How one night forever changed my view of depression & suicide

Depression-Suicide

Saturday afternoon we had a two hour block of free time at the Embracing Orphans retreat. Instead of hiking or going to downtown Estes Park, I hid away in my room to do some last minute prep for my talk that night. In truth I’d had several moments of panic and thought of changing my talk a half-dozen times.

But sanity prevailed and other than adding a few details, I was ready. It would be the first time that I would stand in front of a crowd and talk about my nine year battle with depression (both “regular” and “post-adoption”). I’ve shared about it on my blog and did a video testimony for church several years ago, but this was my first time “live.”

I was all ready to do a quick run through (wanted to make sure I wasn’t going to go too long), when I clicked over to Twitter for just a second. (Can you say ADD?) There was a tweet from someone about praying for Rick & Kay Warren as they had lost their son.

I quickly found the story on MSNBC. A story many of you have read by now.

“In spite of America’s best doctors, meds, counselors, and prayers for healing, the torture of mental illness never subsided,” Warren wrote to church members. “Today, after a fun evening together with Kay and me, in a momentary wave of despair at his home, he took his life.”

I stood in that hotel room and wept. A dozen years ago my reaction to that story would have been completely different. While I’m sure I would have felt sorry for the Warren’s, I’m also honest enough to admit that at one point the thought “Well that was selfish” would have flickered through my brain.

I had no reference from which to comprehend what would lead a person to suicide, especially a depressed person.

Not until one night in early 2004. I had, most likely, been clinically depressed for at least 6 months. But I had refused to admit I needed help. Had refused to talk about it with anyone, including my spouse or my best friends. Had refused to label it or even try to find a label for what I was feeling.

But that night I reached a breaking point – a full realization and face-to-face moment with the pain I was feeling. The realization that I no longer recognized the person I was. And the person I had become was NOT someone I liked.

In that brief moment I thought to myself, “Jesus, just come take me now please. I don’t think I can do this anymore.”

I want to make sure the distinction is clear – I wanted Jesus to relieve my pain. I was not, nor did I ever get to the point of contemplating suicide. I don’t want to unnecessarily scare my friends & family.

But that brief moment was enough to give me a glimpse into the darkness. Enough to forever change the way I would look at mental illness and suicide.

To look not with judgement, but instead with empathy. To know that logic, even “spiritual logic” is sometimes elusive – not because the person isn’t Christian enough. Not because their faith isn’t strong enough or they didn’t pray enough or they have some unconfessed sin. But because they are ill.

Mental illness is no different from cancer. No one chooses it.

Unfortunately, what is different is how we talk about it. ESPECIALLY in Christian circles. As a pastor’s wife (at the time), I felt as if I needed to hide the weight of my emotions behind a mask of hospitality and faith. I was sure that if I began to bare my soul, even just the tiniest bit, that what poured forth would be met with judgement and disdain. No, not from my husband, family or closest friends, but from the church as a whole.

The fear was, of course, not based in reality. But that’s the problem with depression. It blurs the lines of logic and reality until the person suffering is too afraid to take a step forward.

Can God heal? Absolutely! Does every person need medication to get better? No. Are there a lot of people who need help and aren’t getting it? Yes!

A study by the Shaffer Institute revealed that 70% of pastors battle depression. That’s 7 times the national average (1 in 10). So why aren’t we talking about it?

What if, instead of wondering how the church would react, every person suffering from depression knew they would be met with open arms and loving acceptance. What if they knew because we showed them? What if every Christian who has suffered from depression and mental illness would step forward and say “Me too”?

Matthew’s death is a horrible loss – the worst loss a person can ever encounter. I pray that somehow through the Warren’s story the church will wake up to the realities of mental illness and start talking about it the same way we talk about other illnesses – without judgement and shame.

If you are battling depression, please get help. It just takes reaching out to one person to start – whether that is a spouse, best friend or doctor.

If you have been blessed to be left untouched by this disease then I hope you will stand by, ready to support and love those around you who do suffer. Because I promise that there is someone, if not now, then at some point in your life.

