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Depression and Anxiety After Bankruptcy: Understanding the Psychological Spiral

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychotherapist
5 min read
This article is part of the "Psychology of Bankruptcy" series, exploring the psychological impact of financial collapse and paths to recovery. — Clinical Case — Isabelle, 41, former owner of a home décor shop, describes her days as "cotton wool." Since the liquidation of her business eight months ago, she gets up late, avoids going out, barely responds to messages. She has lost seven kilos without trying. In the evenings, she obsessively scrutinizes her bank statements, imagining worst-case scenarios for the weeks ahead. "I know I should be looking for a job," she says. "But as soon as I try to write a CV, I feel nauseous. I tell myself that no one will want a woman who failed at her business. So I close the laptop and stare at the ceiling." This clinical picture is not unique to Isabelle. Personal bankruptcy is one of the most stressful life events identified by psychological research — comparable, on the scale of emotional distress, to a divorce or bereavement. And yet, it rarely receives psychological support.

Normal Sadness or Dépression: How to Tell the Difference?

After a bankruptcy, it is perfectly normal — and even healthy — to go through a period of sadness, discouragement, and grief. This emotional reaction is proportionate to the magnitude of the loss. It does not in itself constitute a psychological disorder.

Clinical dépression, however, is distinguished by several characteristics: persistence over time (more than two weeks), generalization to all areas of life, an inability to feel pleasure in activities once enjoyed (anhedonia), sleep or appetite disturbances, profound fatigue not relieved by rest, and sometimes dark thoughts about the future or about oneself.

If you recognize several of these signs in yourself for more than two weeks, it is important to consult a doctor or mental health professional. Dépression is a medical condition that responds well to treatment — but worsens if left untreated.

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Anxiety: When the Future Becomes a Permanent Threat

Alongside dépression, anxiety is the other frequent companion of bankruptcy. It often takes the form of financial hypervigilance — compulsive checking of accounts, catastrophic scenario planning, difficulty sleeping due to nighttime rumination — but it can also invade other areas: fear of others' judgment, the dread of never pulling through, apprehension about administrative and legal proceedings.

Anxiety is, at its core, an adaptive response: it prepares us to face threats. But when it becomes chronic and disproportionate, it consumes precious energy and prevents effective action. The anxious person constantly thinks about their problems without actually progressing toward their resolution — what is called rumination.

The Thoughts-Émotions-Behaviors Spiral

CBT describes a central mechanism in dépression and anxiety: the thoughts-emotions-behaviors spiral. An automatic negative thought ("I'll never find a job") generates a painful émotion (discouragement, shame). This émotion leads to avoidance behavior (not sending CVs, not answering calls). The avoidance reinforces the original thought (since you're not looking, you're not finding), and the spiral closes in on itself.

Understanding this mechanism is already a form of action. It allows you to see that thoughts are not facts, that emotions are signals rather than truths, and that behaviors can be changed even when your mood is low.

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Testimony "My doctor told me I was depressed. It took me a long time to accept it. In my mind, dépression was for weak people. Then I understood it was a normal reaction to an abnormal situation. That helped me seek help without judging myself." — Sophie M., 45, former restaurant owner

CBT Tools to Counter the Spiral

Cognitive restructuring is one of CBT's central tools. It involves examining automatic negative thoughts with compassionate rigor: What is the evidence that this thought is true? What is the evidence against it? Is there an alternative explanation? What would the consequence be if this thought were true?

Behavioral activation is another powerful lever, particularly useful in dépression. It rests on a counterintuitive principle: you don't wait to feel better before acting — you act in order to feel better. By resuming activities that bring satisfaction — even small ones, even imperfectly — you gradually restart the reward circuit and break the avoidance cycle.

Mindfulness, finally, allows you to distance yourself from rumination. By learning to observe your thoughts without identifying with them — to watch them pass like clouds rather than drowning in them — you reduce anxiety's grip on daily life.

First Concrete Actions

If you feel caught in this spiral, a few simple steps can start the momentum. Each morning, write down three recurring automatic negative thoughts in a notebook — then ask yourself for each one: is this a fact or an interpretation? Commit to some gentle physical activity every day, even a twenty-minute walk: exercise has a documented antidepressant effect. And if symptoms persist or worsen, consult a doctor — appropriate psychological support and/or medical treatment can make a significant difference.

The spiral can be reversed. It takes time, it is sometimes nonlinear, but it is possible.


Gildas Garrec, CBT Psychotherapist in Nantes — Psychologie et Sérénité

Watch: Go Further

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