I have several thoughts on this, but I only have time for one right now:
I’m not a psychiatrist, but I would suggest that the thoughts we have when we’re mentally healthy are the valid ones, and the thoughts we have when we’re depressed are the twisted, irrational ones.
I know that when you’re depressed, it seems that you’re seeing things more clearly, but I think that a psychiatrist would tell you that’s not the case.
So if your healthy self feels okay about not performing up to your depressed-self’s standards, I would strongly suggest to defer to the healthy self (by postponing all decisions until you’re healthy again).
I have several thoughts on this, but I only have time for one right now:
I’m not a psychiatrist, but I would suggest that the thoughts we have when we’re mentally healthy are the valid ones, and the thoughts we have when we’re depressed are the twisted, irrational ones.
I know that when you’re depressed, it seems that you’re seeing things more clearly, but I think that a psychiatrist would tell you that’s not the case.
So if your healthy self feels okay about not performing up to your depressed-self’s standards, I would strongly suggest to defer to the healthy self (by postponing all decisions until you’re healthy again).