5 Myths About Depression

One of the most dangerous attitudes I encounter is one which is almost intrinsic to depression:

isolating self-pity.

Now, most of us engage in this from time to time,
and a little “licking of one’s own wounds,” so to speak,
it not always a bad thing.

But when it leads to the sort of isolation which defies
the comfort extended by friends and family,
it is a bad thing indeed.

And when it goes further than that—
and it regularly does—

it can become implicitly (if unintentionally)
blasphemous in quality.

Myth #1: It won’t happen to me.

As for me, I said in my prosperity,

“I shall never be moved.”

By your favor, O Lord,

you made my mountain stand strong;

you hid your face;

I was dismayed.

Psalm 30:6–7

Overconfidence may not lead directly to a fall or to depression, but being overconfident hardly prepares
one for either.

David appears to have expected his spiritual “prosperity”
to continue unbroken—

the sort of “I’ve finally arrived” attitude
that many of us may have experienced briefly
before learning that, no, life usually doesn’t continue
in an unbroken vista of “personal peace and affluence.”

Even the achieving of those dubious goals does not (thankfully) fully protect us from the

“slings and arrows of outrageous fortune.”

It is better to expect what we are promised in Scripture
in the form of unwanted and (hopefully)
undeserved suffering.

Otherwise, we risk being surprised by that very thing
about which we have been repeatedly warned

1 Peter 4:12

Depression can be quite as fiery a trial as any other,
and will be if we imagine that we “shall never be moved.”

The good news—outlined explicitly in this same Psalm
is that God does indeed hear the cry of the afflicted,

and he does answer those cries with deliverance
that ends with mourning turned into dancing
and songs of praise.

Even if I do not experience depression myself,
thinking that I avoid it because it is impossibility
does not equip me to be particularly sympathetic
towards those who do suffer.

In fact, very many people are significantly depressed
at some point in life,

sometimes as a result of serious medical illness,

sometimes from sad circumstances,

sometimes for no apparent reason at all.

If we are led into the suffering which Scripture promises,
we must trust God to lead us through it in ways of his choosing.

Myth #2: It’s all in my mind.

Well, if you happen to be a disembodied spirit, maybe so.

I’m inclined to say that our minds are (presently)
all in our bodies.

Show me a mind without a body, and I’ll show you
a body without a mind.

Who we are is defined by what we are: living souls

1 Corinthians 15:14

While spirit and body may be distinguished,
they cannot (at least in this life) be separated

James 2:26

References in Scripture to their separation
(as opposed to emphasis on one aspect of ourselves)
do, as far as I can make out, refer to the afterlife

1 Samuel 28, which describes the unlawful summoning
of Samuel from his “rest” after death by Saul

Now, there are synonymous as well as overlapping
terms in Scripture for heart, soul, spirit, and mind,
yet entire theologies have been based upon eisegetical renderings of that single verse in Scripture which references “spirit and soul and body”

1 Thessalonians 5:23

as if it were an anatomy lesson rather than the comprehensive benediction intended by Paul!

So what?

Well, for starters, if you are depressed,
it usually affects your body

in terms of sleep,
in terms of energy,
in terms of appetite,
in terms of sense of well-being.

On the other hand, sometimes depression is
an effect of poor bodily health in one or more ways.

A quick example is untreated obstructive sleep apnea.

This condition, especially in severe forms,
degrades sleep in terms of both quantity and quality.

Much of the night is spent actually waking from sleep
and falling asleep again and again,

so that what is known as sleep efficiency is very low.

In addition, the actual sleep itself is shallow and
non-restorative.

If you’ve ever gone without sleep for an extended period, you will realize how miserable it makes you in almost every way:

concentration is poor,
judgment is impaired,
fatigue slows down action,
irritability rises.

And this is for non-depressed individuals.

Our minds are “housed” in our bodies

They are not disconnected functionally or mechanically from them.

We tend to “sense” ourselves as being centered in our “heads” but, when we face unexpectedly sorrowful news, our “hearts” ache and our center seems to have somehow shifted.

Our brains and the other aspects of our selves that think and feel and know are all part of one body.

The reason that Paul could use the body as a metaphor
for unity as opposed to division when discussing the
church is that the body really is a unity. One.

Myth #3: I definitely don’t need medication.

“That medication made me feel like a zombie!”
is the most common complaint I receive from patients entering my care from treatment elsewhere.

Undoing a bad experience with medications can be a challenge and my initial response is to offer assurances
that my salary is not based on how much or even whether or not I prescribe medication, and that I do not own any pharmaceutical company’s stock.

I go on to say that medications are not always indicated, and that I have in my career done a substantial amount of un-prescribing of medications that were either a poor fit
for a patient’s symptom profile or were prescribed in doses higher than necessary or in combination with such a large number of other medications as to make it difficult to know which was doing what, in terms of both intended effects as well as unwanted side effects.

