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Description The categorical distinction between major depressive disorder and generalized anxiety disorder, codified in the DSM-5, fails to account for their high comorbidity, shared treatment resistance, and overlapping neurobiological substrates. This paper argues that the distinction is often clinically counterproductive -- and that a unitary model grounded in lateral habenula (LHb) neurophysiology resolves the paradox that symptom-based classification cannot. The central proposal is that anxiety and depression are not distinct disorders but different phases of a single pathological process: hyperactivation of the LHb, the brain's primary brake on dopamine release. Chronic exposure to shame-related social defeat produces long-term potentiation in the LHb -- a process the paper terms affective entrainment -- which lowers the threshold for burst firing and constitutes a trait-level vulnerability that precedes and enables both conditions. Anxiety corresponds to tonic sustained firing of the entrained habenula, experienced as anticipatory dread. Depression corresponds to burst firing that triggers GABA-mediated inhibition of the ventral tegmental area, experienced as anhedonia and collapse. The two presentations are not separate illnesses but different points on a continuum of habenular dysregulation. Drawing on Silvan Tomkins' affect theory -- specifically his concepts of neural density, the nuclear script, and the Compass of Shame -- the paper provides a translational framework bridging neurobiological mechanism and clinical phenomenology. Tomkins called his work a human being theory, describing universal structures of affect rather than pathology. The paper honors that framing: what is being described is not a set of discrete diseases but the human condition itself. The paper concludes with a two-stage treatment model offered not as a protocol but as a way of thinking: hardware stabilization followed by script reconstruction. A comprehensive chart maps current interventions -- including SSRIs, benzodiazepines, ketamine, psychedelics, NAC, and EMDR -- onto this framework, with candid acknowledgment of the severe limitations of existing tools. Keywords: lateral habenula, anxiety, depression, unitary model, Silvan Tomkins, affect theory, shame, affective entrainment, glutamate, GABA, dopamine, treatment resistance, NAC, EMDR, psychedelics, nuclear script, human condition
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Brian Lynch
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Brian Lynch (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0566bda550a87e60a1eb58 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20129641