Thanks for posting. Good to hear in some ways because it is narrow-sighted to keep on thinking this is "IT" for therapy. Many mindfulness and yoga therapies have shown help for depression. I always think of CBT as helpful for things like general anxiety or obsessive patterns....or also early eating disorder treatment when you can challenge some of the distorted thinking and also hook the patient up with a nutritionist.
But it has not worked for me for trauma (or years later eating disorder because starving was just my way of self-regulation...fully aware I was too skinny). And if someone has depression tied to trauma (lots of us), then that might also involve a different course.
CBT it useful. It's a great therapy for many things. But it's important to know it's the "THE" therapy. My therapist has Dance Movement Therapy certification, movement analysis, Somatic Experiencing, Mindell Process Werk, Masters in child and family therapy....a lot of modalities that work very well together for treating any age, and particularly trauma. But the research goes into pharmaceuticals more than treatments. A tool kit of combined somatic approaches is a real blessing for complex trauma sufferers. CBT just made me feel helpless and stupid. Because it wasn't about my thoughts. The trauma was driving my thoughts. I knew I was nuts, but body-focused trauma therapy helped me feel like I'm "okay",...not broken, there is a way out..