I advise that it is as important to avoid taking too little medication as it is to avoid too much.

If none is indicated, then any is too much.

However, it is also true that if any is indicated,
then none is too little. “Just the right dose,”
as my mentor used to say, is what is needed.

This book presents 17th-century pastor Richard Baxter’s wise, gentle advice to comfort and strengthen all who struggle with depression or know someone who does.

I continue by stating that medication is very often helpful and regularly necessary for recovery from depression, though it is not—alone—as often sufficient for it.

Other interventions are commonly needed as well.

For example, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
is a formalized approach to identifying

false assumptions,
modifying them,
and then testing the new assumptions through changes in behavior.

As powerful as CBT has proven to be, properly undertaken, it is a rigorous and sometimes very difficult treatment.

Many individuals require medication before they are
able to engage successfully in CBT,
in order to establish a platform of affective (i.e., emotional) stability which can be positively exploited via CBT.

But reluctance to taking medication is quite common
and hardly new.

I think it helpful to consider medication as one of the several means which God may use to bring about healing.

Can God heal by direct intervention with no intermediary?

Certainly. He does.

Are we free do demand that he do so?

Certainly not.

There are too many Scriptural examples of God’s
use of means to bring about healing,

and while I do not imply that each is a form
of medication, some are.

Michael S. Lundy

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Overcome evil with good

Sin will take us farther

than we want to go,

keep us longer than we want to stay,

and cost us more

than we want to pay.

Sin makes us hide from God

when are greatest need

is to expose ourselves

and to hide in God

Not only does sin have consequences,

but also each time we sin,

we reinforce a pattern

that becomes harder

and harder to break.

If we persist in sin with the thought

that one day we will get right with God

we should remind ourselves

that God may still be there,

to forgive and restore us,

but we may not be.

Sin has a diminishing factor to it.

It always gives it’s best

in the beginning.

It never gets better after that …

it only gets worse.

It’s not impossible to say no

to the patterns of the numbing cycle

that surrounds us,

there’s no reason to lower the standard

there’s no purpose

In rationalizing being imprisoned

to self destructive life (death) choices.

Overcome evil with good

Selected

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Read on

Reading is an immense gift,


but only if the words are assimilated,

Only when words

Are taken into the soul


Only when eaten, chewed, gnawed,

And received in unhurried delight

Eugene Peterson

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More grace

He gives more grace

when the burdens grow greater,

He sends more strength

when the labors increase;

To added affliction

He adds His mercies,

To multiplied trials

His multiplied peace.

When we have exhausted

our store of endurance,

When our strength has failed

And the day is half done,

When we reach the end

of our hoarded resources

Our Father’s full giving is only begun.

His love has no limit,

His grace has no measure,

His power no boundary

known unto men;

For out of His infinite riches in Jesus

He gives & gives & gives again.

─Annie Johnson Flint.

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What’s this collapse

We know all things work together

for good to them that love God.

Romans 8:28

We can be certain.

God sits in the ship when it rocks most.

God’s invisible hand is always

on the world’s rudder.

Wherever providence may drift,

our God steers it.

We look over the raging waters

We see the spirit of Jesus

treading the billows.

We hear His voice saying,

“It is I, be not afraid.”

We know God is always wise.

We are confident that there can be

no accidents,

We’re assured there are no mistakes;

We’re confident nothing occurs

which ought not to arise.

We can say, “If I should lose all I have,

it is better that I should lose than have,

if God so wills:

The worst calamity is the wisest

The kindest thing

that could happen to us

is that God ordains it.”

We know that all things

work together for good

to them that love God.”

This isn’t a theory, but a matter of fact.

Every event works out

God’s blessed results;

God rules all,

God governs wisely,

God brings good out of evil,

We pray,

‘Send me what You will, my God,

as long as it comes from You;

Only God can relieve our worries

God’s Omnipotence

has servants everywhere.

His method is sublime,

His heart is profoundly kind,

God never is before His time,

and never is behind.

Spurgeon adapted

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Mildew can attack our hearts

When we ask:

Give us this day our daily bread

We’re saying:

protect us from

The blasting & mildew!

Don’t damage our crops with hail!

Haggai 2:17

Hail is destructive to our standing crops,

Hail beats down the precious grain on the ground!

We’re grateful when the corn is spared a terrible a ruin!

There are dreaded mysterious destroyers

Our crops can be assaulted with smut, bunt, rust & mildew.

This turns the ear into a mass of soot,

These render it putrid,

This drys up the grain, in a manner so beyond all human

control that the farmer is compelled to cry,

“This is the finger of God.”

Innumerable minute fungi cause the mischief

It is only goodness of God,

That the rider on the black horse doesn’t

soon scatter famine over the land.

Infinite mercy spares our food.

