I wrote this weeks ago and it has been read and reread, edited and chopped. I
do not post this flippantly. It is a large issue that many are talking more about
recently. I’d like to add my voice to the discussion. I do not address my
convictions about what depression is and what we as Christians should think
about it in the piece, but would like to say here, briefly, that I personally
believe that depression is an illness, with complex causes and facets, that may
or may not have spiritual aspects. It can, and should when advised by a medical
professional, be successfully treated with medication. When science and medical
knowledge given to us by people with God-given abilities and wisdom open our
eyes to ways to improve our lives, we should listen and accept this gift. Christians
who need to go on medication to be able to live a life free from the hold of
this illness often feel immense guilt, and this is wrong. We as the church need
to be aware of the damage we do to people within and outside our community, by
not speaking about this, and other mental illnesses, in an open and loving way, often alienating both
those suffering and their families, and helping to create feelings of guilt, shame
and isolation. Whatever your thoughts on the theology of this issue, I hope
that you can read my letter below with the same openness in which it was written. Thank you for listening.
* * *
10/09/14
Dear church
member who is discussing this thing called “Depression” like it is the flu
I have heard
your discussions, or news of your discussions: theological debates and
philosophical arguments on the origins and meaning of this thing called “Depression.”
Oh, it is so interesting to bat ideas around like tennis balls, back and forth,
resting occasionally to consider what God might say in His Word, then, using
whatever verse you have found to hit the ball with renewed vigour. I have no
desire, here, to hit the ball with you. That is a conversation for another day.
This is just to remind you, in the midst of your game, your intellectual
discussion, that mixed up in this thing called “Depression,” there are people.
Other people who are struggling to understand it as well, but not because they
enjoy the stimulating conversations, the batting of the ball, but because they
live with it. I am one of those people. I have lived with it in my house. Its
darkness has covered the room I sleep in and painted grey the windows that I
wake up to. I cannot speak for those who suffer from this thing called
“Depression.” No one who has not felt the depth of their darkness can be so
foolishly presumptuous as to attempt to describe what it feels like. For that,
we need to put the ball down and listen to them. There are many who have
courageously stepped onto the court of our game and tried to share their world;
we would do well to just sit down, be silent,
and listen. I am not one of those, and will not attempt to tell their story.
But, I can tell the story of one who
has lived with this thing called “Depression” in my house as it has consumed
someone I love.
I would like
to tell you what it is like to live with someone you love who is suffering from
Depression in just three words.
Alone. Because
of the silence surrounding this disease, the stigma attached to it, and the
church’s often unkind and ungodly reactions to it and the people who have it,
it is impossible to not feel totally alone. As you watch your loved one suffer
and sink further and further into darkness and silence, away from you, you have
to do it alone. No one knows what happens behind the walls of your house. No
one is let in. A face is painted, and then
you get in the car, go to work, school, church. Sometimes the mask slips
outside the walls and someone sees a glimpse of the reality, a hint of the
pain, a suggestion of something not quite right. But nobody asks, really. And
usually, you hold things together, until you come home. And then, face washed,
you see the reality happening in your family. The silence, the pain, the
confusion. Even at home, however, you
cannot afford to be fully real. You must be strong. You must continue, day in
and day out. Fighting the despair, in the one you love, and in yourself, on the
outside at least. Sometimes contradicting, sometimes just listening, accepting
the negativity, the tears, the hopelessness, the silence, the gloom that falls
and settles into the rooms in which we must live, eat, and sleep. And you must
do it alone. No one enters into that place. No one knows, and if they did, they
would not understand. They could not move in. You must continue, and continue,
and continue, alone.
Anger. I feel
a lot of anger. Some of it is misplaced, and that is my problem to deal with,
kindly do not tell me that, I know it. But I will not lie; I feel angry. Angry
at this disease that has stolen the one I love; that consumes and surrounds
them with a dark, impenetrable wall that I can’t break through; that turns them
into someone I don’t know, can’t understand, and cannot hold.
I find my
anger turned on them in their helplessness. I want to shake them out of their
fog, to scream and shout in their face, to beat them into feeling-saying-doing
something. But I cannot. Because it would not be fair. And because it would not
help. My anger must find another outlet.
Enter
unthinking, uncaring people. I feel angry towards people, so many people, who
do not understand, who do not try to understand, who do not see that there is
even something to understand.
Enter church.
Oh, church, how can you stand there and not see? How can you leave your
brothers and sisters to suffer silent and alone behind the walls of the houses
you give them? How can you ignore the pain that is so evident if you would just
open your eyes to it?
And then, when
I follow the horrifying train of my thoughts, I turn to God. And, God help me,
I am angry at you. How could you do this to us? Where are you in our pain and
darkness? Why do you leave us here alone and afraid?
Afraid. I am
terrified. I do not know where this disease will take the one I love. I do not
understand it and, as I stand watch from the other side, I cannot help. There
is no quick fix, no twelve-step solution, no magic formula: I cannot
problem-solve this thing. And I cannot step into the darkness with the one I
love. I cannot follow. And yet sometimes, an even darker fear stalks me,
perhaps, I will follow.
Alone. Angry.
Afraid. There are other feelings that drip off this thing called “Depression”
when it moves into your house: guilt, grief, pain, hopelessness, confusion.
These three, however, accompany me and cannot be shaken off. And this is my
experience. I do not speak for all who have had to live with this thing called
“Depression” in their house. I do not even speak for every member of my family.
I speak for myself. It is not the experience of all who live with and care for
family with Depression. But it is mine. Hear it and consider it as you debate
the ethics, the origins, and, God help you, the theology of this thing we call
“Depression.” And then, eyes a little more open, please, be kind.
Rebekah, this is beautiful and brave. Thank you for writing and posting it. I hope that many people read and think about it.
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