you.