Like A Broken Vessel
**About a year or so ago, I was asked to speak in my church on depression. It was a really difficult task and the process of writing all my thoughts down often left me gasping for breath as I recalled, emotionally and physically, the pain I had suffered over the years.
My Bishop suggested that I submit the talk to our Church's magazines...but I just haven't been able to find the courage to do it.
Lately, I have been prompted to share this talk and be more open about my personal struggles. I have tried sitting down to it and revising the talk as it needs to be like 2,000 words less than it is....
Still terrified to do so, I am going forward with faith and promptings and just letting it all out here on my blog. I don't know if it will help anyone. Maybe it is just for me, again. But I hope it does touch someones life in even a small way...letting them know that they are not alone.***
The talks I have been asked to reference in regards to my
message today are taken from the Conference talks of our Prophet, President
Monson titled , "We Never Walk Alone" and from Elder Holland
"Like A Broken Vessel"
My heart is full of remembrances' of past heartaches and the
divine hand of God in my life that got me through the greatest trial of my
life. That trial was a 5 year battle with debilitating depression. I normally
don't write out my talks word for word, but the things that I have felt
prompted to share today are so personal and tender, I felt the only way I could
get through this without crying uncontrollably was to write it all down. I hope
that I can still share the things in my heart and the things that the Lord
would have you hear today. May your
prayers be with me so that I can speak boldly and that the words I say will be
uplifting to you.
Let me begin by declaring----Depression is not a choice. It is not a punishment. It is not a cry for attention. It is a very real and very scary thing that
afflicts both old and young. It is not a
sign of un-worthiness. It is not a
reflection of your spiritual well being.
It is a mental illness. Just as
real as cancer and often just as debilitating.
To quote Elder Holland, it is "an affliction so severe
that it significantly restricts a person's ability to function fully, a crater
in the mind so deep that no one can responsibly suggest it would surely go away
if those victims would just square their shoulders and think more positively...No,
this dark night of the mind and spirit is more than mere discouragement."
While in the depths of my personal trial, I remember watching
Oprah and hearing someone on the show talk about depression in this way. "Depression
is like sitting on a couch and 5 feet away from you is a magic wand and you
know if you can just pick up that magic wand you will be cured and all the pain
will go away...but you just can't get off the couch".
In organizing my thoughts today I have decided to first share
some steps that Elder Holland has outlined as ways to prevent a depressive
episode and then I want to share the steps of how to get through and survive
depression if you are currently on the battlefield.
First--- Prevention:
Elder Holland outlines that the first step is:
#1 Watch
for stress indicators: Try to identify the things in your life that cause
you stress. Once you have identified them, find ways to avoid those
things. I have identified that I cannot
watch certain types of movies that have intense scenes when I am working on
preventing a depressive episode. I once
was in a very stressful family situation overseas and we decided to watch the
film "Mimsy". A really cute movie,
but also very intense. My mom said she
was watching me as my body became more and more tense and a look passed over my
eyes that she had not seen before. After
the movie was over, the family situation escalated and I started to have a
panic attack.
I had never had one before and it was terrifying. Everything in my mind and body was screaming
for me to jump out the window. Thankfully, my mom and younger sister were
able to calm me down and I rested and replenished for the rest of the
night. But I have identified intense
films as a stress indicator and I now know to avoid them when I feel a
depressive episode coming on.
#2 Make
adjustments immediately when you start to feel depleted. Slow down. Rest up. Replenish. And Refill. Recently I had to ask to be released from a
Stake calling. I was serving as the
Stake Primary Secretary and at the end of the first year of that calling, I had
to make some changes in my life that were very dramatic. Our family was struggling with a trial that
needed more of my attention than I was able to give. I struggled to juggle it all but realized I
was losing and I could feel the cloud of depression and anxiety starting to
come over me. I knew I needed to make a
change.
I prayed and struggled and sought guidance on what I should
do, and the answer was clear. I needed
to ask for a release. It was not easy to do and I felt horrible and
unworthy for asking for the release but I was sure that that was what the Lord
was telling me to do. When the High Councilman over Primary, and his
wife, the Primary President I served under, came to my home to offer the
release, the Sister told me that she had been praying to know if I should be released and felt
prompted that I should but
that I needed to make that decision for myself. It needed to come from me; it was a lesson the
Lord wanted me to learn.
She could
see how I was struggling and her prayers were heard. I later found out that one of the Counselors
in our Presidency was praying for me as well.
They truly knew my need and they loved me enough to let me go.
If those steps do not work, and you
are cast into the chasm of depression...your first step is to:
#1 Seek Counseling. Elder Holland states: "If you had appendicitis, God
would expect you to seek a priesthood blessing and get the best medical care available. So too with emotional disorders. Our Father in Heaven expects us to use all of the marvelous gifts He has
provided in this glorious dispensation."
Throughout my life, I have seen many different counselors for
many different reasons. In the first
years of our marriage, I sought counseling to heal from a past abuse that was
affecting my ability to love my husband the way I wanted to so desperately.