A couple other posts you must read…

Ann Voskamp – “There’s no stigma in saying you’re sick because there’s a wounded Healer who uses nails to buy freedom and crosses to resurrect hope and medicine to make miracles.”

Kristen Howerton – “When we hear about grieving parents it can be so tempting to try to assign blame, because if they aren’t to blame, then we have to grapple with the reality that sometimes, tragedy is senseless. This is an uncomfortable truth: awful things happen to children that parents cannot prevent.  It’s a truth so painful that we would rather throw grieving parents under the bus than face it.”

The Thorn of Depression: Guest Post at BeBoldJen

Last week this comic was making the viral rounds and it cracked me up. I loathe Sponge Bob. He has to be the most annoying character ever invented.

So when my amazing friend Jen asked me to guest post about my struggle with depression, I had to include it.

Jen just had her first article, titled “Dirt Road Dependence” published in Proverbs 31 Magazine. Since I got to live that story with her in Ethiopia, I’m even more proud and excited for her. It was featured on Encouragement Cafe Radio yesterday and she invited some women to guest post on her blog about their own struggles with weakness and dependence.

Go read my post.

Here are a few other posts about my struggle with depression:

If you are new to my blog, thanks for visiting! I blog primarily about life as an adoptive family, how to afford adoption, and living in financial freedom. If you’re in the process of adoption, or think it might be in your future, I hope you’ll be encouraged by my book “Adopt Without Debt: Creative Ways to Cover the Cost of Adoption.”

The Happy Pill Debate

For those of you who have been around here for awhile, you’ve walked through some interesting times with me – the last of which was post-adoption depression that I wrote about here and here.

(If you’ve been around a REALLY long time you got to hear about my first episode of depression.)

Well, mostly because of my laziness in scheduling doctor’s appointments, I went off my anti-depressants about 3 months ago.

It’s this incredibly weird game I play called “Do I still need the pills? Maybe I’ll be fine without them.”

The problem is that the game sometimes takes a REALLY long time to play.

Because the signs are subtle, especially at first. Really it might seem like a really long case of PMS.

I’m irritable, I snap at the kids, I’m moody. Nothing sounds good to eat. And I lose all motivation to do ANYTHING.

But then it starts to effect my concentration and my creativity which in turn effects my job.

Then I get the whole “I don’t feel like me” thing going on.

And yet I still waffle back and forth. Is it bad enough to go back on the meds (and no, I don’t know what “bad enough” is – my definition might be entirely different than my husbands :-)

I’m fortunate that I don’t have any side effects from the Wellbutrin but still, no one wants to put medicine in their body if it’s not needed.

But alas, it is needed and so I gave up the game.

And am back on what I lovingly refer to as “my happy pills”.

Sanity restored.

My Lightbulb Moment – Post-Adoption Depression, Part 2

For the record I’d rather be catching the NCIS I missed yesterday, but a promise is a promise.

If you didn’t read Part 1, it’s here.

So my “lightbulb moment” happened one evening at the conclusion of a small group BBQ and pool party (luckily NOT in front of my small group). I’m not even sure when exactly it was – maybe July?

When we arrived at the Reeve’s house Noah asked if he could bring his DS inside. My answer was a definite no. There was a pool, basketball and tennis and absolutely NO need to have our nose stuck in a video game. EVERYONE in the car heard me say it.

So we’d had a great time and when Mark and I agreed that it was time to go I said that I would round up the kids which is a monumental task. I mean you get one or two to the right spot and while you go off and find the third and fourth the first two get distracted by something else  – it’s like herding cats! I was rounding up wet swimsuits, finding shoes, grabbing the casserole dish, etc.

Mark was playing basketball.

I was annoyed.

For the record at any other time this would not be a big deal. He went over to say goodbye to the guys and ended up playing for 5 minutes. But it was like turning on the burner under a pot of water that had been sitting on the stove for a really long time. (I love you honey and please don’t take it as me criticizing because I totally acknowledge that my reaction was unwarranted.)

I had one last kid to round up…Noah.

One of the kids mentioned that he was upstairs in the kids room so I traipsed up the stairs (telling the girls not to leave the spot where I had planted them). I found Noah crouched in the bedroom PLAYING HIS DS!!!!

