Thanks.Actually Lithium did help a bit, the only one out of 19 or 20. However, it slowed me down a bit, a bit being unacceptable to me. I'd rather be more scattered & unstable with higher energy.
To each their own. I'm certainly glad to hear your depression is better. Depression is so miserable I can't fault anyone for taking whatever measures they can to releave it.

It's my belief that what a person with depression should do is to try various treatments and see what works. Since we don't yet have any test to predict responsiveness to treatments based on a person's genetic makeup, all we can do is gamble, do what works, and throw out anything that doesn't.
For my part, I should also try eating healthier, exercising, and other lifestyle changes. But the Wellbutrin I'm now on has definitely helped pull me out of some really dark holes, for three different depressive episodes, most recently in the first half of 2011. Prozac, on the other hand, was worse than useless.
I think it will all boil down to interactions between genetics and environment. I suspect there are a number of genes that all correlate with higher risk of depression, and depression associated with some of these genes (and combinations thereof) respond strongly to environmental pressures, while others do not show as strong a response. It's encouraging that people are beginning to unravel this sort of thing though, as your article points out with one particular gene.I suppose I am coming at things from my own perspective, personally I do not believe it is my genetic destiny to be depressed, that is to say I nearly all of my depression is related to circumstances. Others seem certain that their depression is largely hereditary. And perhaps we are both right. I personally think more people are depressed now than need be but perhaps some in inevitable regardless of circumstance. I find it hard to believe that major depression is built into an genome (it seems like such a maladaption) but I could be wrong. In certain circumstances I've realized, depression could be very adaptive. When you don't know whether to fight or flee & any wrong movement could be fatal a hibernation type emotional response could be helpful.
Words fail me, hibernation is a poor choice but it's hard to put words to the experience (my experience anyway) of major depression. It feels like literally parts of me are dying (emotional parts, social parts, etc.). If I could do a brain scan of myself during these periods it would probably look like that.
It is known that depression rates have increased over the past few decades - whether because of increased diagnosis or increased incidence isn't known. However, depression certainly existed in historical times - many famous artists showed telltale signs of it, and it is easy to find writings about "melancholy" and such from the 19th century. As for why it evolved, there are some evolutionary psychology explanations. But I don't put much stock in that whole field - it's full of plausible explanations made up on the spot without any way of testing their conclusions.