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Giving Voice to Depression: Real Stories & Expert Support for Depression and Mental Health

Giving Voice to Depression: Real Stories & Expert Support for Depression and Mental Health

Written by: Recovery.com - Depression Help & Support
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Giving Voice To Depression unites lived experience and expert insight to shine a spotlight on depression and mental health. Each week, we bring you honest personal stories, evidence-based strategies, and compassionate conversations to help you understand, cope with, and recover from depression. Whether you’re navigating your own journey, supporting a loved one, or simply seeking to better understand mental-health challenges, this podcast offers real voices, trusted guidance, and a path toward hope. Subscribe now for new episodes every week and join a community where depression isn’t silenced—it’s voiced, understood and overcome.

© 2026 Giving Voice to Depression: Real Stories & Expert Support for Depression and Mental Health
Hygiene & Healthy Living Psychology Psychology & Mental Health
Episodes
  • What Depression Really Feels Like: Symptoms, Negative Thoughts, and How Recovery Happens
    Feb 24 2026

    What does depression actually feel like from the inside?

    In this candid conversation, Terry McGuire shares the origin story behind the Giving Voice to Depression podcast — and opens up about her own experience with major depression, antidepressants, intrusive thoughts, and the isolating voice of the illness.

    She describes how depression “talks in your own voice,” how it infiltrates your thinking before you realize what’s happening, and how it convinces you that you are a burden, alone, and beyond hope.

    But this episode is not just about the darkness — it’s about what helped her come out the other side. With medical support, medication, and a decision to speak openly, Terry turned her experience into a mission: helping others feel less alone.

    This episode also explores:

    • Masking depression with humor
    • PTSD and trauma rewiring the brain
    • Why listening can save lives
    • Why depression lies feel like truth
    • The importance of speaking openly about mental health

    If you've ever wondered whether what you're feeling is depression — or if you love someone who may be struggling — this conversation offers honesty, clarity, and hope.

    You are not alone. And recovery is possible.

    Primary Topics Covered:
    • What depression really feels like internally
    • Negative self-talk and cognitive distortions
    • Depression symptoms: withdrawal, hopelessness, fatigue
    • Antidepressants and medical treatment
    • Crisis hotline volunteering and suicide prevention
    • The power of listening and compassion
    • Masking depression with humor
    • PTSD and adverse childhood experiences (ACEs)
    • Depression in families
    • The origin story of the Giving Voice to Depression podcast:
    Timestamps:

    00:00 – Introduction and purpose of the podcast
    03:02 – Terry shares her depression origin story
    04:32 – Why hearing from someone who’s been there matters
    05:19 – Evidence of the deep need for real depression stories
    06:16 – Volunteering for a crisis hotline after family loss
    07:10 – Powerful suicide prevention stories
    10:55 – Using humor to mask depression
    11:59 – What Terry’s depression felt like internally
    12:22 – “Depression talks in your own voice”
    13:45 – PTSD, trauma, and brain changes
    15:43 – Experiencing depression differently within families
    17:11 – Depression thoughts feel like “truth”
    18:21 – Where to find Giving Voice to Depression
    19:42 – A reminder: It is worth the fight

    Explore mental health and addiction treatment options at recovery.com
    Facebook Community: https://www.facebook.com/GivingVoiceToDepression/
    Terry's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/givingvoicetodepression/

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    21 mins
  • Childhood Depression Warning Signs: What Parents Missed — and How We Can Do Better Today
    Feb 17 2026

    What if the “sad kid” in school wasn’t just sensitive — but struggling with depression?

    In this powerful episode of Giving Voice to Depression, Sally looks back at her childhood and teenage years and recognizes signs of depression that were misunderstood or overlooked. Excessive sleeping. Dark poetry. Persistent sadness. Thoughts about suicide. A lonely letter written at age ten.

    At the time, mental health education was limited. Her teacher raised concerns. Her parents didn’t know what to do. Therapy wasn’t discussed. Medication wasn’t considered.

    Now, nearly 70, Sally shares her story not with blame — but with purpose.

    She wants today’s parents, teachers, mentors, and caregivers to recognize the early signs of childhood depression and to know that help is available. Through diagnosis, medication, therapy, and self-awareness, Sally built a successful career and meaningful life — while still managing depression honestly.

    If you’ve ever wondered:

    • “Is this normal teen behavior?”
    • “Are these warning signs?”
    • “How do I help a child who won’t talk?”

    This episode offers clarity, compassion, and a call to action.

    Depression in children is real. It’s treatable. And early intervention can change — and save — lives.