Quite honestly, I don’t remember what my reaction was at that exact moment. I’m guessing I yelled at him pretty enthusiastically. Then I marched him downstairs, rounded up Luke and ordered them all to the van. I’m sure I tossed out a few polite “see you next week” remarks to our friends but inside I was starting to B-O-I-L.

As I’m throwing stuff in the back of the van I found out that apparently Luke had come out to the van, gotten his DS and took it inside. You know, because if one kid does it then it must be okay, despite that fact that mom was very specific earlier.

At that point Mark got to the van and I can only imagine what I must have looked like.  The Tasmanian Devil? That girl from the Exorcist right before her head spins around?

He cautiously asked “What’s wrong?” and I boiled over.

I’m sure I said a lot of other things but the one comment I distinctly remember spitting out, in THE most sarcastic voice ever, was “Well, apparently everyone around here thinks it’s OPTIONAL to obey mom!”

And then I said a lot of other things.

And then I said a lot of other things inside my head.

They were not pretty things.

I have NEVER been so angry in all my life.

And THAT, was the issue.

On the tensely quiet ride home I stared out the passenger window, my mind swirling with all kinds of thoughts.

I could sense Mark looking over at me occasionally, too smart to say anything. (He’s a quick study!)

See that girl, the one who blew up over a disobedient child, was not ME.

I do not have an extreme temper. Yes, I can feel strongly about stuff, can argue a point with the best of them, and I won’t try to tell you that I never lose my cool or yell at my kids.

But the intensity of what I was feeling that night was enough for the lightbulb to go off and for me to realize “This is not me!”

It was not just normal adjustment issues. It was not just being tired. It was not PMS.

The ugly beast had reared its head again.

In a way that realization was incredibly freeing because all of a sudden I knew where I was. It was familiar and I knew where to go from there.

Depression has a laundry list of symptoms but what the last seven years has taught me is that MY most obvious sign of depression is my irritability and anger level. It’s why I had been going back and forth in my head for a couple of months, debating, praying, trying to figure out whether things were bad enough to go back on my meds.

I am not the “wallow in bed with the covers over my head” kind of gal. I am stubborn and I push myself and while that is good, it also allows me to hide from some of the other symptoms that really are there, just undercover.

So I went back on my anti-depressant (Wellbutrin seems to be the right one for me) and within just a few days it was like that scene from Song of the South with the “bluebirds on my shoulder”. Yes, I think I actually hummed “Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah” intermittently for a few days.

If you asked me “What were you depressed about?” I couldn’t tell you. With my first clinical depression I could list the triggers for you (four major stressful life events in a short span of time). But it’s not like I was sitting around bemoaning the “way things used to be” or dealing with major attachment issues with the kids. We were actually VERY fortunate with our kids and had a relatively easy transition. Yes going from 2 kids to 4 was hard, yes there were challenges but nothing that seemed like that big of a deal.

But that’s the thing with depression, it doesn’t play nice and logical. Which, for someone who LOVES nice and logical, is really annoying.

Other than being therapeutic for me, I hope my story might help others struggling through the same issues. If you’re not sure if you have PAD, go talk to your doctor. Open up to the people closest to you about what your struggling with. Sometimes those around us see things we can’t see and it brings clarity to the issue.

Don’t wait until your boiling point.

The Realities of Post-Adoption Depression – Part 1

I can remember exactly where I was when I first heard the term “post adoption depression”.

We were sitting in a hotel conference room in Spokane, WA at our required adoption training.

I’m pretty sure that the thought that went through my head was something like

“Crap! I’m screwed.”

Eloquent? Maybe not.

Truthful? Yes.

See, I’ve been down that road before.

Well, a slightly different version of that road, but one I did not want to revisit.

But the ugly truth is that I have a “genetic predisposition” with a history of depression in my family.

So yes, I had accepted the fact that I would most likely face this issue on and off throughout my life. I was just hoping it would be a dozen years or so before it smacked me down again.

The few scientific studies that have been done on post-adoption depression show that approximately one half of adoptive mothers will experience it – some very mildly and some more severe.

