Again, quite unlikely (not impossible). Anecdotes are certainly worthwhile to some degree, because we're not animals, but I don't think your blaming CR for depression can be backed up by science. I think it might be a case of confirmation bias & post hoc ergo propter hoc. Or you simply had bad luck (statistics and all that, not everyone lives under the bell curve...)
http://www.imminst.o...p;hl=happy mice
As I said in my post, I'm not fully pinning it on CR and it could be a coincidence. I went into CR because of the science behind it, but I decided to stop because I was concerned it was involved in the problem. If it was involved, that would have defeated some of the purpose of CR. To be clear, I didn't post any of that to be a warning to anyone. I learned a lot about health and nutrition prior to and while on CR. I plan on keeping my calories generally lower than pre CR by eating slightly smaller portions rather than counting them. I'll simply focus on maintaining a steady, healthy body composition.
The loss of libido came first actually, but it was a gradual loss. If it was CR related, I'd say that's the biggest drawback. It probably wouldn't be an issue if I was a bachelor.
I disagree that it's unlikely that there could be a correlation, but I agree that there isn't much saying CRON and depression are correlated. (Emphasis on the "ON", of course. Without optimal nutrition, I would imagine CR and depression are correlated. The thread you linked has some discussion of that.) I'd like to see a long term study done to see how CRON affects the occurrence of mental illness, especially depression, in those with a history of it. At this point, I haven't seen any literature that addresses that directly so I wouldn't say "unlikely."