    Primary Topics Covered:
    • Early signs of childhood depression (sleeping excessively, isolation, persistent sadness)
    • The difference between “moody teen” and clinical depression
    • Writing dark poetry and suicidal ideation as warning signals
    • The impact of grief and unprocessed loss on children
    • Missed opportunities for early intervention
    • Depression diagnosis at 21 and delayed treatment
    • Finding the right antidepressant medication after years of trial
    • What depression feels like: “the rain-soaked coat” metaphor
    • The importance of educating families about youth mental health
    • Why reducing stigma saves lives
    Timestamps:

    00:00 – Introduction to Sally’s story and why youth mental health matters
    01:26 – Is it surly teen behavior — or depression?
    02:50 – Excessive sleeping and feeling “different” as a teen
    03:58 – Grief after her grandmother’s death and emotional shutdown
    04:44 – Dark poetry and early suicidal thoughts
    05:41 – Teacher warning signs — and missed intervention
    07:06 – The letter written at age 10: loneliness and sadness
    08:03 – How childhood depression steals joy
    09:14 – Adult diagnosis and unexpected antidepressant breakthrough
    10:38 – The mistake of stopping medication too soon
    12:10 – Building a successful career while managing depression
    13:06 – What depression feels like: the “rain-soaked coat”
    14:13 – Why today’s children have more access to help
    14:58 – What parents should look for beyond scraped knees
    15:16 – Youth suicide prevention and early intervention
    16:33 – Reducing stigma: calling therapists “feeling doctors”
    17:45 – Closing reflections and hope

    Explore mental health and addiction treatment options at recovery.com
    Facebook Community: https://www.facebook.com/GivingVoiceToDepression/
    Terry's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/givingvoicetodepression/

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    19 mins
  • Spreading Love, Saving Lives: The Little Heart Project’s Impact on Depression and Suicide Prevention
    Feb 10 2026

    When Kathleen’s life fell apart near age 50 after a traumatic family event, she found herself battling severe depression, anxiety, PTSD, and suicidal thoughts. After years of therapy and treatment-resistant depression, a turning point came through an unexpected source — crocheting tiny hearts.

    In this episode of Giving Voice to Depression, Kathleen shares how creating and distributing these handmade hearts evolved into The Little Heart Project, a grassroots movement spreading kindness, connection, and suicide prevention awareness one heart at a time.

    Through the project, strangers exchange hope — crocheters, volunteers, and recipients alike — proving that small, loving gestures can open conversations about mental health that might save lives.

    Hosts Terry McGuire and Dr. Anita Sanz discuss how compassion and community can coexist with clinical care, how simple acts of creativity support emotional recovery, and how we can all play a part in turning despair into connection.

    If you’ve ever wondered whether small acts of kindness can make a difference, this episode will convince you that they can.

    Primary Topics Covered

    • Kathleen’s journey through depression, PTSD, and suicidality
    • How crafting and purpose can support recovery
    • The creation and growth of The Little Heart Project
    • How simple acts of kindness can spark mental health conversations
    • The power of messages like “You are loved” and “It’s okay to not be okay”
    • The role of ketamine therapy in treating treatment-resistant depression
    • Building a mental health “toolbox” — strategies that actually help
    • Why talking about depression and suicide is essential for healing
    • The ripple effect: how one heart led to a life-saving late-night conversation
    • Final reflections on hope, survival, and doing what you can in dark times

    Timestamps

    00:00 – Welcome and introduction from Terry and Carly
    01:03 – Why this Valentine’s-themed episode focuses on “hearts that heal”
    02:59 – Kathleen’s story: depression, trauma, and PTSD after a family crisis
    03:56 – Living with depression while trying to work and survive
    05:42 – Discovering crochet as a mindful escape
    06:30 – Launching The Little Heart Project and how it works
    07:42 – How kindness sparks mental health conversations
    08:41 – What messages are on the heart tags (“You are loved,” “It’s okay to not be okay”)
    10:46 – How therapy and ketamine treatments helped her recover
    12:27 – Building a “mental health toolbox” of coping strategies
    13:38 – Sharing her story and reducing stigma through speaking
    14:45 – The story of Samantha and Andrea — a heart that saved a life
    16:05 – Hope, honesty, and understanding different healing paths
    18:17 – Dr. Anita Sanz: why focusing on “what we can do” brings peace
    19:12 – The value of surviving long enough for treatment to work
    21:34 – Why hope — even 0.01% — is enough to keep going
    22:01 – Closing thoughts and how to get involved in The Little Heart Project

    Explore mental health and addiction treatment options at recovery.com
    Facebook Community: https://www.facebook.com/GivingVoiceToDepression/
    Terry's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/givingvoicetodepression/

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    23 mins
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