One might compare it to postpartum depression although most professionals attribute PPD, at least partially, to post-pregnancy hormones being out of whack. No such hormone issue can be blamed for PAD.

It seems so bizarre that here, at the joyous completion of a year-long journey, one filled with ups and downs, that depression would rear its ugly head.

With my first bout of depression in 2003 it was a full 6 months or more before I became so desperate that I reached out and got help. Since then I have learned to recognize my warning signs. But even still there is always doubt. Am I just tired? Is it just PMS? Is it just normal adjustment issues?

All it took was one defining moment for me to realize that it was so much more…

(Continued)

Satan’s Cell Phone

On Friday night my mom and I went to see Christian comedian Chonda Pierce. I’ve heard bits and pieces of her act and she is FUNNY! What I was not prepared for was how powerful a speaker she was.

She has battled depression, something she writes about in her book Laughing in the Dark: A Comedian’s Journey through Depression. Toward the end of the evening she began to share about her recent relapse into depression – one that got so bad that she was eventually hospitalized.

She talked about how much she loved going to group each day and that she finally figured out why. It was the one place where she could go each day and be 100% totally authentic.

She said, and I agree, that this is what church should be but so many times it is not. We see a friend we know and ask “How are you?” We get the typical “I’m great, how are you?” in return. But is that the reality. Is that the truth? Granted we are often picking up kids and “busy” but shouldn’t church be the one place where we can say in response “You know, it’s been a tough week.”

Why are we afraid to be authentic with one another? Are we afraid of rejection? That the other person is too busy? That once we start into our problems that we won’t be able to stop and will be emotionally overwhelmed?

She made one other comment that, given all the recent discussion about depression I would share. She was talking about how Satan can just fill our heads with all kinds of lies that will absolutely drag us down.

“If Satan is the author of lies, then depression is his cell phone!”

How true. Those of us who have suffered through depression know that there is no time when our mind is more easily accessed and where those lies are heard loud and clear. I just loved it.

Songs for the Broken

I thought I would share my list of songs that have helped me through these times of discouragement and darkness. Some are new and so technically I didn’t listen to them in the midst of my depression, but they still speak to me.

While you may not be suffering from depression, everyone goes through a down period at some point in your life. Maybe these songs will be able to minister to you as well.

No One Else Knows by Building 429 (Lyrics) (Video)
The Real Me by Natalie Grant (Lyrics) (Video)
Praise You In This Storm by Casting Crowns (Lyrics) (Video)
Everlasting God by Lincoln Brewster (Lyrics)  (Video)
You Carried Me by Building 429 (Lyrics) (Video)
When the Tears Fall by Newsboys (Lyrics) (Video)
Psalm 73 (My God’s Enough) by Barlow Girls (Lyrics) (Video)
Amazed by Building 429 (Lyrics)

If you have other songs that you think should be on hear, leave a comment. I’d love to hear them.

Climbing out of the Well

Well
Last week hubby was talking with me and one of the ladies in our church who is a counselor, in preparation for last week’s message on depression – getting ideas, etc.

Meloney used this awesome illustration of "The Well". She said that some people are so far down in the well that they cannot see the light, they cannot imagine a way out and they have no hope. Those people need medication to help them begin to come up out of the well – to begin to see the light before other methods of treatment for depression will begin to work.

That was me. I honestly don’t think that I could have pulled out of the depression without medication. I know there is some controversy in Christian circles about medication for mental issues (don’t even get me started on Tom Cruise), but I don’t see how it’s any different than someone suffering from cancer. God has gifted individuals with skills to make amazing medical advancements. Who are we not to use every tool provided?

Along with the medication my doctor told me to start seeing a counselor which I did for a period of about 6 months. I did a lot of journaling during that time, a lot of examining of all the things going on in my life and I really did re-prioritize a lot of stuff.

A couple of other things that I either used at the time or have learned since then that help (besides prayer):

1. Exercise – I am bad about staying disciplined in this area but when I exercise regularly I feel so much better about myself, my energy level is up and research has shown a direct link between exercise and depression. It raises the seratonin levels in the brain which is what anti-depressants do as well.

