Most people know what it feels like to be knocked sideways by life. A disappointment, a loss, a stretch where nothing seems to go right. There’s a temptation to give it a clinical name, to call it depression, because a diagnosis makes the feeling seem containable—something with edges that can be treated and resolved.
Sadness and depression aren’t the same thing, and collapsing the distinction doesn’t help either condition. Sadness is proportionate and traceable. It has a cause, and it lifts as circumstances shift or time passes. Depression doesn’t follow that logic. It’s persistent, often causeless, and resistant to the things that normally restore equilibrium.
That distinction matters more than it might seem. When ordinary sadness gets labelled as illness, it erodes the resilience that carries people through hard periods. Deciding you’re unwell changes how you respond—you’re less likely to stay functional, less likely to grieve cleanly, more likely to treat every difficult feeling as a symptom requiring management rather than an experience requiring time.
Acknowledging sadness for what it is takes honesty. It means accepting discomfort without inflating it, and recognising that feeling low after something painful isn’t a malfunction. It’s the appropriate response to a difficult experience.
Not everything that hurts is a disorder. Sometimes it’s just life, and the way through it is forward.
Liberty lives not in certainty but in optionality—in the deliberate
Yasujirō Ozu’s
Kyōko, the youngest daughter, gives voice to the anger simmering beneath the surface, frustrated by her siblings’ indifference. But it’s Noriko, the widowed daughter-in-law, who delivers the film’s quiet verdict. When Kyōko says, “Isn’t life disappointing?,” Noriko replies with calm acceptance: “Yes. Nothing but disappointment.” The exchange is delivered without bitterness, without drama. Disappointment, Ozu suggests, isn’t just about other people falling short. It’s about
Imposter syndrome has a specific texture. It’s not ordinary self-doubt—it’s the persistent fear 

Despite the 777-300ER’s dominance in high-capacity, ultra-long-range operations, the Airbus A330 
All-or-nothing thinking—the habit of seeing life in rigid extremes—distorts how you interpret events, relationships, and even your own ability to change. It works beneath conscious attention, which is why it’s so persistent.
A quote often attributed to