I have a friend who has struggled with depression for many years. We were talking about the effects of depression on many members for whom it (and other similar issues) are difficult to control. He shared the following and gave me permission to share it here. (the
bolding is mine; the
underlining his) I hope it helps someone, somehow, in some way:
One of the issues that I think can stand some scrutiny is the issue of
what happens to worldview with a mental illness. All my life I was
taught "The light of Christ is given to all men so they can know good
from evil. If you do what's right, you will be blessed (always with the caveat that it may be in the next
life that you are blessed, leaving you holding the bag in this life)."
This is a great principle. It sounds like a law of physics or a
mathematical equation - when you do x, y will happen. You pray, you get a feeling someone is listening. You serve others, you get a warm fuzzy feeling inside. So what happens when it doesn't work for you? Did I just fall out of the human race/all men category?
We
like rules to be comprehensive and without exception so we can count on
them. Without rules that follow accepted patterns, the apple cart is
upended and the whole world around you goes into flux. "I don't know
what I can count on anymore when life itself seems to change on a daily
basis." This way of thinking could end tomorrow, or it could go on for
decades or until the end of my life. It is a shame that we mentally ill
folk are so complicated ("Doc, what do I do?" "Take two aspirin and call
me in the morning." "Bishop, I don't feel
things anymore. How do I feel the spirit?" "Just pray, and it will come
to you.") The 2 + 2 equation breaks down like light around the event
horizon of a black hole (perhaps a more apt analogy than I intended!)
Thus, it is not unreasonable to conclude that for some members or non-,
just doing the "prescribed" church standard answers will not necessarily
result in an invariably positive result. Ergo: faith crisis that may or
may not have a resolution subject to missionary discussion-level
prescriptions for "finding the truth."
I am not looking for
anyone to diagnose or try to treat me or my issues. I have
shared what I have shared simply to put forth the idea for discussion that there are
people in the faith community of the LDS Church for whom the normal
rules do not appear (I chose
that word carefully) to work the same as they do for many others, or
even themselves earlier in their lives. This is not a necessary
consequence resulting from sin, lack of faith, apostasy, or not "doing
the right things." I invite you to comment on this as you see fit.
If
I could speak for others who may feel like me, I would want to say "we
just want to know that we are not excluded (by biology, by genetics, by
disease, by spiritual state, by nature) from what other faith-holding
saints are able to feel and recall on a daily basis that guides them on
their walk through life." But I have to admit, I do feel like God has
made an exception for us and struggle to believe that what happens in my
life and my heart are evidence of a "loving" Father in Heaven.
It is possible to feel alone standing in a room crowded with people - depending on if you feel excluded (not even necessarily by them but from them). It is extremely difficult when you feel the same way about God.
2 comments:
Thank you for sharing this. I struggle with depression and some Sundays are unbearable. This was a great explanation. It is good to hear my thoughts come from someone else, to feel not alone. Thank you.
Thank you, Radel. I appreciate your comment - deeply.
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