2. Get Involved/Stay Involved – For me, I was already involved in other things when the depression hit. I was a church nursery coordinator, we hosted a home team, etc. My natural tendency was to pull back and withdraw from those things. But it was the times where I was doing something for someone else (especially the nursery) that I would forget about myself and the issues I was dealing with. So if you’re not involved in helping other people somehow, do it.

This is not to be confused with doing too much. I also pulled out of some less important things.

3. Journal – Specifically I did a lot of journaling about things I had to be grateful for – even small things. When I was worn out and overwhelmed with doing the umpteenth load of laundry I would stop and say "God, thank you for providing nice clothes for my family…and a washing machine and dryer."

4. Talk About It – Reach out to those around you and let them know what is going on in your life. Your true friends will not judge you or turn their back on you. They may not know exactly what to do or what to say but just having people around you that can help carry the burden is a huge thing.

5. Worship Music – Music has always been a big part of my life and I love finding a song that I really connect with. There are so many great praise and worship songs out there. Tomorrow I’ll post a list of songs that have especially spoken to me.

If you’ve gone through depression and have other things that helped you, please share them.

The Dark Days

So here, it is…the story of my journey through depression. Of course this is the condensed-made-for-Sunday-morning-TV version.

So first watch the video, then come back and read the in-between part of my story.

Depression Testimony Video

Back? Okay.

So it took a minimum of 6 months of misery before I had that “revelation” that I talk about in the video. It was at that point that I finally began to share with those around me what was going on – Mark, Kristen, Stacey. To this day, none of those 3 people probably knew the whole story, or the depth of it. It was something that I had never really put into words until preparing this testimony.

Turns out Kristen had been experiencing similar things and was already on meds. I think in talking to her I finally realized that “Yes, this might actually be depression.” Before, I had written that word off. I thought that because I was functioning that I couldn’t possibly be that bad off. WRONG! I’m apparently, just amazingly stubborn.

So I finally went to see my doctor who, God bless her, happens to have a real interest in psychiatric medicine so, while it wasn’t her specialty she was very well versed. She went through the list of questions that went something like this…

  • Have you lost interest in normal daily activities and/or hobbies you enjoy?
  • Do you have crying spells? Feel sad or hopeless?
  • Do you have trouble sleeping or want to sleep too much?
  • Do you have trouble concentrating and making decisions?
  • Do you have an increased or decreased appetite?
  • Are you restless, agitated, irritable and easily annoyed?
  • Do you have less interest in sex?

Yes, yes, yes….

The only question I said no to was “Have you had thoughts of suicide?” I think my actual response was, “Are you kidding? And leave my husband to take care of the kids alone? They’d eat cheese crisps every day for the rest of their lives.” (Moment of humor to break up the tears that were flowing by that point. I’m sure if something does ever happen to me they’ll be fine – he does know how to make other stuff.)

I was diagnosed with clinical depression and put on anti-depressants. We talked a bit about my family history. My paternal grandmother dealt with depression – I remember several severe episodes growing up.

Luckily Wellbutrin seems to work faster than some of the other drugs that can take a couple of weeks before you see an improvement. I remember waking up one Saturday morning about 3 or 4 days after my doctor’s appt. I got in the shower and all of a sudden it dawned on me – I was actually in a good mood. (Well as good a mood as I can have in the morning). It was amazing and I felt such a huge sense of relief.

It still took me a couple of months to tell the rest of the family about my depression. Friends too. It’s one of those things that’s kind of hard to just work into conversation. “Hi, how are you?” “Good now that I’m on anti-depressants.” See what I mean? AWKWARD!

I was on meds for about two years before I weaned off of them. I’ve been back on them once since then. I can spot the warning signs now and that helps.

So this is already really long, so I’ll be back with another post about some of the things that helped me as I was coming out of the depression.
…….

On a completely shallow note one of the first things I thought when the video started to play for the first time was “Dang, my hair looks GOOD!” (Go Jen!) And just for the record I’ve had like 4 other people tell me that too, so it’s not just me being vain :-)

Depression Testimony

In 2007 our church was doing a series titled “Baggage” and I filmed this testimonial about my struggle with depression. This served as an intro to the pastor’s sermon so it doesn’t go into what I learned from my journey as much.