When my
parents divorced about 5 years ago, I sought counseling to heal from the
emotional turmoil that shook my core and tormented my soul.
But when I
was in the midst of my depression, counseling was the furthest thing from my
mind. I felt crazy. Un-loveable.
Broken. Useless. I felt that no amount of prayer or fasting or
scripture reading would ever make me feel better.
I was so scared. There was a time that I dealt with
agoraphobia, where I was terrified of going outdoors. I couldn't do my laundry in the laundry
center across the parking lot from my apartment, check the mail, or even answer
the door. Even a knock at the door would
send me into a panic.
The things I
was feeling and the thoughts in my head were so dark and terrifying that I
thought if anyone knew them, surely they would take my child away from me. I was sure that I would never recover and
whatever the counselor had to say to me it surely would not help. I felt beyond repair.
At some
point, I relented, and the advice I received help quell the storm
temporarily. But the war in my mind was
not over just because one battle was won.
This leads
to step:
#2...BE
HONEST and Prayerfully and responsibly consider the counsel and solutions the
counselors prescribe.
It is not
enough to just go to counseling and listen to the words of comfort they
offer. You have to actually use the
tools given. It is also imperative that
you are completely honest with them, even when the truth is the scariest thing
in your mind and telling them feels like the most dangerous and reckless thing to
do.
Trust me
when I say that Satan is well aware of the workings in your mind. He is aware of the dysfunction that is
causing this suffering and he is using his greatest tools on you at your
weakest point. The lies he feeds a
depressed mind are dark and he wants nothing more than for you to succumb to the
darkness and lose that last bit of hope that is in you.
I was
there. I was in that chasm. The smile that I wore on my face was a mask
that was covering up a deep loneliness and fear.
At the
lowest point in my depression, I was serving as a counselor in my Ward's
Primary. One particular Sunday my mask felt heavy and I just couldn't wear it
anymore. The depletion must have shown
on my face and on my countenance. I was
pulled aside during sharing time and asked if I was ok by the other counselor
in our Presidency.
I told her I
was fine, but the Spirit told her that I wasn't. She kept pressing and I finally broke
down. I told her that I just couldn't do
it anymore. The world was just too
much. The darkness too great. I felt that if I just disappeared, everything
would be better.
I felt that
eventually my family would get over not having me in their life. They would move on and be happier for it. I was so totally convinced that this was the
only good and honorable thing to do. I
truly felt that this was the only way out.
I swore my
friend to secrecy and plead with her not to tell anyone what I had told her and
then I reassured her that all was well and that I had the situation under
control.
That same afternoon,
2 members of the Bishopric came to my house to check on me. They asked me how I was feeling. I responded
with my famous answer, "I am just fine, thank you." They told me that a friend of mine was
worried about me and thought I could use some immediate help. I assured them again, with a smile on my
face, that all was well and they did not need to worry.
After they
left, I called my friend to tell her how upset I was that she broke a
confidence with me. She replied
tearfully and meekly that she would never be able to live with herself if I
followed through with the thoughts in my mind knowing that she didn't say
anything to help prevent it. I was very
angry with her but also there was a glimmer of
happiness, in that a hand had been extended to me that I was finally willing to take hold of.
I was sent
back to counseling and I was to visit with my Bishop every Sunday after Church
to check in with him. My friend called
me every day to check in also and many days she heard the real truth in my
voice even when I said I was fine, and she would take the kids for the day and
sometimes overnight.
When I went
to my first meeting with my new counselor, I was shocked by his youth and put
up immediate walls against him.
I decided in
those first moments that there was no way a young man that seemed nearly my own
age had anything worth sharing with me that could possibly help. I was so irritated and I just wanted to walk
out. He told me, "Olivia, the woman
that sits before me now is not the same woman that your Bishop
described." I laughed and with a
smile I said, "Oh I know. This is
just a mask. I don't trust you enough to
take it off yet. But we'll see how this
goes and take it from there."
He replied
with a "fair enough" attitude and we did indeed take it from
there. Over the period of our
professional relationship, he saw more tears and more honest emotions from me
than I was even willing to share with my husband.
A few
Sundays into my transformation, I overheard my Bishop say to my friend,
"You know you saved her life."
She
did.
#4 Rejoice in the small victories.
The
victories may seem silly to some, but taking a shower, getting dressed, or eating
a decent meal can be some of the hardest tasks and some of your greatest
triumphs. During those first days of
healing, my Bishop counseled me to do only one thing. Read.
I was not to think, watch TV, go outside or do anything until my husband
came home every day. If I got dressed
that day, it was a victory and I should rejoice. But other than feeding my kids and changing
messy diapers, I was to only READ.
I added a #5 to this list DO NOT GIVE UP or GIVE IN
In President
Monson's talk, he shares a story of woman named Tiffany who was in a similar
battle with depression. Tiffany sought
comfort from the scriptures and from prayer, but when peace did not come she
felt abandoned by God. Eating became a
difficulty to her and she started to lose weight.