There are active agents ready to destroy our harvest.

Pests of every kind lurk and loom

We should pray & pray,

“Give us this day our daily bread.”

The curse can engulf us;

we have constant need of God’s hand of blessing.

When blight & mildew come

they are chastisements from heaven.

We must learn to bear the rod

It is our Lord that has appointed it.

Spiritually, mildew is no uncommon evil.

When our work is most promising this blight appears.

We hoped for His grace,

But then this strange apathy,

or an abounding disillusionment,

or a cruel hardness of heart destroys!

Look for unconfessed sin in us,

Look for deficiency of sincerity

Look for empty decisions

Look for the disappointing of our desires.

We need renewed dependence on the Lord,

We need prayer that no blight would fall on us.

We need deliverance from pride

We need the Lord of the harvest to remove the damage.

Mildew can attack our own hearts.

It can shrivel our prayers & rot our expressions.

Only God can avert serious calamity.

We need Jesus Spirit to Shine!

He is our blessed Sun of Righteousness,

He only can drive the blights away.

We have to have His showers of blessing!

We need His grace & peace multiplied for us!

Adapted from Spurgeon

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Covid keeps creeping

This covid phenomena won’t go away.

Even though we had it had tests to prove we’re over it

And even have had tests showing we have antibodies

against it. Yet they won’t let us have the freedom of

a congratulatory you’re a victor badge.

Now Jill has a procedure scheduled at the hospital and what

do they want to do? Yep, that is right. Another psycho

Covid test. I feel like saying ok. The test is a week before

the procedure. What about any bugs that might crawl into

her body between the test and the surgery???

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Delight in God’s Word

But our delight is in God’s Word

We love God’s Word so intensely

that we want to think about every aspect of it constantly.

Psalms 1

As God’s words comes to us we drink His words in,

His voice in His word fills our heart with joy and happiness

because we belong to God.

Jer. 15:16

We Let the word of Christ dwell in us richly,

We allow His words teach us

We exhort each other with all wisdom,

We sing psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs,

We let God fill our hearts with grace to God.

Col. 3:16

We commit ourselves wholeheartedly to God’s Word

He speaks to us from His word daily.

Deut. 6:6

We Fix these words of God into our mind and being,

We tie them as a reminder on our hands

We let them be symbols on our forehead.

Deut. 11:18

We find all our delight in Your Word;

We do not forget Your instructions.

Psalms 119:16

We delight in Your Words because we love them.

Psa. 119:47

Your Word is our delight,

We’ll never perish from affliction because Your word is our Joy.

Psa. 119:92

We will never forget Your Word, for by Your word You have revived us.
Psa. 119:93

We will meditate on Your Word Lord

We will focus on your ways in our (behavior).

Psa. 119:15

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Be strong in the Lord

God is strong, and he wants us to be strong in the Lord.

We take everything our Lord has set out for us to live out,

He’s provided well-made weapons of the best materials.

We put them to use so we will be able to stand up to everything the Devil throws our way.

This isn’t easy.

This isn’t something we do lightly.

We can’t be all cavalier

This is for keeps,

This is a life-or-death fight to the finish against the Devil and all his fallen angels.

We have to be prepared.

We’re up against far more than we can handle on our own.

We take all the help we can get,

We use every weapon God has issued,

We stand up on our feet.

We apply Truth,

We learn righteousness,

We learn peace with God and the peace of God,

We grow in faith,

We develop a deep understanding of our salvation

We Learn how to apply God’s word in every situation.

God’s Word is our indispensable weapon.

We pray continuously.

Prayer is our essential weapon in this ongoing warfare.

We Pray hard and long.

We Pray for our brothers and sisters.

We pray Keeping our eyes open to all the needs of others.

We keep praying persistently to Keep each other’s spirits up

We ask that no one falls behind or drops out.

We just can never do without prayer.

We Pray that we’ll know what to say

We pray that we’ll have the courage to say it at the right time

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a cyclical train wreck

Oh Lord, it happens too much.

I feel like a cyclical train wreck.

I’m in a culture that denies Your sovereignty

Everyone worships at the throne of the perpendicular pronoun, “I”.

“I” is everywhere in me!!!

help me to exemplify the greatness of You;

help me bow to You.

You have given me a life full of opportunities to serve

Please enabled me to live at full potential for Your glory.

I humble myself before “You” and acknowledge that

“I” could not breathe a breath,

‘I” couldn’t think a thought,

“I” couldn’t make a sound decisions,

“I” couldn’t press on to one iota of excellence without Your power.

You alone are the One “I” seek to please.

“Life’s a privilege!”

Make You my only intention.

Show me how to serve You and not To serve “I”.

Grant me grace and courage to give myself away to You

Let me sacrifice for others

Adapted from the prayers of a past senate Chaplin

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