Don't Be S.A.D.... Lighten Up

SAD (seasonal affective disorder), also known as winter depression, winter blues or seasonal depression, is a mood disorder subset provoked by reduced daylight hours during fall and winter. People who have normal mental health throughout most of the year experience depressive symptoms at the same time each year.

SAD is characterized by irritability, oversleeping, increased tiredness, changes in appetite, and reduced motivation to participate in social activities. If you're like most people with SAD, your symptoms start with the reduction of seasonal light and continue into the winter months, sapping your energy and making you feel moody. Less often, SAD causes depression in the spring or early summer.

Although experts were initially skeptical, this condition is now recognized as a common disorder. The American Psychiatric Association Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV & DSM-5) was changed and is no longer classified as a unique mood disorder but is now a specifier called with seasonal pattern for recurrent major depressive disorder that occurs at a specific time of the year.

SAD's prevalence in the U.S. ranges from 1.4% in Florida to 9.9% in Alaska. Countries closest to the equator report almost no incidences of SAD, whereas extreme northern and southern countries have high incidences. This is mainly due to the fluctuations in daylight hours as the seasons change, disrupting a person’s circadian rhythm—or internal clock—which controls a person’s physiological response to light and darkness.

To reiterate, if you have SAD, you may:

  • Feel sad, grumpy, moody, or anxious.
  • Lose interest in your usual activities.
  • Eat more and crave carbohydrates, such as bread and pasta.
  • Gain weight.
  • Sleep more but still feel tired.
  • Have trouble concentrating.

Women are four times more likely than men to experience SAD due to the disorder’s association with female hormones. Individuals who have been previously diagnosed with depression, or those who have a family history of depression, are at an even higher risk for SAD.

The reduction of daily light exposure causes shifts in hormone and chemical levels in the brain. The two main hormones responsible for SAD are serotonin—responsible for 'feel good' mood and melatonin—responsible for inducing sleep. Some people are more sensitive than others to the reduction of natural light during the day and will produce more melatonin and less serotonin during the autumn and winter months. These chemical shifts disrupt the circadian rhythm, worsen moods, and decrease energy.

The most common treatment for SAD is light therapy, which consists of daily exposure to light that mimics outdoor light, leading to increases in serotonin levels in the brain that will help lift moods and relieve other symptoms. It is best to start light therapy early in the fall, before symptoms appear or they become to get too intense and interfere with school work and other daily activities.

Interestingly, the symptoms of SAD are not limited to only reduced seasonal daylight. Similar symptoms are now common for millions of people all year round caused by our now predominant indoor life style that has unwittingly created a silent epidemic known as  — mal-illumination."

Mal-illumination is brought about by limiting our daily intake of full-spectrum daylight and supplementing it with too much artificial 'limited-spectrum' indoor light, especially blue light at night, and by shielding ourselves from the sun with such things as tinted windows, windshields, sunglasses and suntan lotions. Mal-illumination silently contributes to many adverse health issues and some are quite serious — obesity, depression, fatigue, sleep & eating disorders as well as breast, prostate and colon cancer. Like malnutrition, mal-illumination causes deficiencies by depriving us of the sun’s vital ‘energetic nutrient’ wavelengths which enter the body through the eyes and skin. Sunlight striking the skin manufactures natural vitamin D while light entering the eyes regulates vital circadian rhythms that control appetite, energy, mood, sleep, libido and other body-mind functions

Fact is — humans are photobiotic ‘solar beings’ — all of us are absolutely dependent on the absorption of radiant, solar energy. Every metabolic process, every enzyme reaction, muscular movements, the digestion of food and the burning of fat are all biological processes that are augmented by sunlight energy. A reduction of ‘natural light energy’ causes a slowdown in these processes that leads to decreased metabolism, reduced burning of fat, reduced vitality and compromised immunity.

As with many other forms of depression, exercise and frequent trips outdoors can help prevent or relieve SAD symptoms. Don't brush off that yearly feeling as simply a case of the "winter blues" or a seasonal funk that you have to tough out on your own. Take steps to keep your mood and motivation steady throughout the year. 

Interested in more information about biologically beneficial light and your health? Visit Science of Light (SOL), a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that works to raise awareness of mal-illumination. SOL provides a free e-Book: MAL-ILLUMINATION… the silent epidemic and free MP3: The Secret to “Light” Your Metabolic Fire.

12/5/2016 10:00:00 PM
Ken Ceder
Written by Ken Ceder
I'm a health science researcher focused on biologically beneficial light since 1987 and the founder and past president of Ott Light Systems in Santa Barbara, CA. Currently, I am the executive director of Science of Light, a 501 (c)3 non-profit based in Surprise, Arizona.
View Full Profile Website: http://www.scienceoflight.org/

Comments
For a tiny cost in pennies, add light to your living quarters on a daily basis; shades and blinds open for all of your walking-around hours, routinely.
Be out of doors as much as practical; add sunblock to your skin for protection, and you'll liven up natural use of vitamin D.
Lighten up emotionally as well.
The big mix benefits you, and the loved ones around you.
Posted by Sparky
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