Everyone
                                    feels a little down sometimes. Who wouldn't?
                                    Life is filled with challenges and complications.
                                    Anything from getting a bad grade to breaking
                                    up with a boyfriend can make you feel sad.
                                    Even bad weather can affect people's moods.
                                    But what about when you, or a friend, always
                                    feels like nothing is worth the effort, even
                                    though everything seems to be going okay? 
                                
 When
                                    this feeling lasts for awhile and gets in
                                    the way of your life, or comes in repeated
                                    cycles, you could be suffering from clinical
                                    depression. Someone who is clinically depressed
                                    cannot just 'snap out of it,' and often,
                                    they can't explain just why they feel depressed. 
                                
What
                                      are the signs of depression? 
                                
 Signs
                                    of depression include feeling hopeless or
                                    helpless about life. These feelings can translate
                                    into feeling less interested in your hobbies,
                                    sports, clubs or other activities that you
                                    used to be involved in. Someone who is depressed
                                    may be sleeping or eating a lot more, or
                                    less, than she used to before she felt depressed.
                                    Other indications of depression include a
                                    big drop in grades, hanging out with a different
                                    group of friend or dropping friends altogether.
                                    It's important to distinguish clinical depression
                                    from other emotions such as grief. If you
                                    have experienced a loss, such as the death
                                    of someone close, or you've just broken up
                                    with your boyfriend, it's normal to feel
                                    down for a period of time. A period of grief
                                    may last from several weeks to even a year.
                                    It's important to realize the difference--
                                    grief is feeling sad about your loss, a natural
                                    reaction. But sometimes people don't work
                                    through their loss and it can turn into depression. 
                                
 Sometimes
                                    someone may feel so depressed that they plan
                                    to end everything and kill themselves. According
                                    to Melisa Poulos, Assistant Director of the
                                    Samaritans and the Coordinator of the Samaritan
                                    program, a nationwide support group for teenagers,
                                    teenage girls are more likely than boys to
                                    attempt suicide, although boys are more likely
                                    to die from their suicide attempts. Girls
                                    may be more likely to seek help for their
                                    problems, or talk and write about their feelings
                                    to try to help themselves feel better. 
                                
How
                                      can I get help? 
                                
 It
                                    is important to get help right away if you
                                    feel depressed or suicidal, or if you think
                                    a friend is depressed and/or considering
                                    suicide. To get help, talk to someone you
                                    can trust, such as a parent, a teacher, a
                                    counselor at school or a friend who will
                                    listen to you, take you seriously and get
                                    you help. If you think a friend has a problem,
                                    talk to them openly. Encourage your friend
                                    to seek help. 
                                  "Ideally, an adult who is familiar with this
                                  sort of situation is the best person" 
                                  to seek help from, says Melisa Poulos. 
                                
 If
                                    you don't feel you can talk with anyone you
                                    know about feeling depressed or suicidal,
                                    there are many agencies and organizations
                                    you can turn to. These places can provide
                                    a listener who will let you talk about your
                                    problems without judging you and will give
                                    referrals and options on where you can get
                                    help. A few numbers are listed below; all
                                    are 24-hour crisis hot lines. You can also
                                    check your local telephone book (usually
                                    the yellow pages) under Social and Human
                                    Services, Suicide Prevention Services, Counseling,
                                    and Youth Services. It is very important
                                    that you keep calling until you can get help.
                                    Sometimes you can't pull yourself out of
                                    your depression on your own. 
                                  "To treat clinical depression, medication,
                                  psychotherapy, and support all go hand-in-hand," 
                                  says Evie Barkin, Vice President of the Manic
                                  Depressive and Depressive Association of Boston. 
                                
 You
                                    won't be turned away if money is a problem,
                                    either. "There are lots of services available
                                    that do not charge or will negotiate their
                                    fees," says Genny Price, Clinical Director
                                    of Bridge Over Troubled Waters in Boston. 
                                  "A professional can't say, 'no money, no service.'
                                  There's an ethical obligation to help." If
                                  you get a busy signal or if no one answers
                                  the phone when you call, DO NOT GIVE UP.
                                  Call another organization right away. 
                                
 Feeling
                                    depressed or suicidal are feelings that can
                                    changed. Help is available. Don't give up
                                    hope in your life or yourself. 
                                
                                For
                                    help combatting depression, you can call
                                    any of these 24-hour hotlines: 
                                 Assessment
                                      Center, 1-800-234-0038 
                                  Alpine Health Care Teen Help Line, 1-800-827-7511 
                                  Teenline, 1-800-522-8336 
                                  National Runaway Switchboard, 1-800-621-4000 
                                
                                This
                                    article originally appeared in  TEEN
                                    VOICES