Why This Matters
Why do we sometimes bounce back quickly from life’s setbacks, while other times we spiral into isolation and self-doubt? Why does one person see a loss as temporary, while another feels crushed beyond repair? Asking why is the key to understanding whether we’re simply having a rough patch — or facing the weight of depression.
Life presents challenges in many forms. It may be the athlete who gets cut from the team, the parent worried about their child, the person battling addiction, or the partner watching a loved one change after trauma. It may be financial stress, job loss, obesity, or the heavy decision of whether to retire from a stable career. Each of these moments tests our resilience. But in every case, the question remains: Am I just down, or is this something deeper?
1. The Athlete
Imagine a teenager who gets cut from the baseball team, fails his math test, and then has his girlfriend break up with him — all in the same week. He withdraws, embarrassed and hurt. His parents worry: Is this depression, or just discouragement?
Sports mirror life in this way. Vince Lombardi once said, “It’s not whether you get knocked down, it’s whether you get up.” The young athlete may be down, but what will determine his recovery is not the fall — it’s the choice to rise again.
2. The Parent and Child
Parents often struggle to know if their child’s isolation is depression or just a temporary low. Children may not have the language to explain their feelings, so they retreat instead. Sometimes it’s low confidence, sometimes it’s sadness, and sometimes it’s a deeper struggle.
Michael Jordan captured this truth: “I’ve failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed.” For a child, failure can feel final. But with encouragement, they can learn that mistakes aren’t permanent — they’re building blocks to resilience.
3. Substance Abuse and Relapse
For someone in recovery, relapse can feel like failure. Shame builds, and isolation deepens. They question their self-worth and may believe they’ve let everyone down.
But relapse is not the end. Babe Ruth once said, “It’s hard to beat a person who never gives up.” Recovery is rarely a straight line. Each stumble is not proof of failure, but an invitation to try again with renewed strength.
4. The First Responder
Consider the first responder who faces tragedy after tragedy — horrific accidents, life-and-death decisions, human loss. Over time, their partner notices a change: the warmth and joy once present has faded. Is this depression, or a protective shell?
Kobe Bryant understood this duality: “Everything negative — pressure, challenges — is all an opportunity for me to rise.” For first responders and their families, the key may not be quick recovery, but finding meaning and growth through unimaginable challenges.
5. Couples and Partners
Isolation doesn’t only happen to individuals. Sometimes it creeps into relationships. A partner grows distant, communication falters, and love feels muted. The question becomes: Is this depression, stress, or avoidance?
Mia Hamm once said, “Celebrate what you’ve accomplished, but raise the bar a little higher each time you succeed.” Couples can apply this by choosing to grow together, using challenges not as wedges but as opportunities to build a stronger bond.
6. Careers and Retirement
For someone earning $80,000 a year, the question may not be “Can I keep doing this?” but “When is the right time to walk away?” Retirement isn’t just about money — it’s about purpose.
This is where my father’s wisdom fits so beautifully. He once told me: “Financial freedom is when the interest I earn on my principle is so much more than I can ever spend for my everyday life existence.” That definition can inspire anyone preparing for the next phase of life.
But career struggles aren’t just about leaving — sometimes they’re about losing. Job loss can be devastating, not just financially but emotionally. It can shake your identity. Yet your value has never been tied to a paycheck. Your worth comes from who you are, not what’s printed on a business card.
Tiger Woods once said, “No matter how good you get, you can always get better.” Whether you’re redefining retirement or rebuilding after job loss, it’s an opportunity to reset, refocus, and grow stronger.
7. Financial Stress
Consider the older adult who worked their whole life, only to face dwindling savings and rising costs. Stress consumes them. Is this depression, or simply the weight of financial pressure?
Arnold Palmer once said, “Success in this game depends less on strength of body than strength of mind and character.” Money matters, but it is strength of character that defines how we face the storms of scarcity.
8. Obesity and Health
Obesity brings unique challenges. Beyond health, it carries shame, self-judgment, and isolation. Is it depression, or is it confidence crushed under the weight of stigma?
Wayne Gretzky once said, “You miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.” The same holds true for health. Progress doesn’t come from perfection — it comes from trying, from taking the next shot, and from refusing to give up on yourself.
The Distinction That Matters
• Feeling Down is temporary, tied to setbacks.
• Loss of Confidence often looks like isolation, but it’s rooted in fear and shame.
• Depression is persistent, numbing, and doesn’t improve even when circumstances do.
The first step is always asking why. Why am I isolating? Why do I feel stuck? Why do I think I’ve failed? In that “why,” we uncover the difference between being down and depression.
My Coaching Perspective
My 1-on-1 coaching, my group coaching, and my team coaching all use the Life Lessons thru the Lens series as a blueprint. Whether through tennis, baseball, basketball, football, golf, soccer, hockey, volleyball, or boxing — sports are only the backdrop. The true message is universal: setbacks don’t define you. What defines you is how you respond, how you reflect, and how you grow into the best version of yourself.
CONCLUSION
Let me ask you this: when you feel isolated, do you believe it’s because you’ve failed — or because the storm you’re facing is too heavy to carry alone? The answer to that why may be the first step toward your breakthrough.
FAQs
Q1: How do I know if I’m just down or truly depressed?
Look at persistence. Feeling down usually improves with time, rest, or encouragement. Depression lingers and numbs joy, motivation, and connection.
Q2: What if my child or partner is isolating — how can I help?
Start with compassion. Ask why without judgment. Encourage small steps toward connection. If isolation persists, seek professional support.
Q3: I’ve relapsed, lost a job, or gained weight. Am I depressed?
Not always. Sometimes it’s confidence or situational stress. But if hopelessness lingers for weeks, it may be depression. Either way, reaching for support is strength, not weakness.
Q4 : How do I know when it’s the right time to retire or change careers?
It’s not just about money — it’s about purpose. Ask yourself why you want to make the change, and whether you’re prepared emotionally as well as financially.
Q5 : How does your coaching help in these struggles?
My coaching — and my Life Lessons thru the Lens series — focuses on building resilience, self-awareness, and growth. Sports are the metaphor, but the mission is life: helping you become the best version of yourself, no matter the challenge you face.