When we think critically about monsters, we tend to classify them as scary-looking, deformed creatures that hid in our closet and under our beds, creatures that lurk silently in the shadows, waiting to attack. Technically, a monster should only be something spoken of in fairy tales and legends. But nowadays, a monster represents more than just a mythical creature that resembles something of a mix between a human and an animal, they represent us, humans. Zombies, are clearly the right monsters that have a resemblance on humans, but not just any human, they resemble humans with mental health problems in our society. In the famous AMC show, “The Walking Dead,” the zombies, better known as the “walkers” are explicitly a resemblance of depressed people among our society.
According to the National Alliance on Mental Health, an estimated of 16 million Americans suffer from depression in today’s society, which is almost 7% of the population. People of all ages and all racial, ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds can experience depression. Depression is a mood disorder that causes a persistent feeling of sadness and loss of interest, it affects how you feel, think and behave, and it
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It focuses on deputy sheriff Rick Grimes who sets out to find his family and encounters other survivors along the way. The survivors are isolated, scared and lonely. As well as Rick, many of the other survivors are in the search to find their family and friends. But they are constantly worried that the “walkers” will get them; it’s present in the back of their mind all the time. And even though, the survivors try to find places where they can feel safe for a few days, weeks, or even months, the “walkers” will break down their secured walls, and they always find a way in. Depression is just like the “walker,” it will always find a way in someone’s life and infect them with the horrible