Her friends
and family were very worried about her. After an unsuccessful attempt of trying
to get her to eat, one day, a friend asked, "'There must be something that sounds good to you.'
Tiffany thought for a moment and said, 'The only thing I can think of that
sounds good is homemade bread.' But
there was none on hand.
The
following afternoon Tiffany's doorbell rang.
Her husband happened to be home and answered it. When he returned, he was carrying a loaf of
homemade bread. Tiffany was astonished
when he told her it had come from a woman named Sherrie, whom they barely
knew. She was a friend of Tiffany's
sister Nicole who lived in Denver, Colorado."
To summarize
the rest of the story, Sherrie felt prompted to not only make a second loaf of
bread that day but to take it with her on her errands, and then deliver it to a
woman that she had just briefly met who lived 30 min in the opposite direction
that she needed to be in to put her crying one year old down for a nap.
I don't know
the rest of the story, but I would venture a guess to say that that loaf of
bread saved Tiffany's life.
Elder
Holland further counsels:
#1 To never
lose faith in God's love for you
#2 To
"FAITHFULLY pursue the time-tested devotional practices that bring the
Spirit of the Lord into your life."
#3 To seek
counsel and blessings from the priesthood holders in your life.
#4 To take the
Sacrament and remember the Atonement.
and finally...
#5 To believe
in miracles.
I testify
that these last five steps will help all of us stand the test of trials and
refining fires in our lives. They are
tools that are necessary to heal when used with the other tools such as
counseling and medication.
They will
also help us when we are simply lonely or having a tough time. They help us just as much as when all is
well. If I had not used these tools in
conjunction with the help of counselors, Drs. and medications, I might still be
fighting a battle in my mind.
I testify
that the Lord can and does work miracles in our lives. He gave me a miracle when he placed my friend
in my life at the time when I needed her most.
He gave me a miracle when He gave me the most wonderful, patient, and
compassionate husband in the world. He
continues to work miracles in my life will continue to do so as long as I
remain faithful to my covenants.
From Elder
Holland, "Whatever your struggle, my brothers and sisters- mental or
emotional or physical or otherwise- do not vote against the preciousness of
life by ending it! Trust in God. Hold on
in His love. Know that one day the dawn
will break brightly and all shadows of mortality will flee. Though we may feel we are 'like a broken
vessel,' as the Psalmist says, we must remember, that vessel is in the hands of
the divine potter. Broken minds can be
healed just the way broken bones and broken hearts are healed. While God is at work making those repairs,
the rest of us can help by being merciful, nonjudgmental, and kind."
Now I would
like to address those who are in relationships with people who are suffering
from depression. Like Elder Holland says, be patient. I know it is not easy to
do. Let go of the idea that if you could
just say the right thing, the right phrase, it would make it all better. It won't.
I know there are some days when you just want to put your hands on your
loved ones shoulders and just shake them out of it! I am sure some days phrases go through your
mind such as: "Just snap out of it!
Stop it! This is ridiculous! Not
this again! Why are you acting this
way? OR Can't you just feel
better?"
Trust me, your
loved one is saying those same things to themselves and would that it were that
easy. They want to feel better just as
much as you want them to but the light at the end of the tunnel is simply overshadowed
and hope seems like a distant memory.
Just love them. Love them, love
them, love them. Elder Holland says,
"...try not to be overwhelmed with the size of your task.
Don't assume
you can fix everything, but fix what you can.
Whatever else you may or may not be able to provide, you can offer your
prayers and you can give 'love unfeigned'. Charity never faileth"
If all you can offer is a shoulder, clean
dishes in the cupboard, or a loaf of bread...give what you can. Don't ask what you can do, just DO SOMETHING.
In the beginning it may make them
angry. They may feel like YOU think they
are incapable or lazy. Keep doing it
anyway. Let the Spirit be your guide. Eventually they will be able to let you in and they will be so
glad you never.. gave.. up!
Elder Holland
says, "I bear witness of that day when loved ones whom we knew to have
disabilities in mortality will stand before us glorified and grand,
breathtakingly perfect in body and mind."
The charity
that you give your loved ones will be magnified by God. Trust Him and continue to serve and give what
you can.
I would like
to close by quoting our dear Prophet:
"My
dear sisters [- and I add brothers-] your Heavenly Father loves you- each of
you. That love never changes. It is not influenced by your appearance, by
your possessions, or by the amount of money you have in your bank account. It is not changed by your talents and
abilities. It is simply there. It is there for you when you are sad or
happy, discouraged or hopeful. God's
love is there for you whether or not you feel you deserve love. It is simply always there."
I add my
witness and testimony of this truth as I have felt His unconditional love in my
life. Especially in those moments when I
felt unlovable. He loves us. All of us....I leave these things with you
in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.
Comments
It takes courage to share our hearts, so thank you for sharing yours. :)