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By
Bruce T. Forbes
©iStockphoto.com/Leslie Banks
Editor’s
note: Overwhelmed with the positive response to his article,
“When
a Handshake Isn’t Enough”,
which discussed what we can do to help our troubled brother, the
author was urged to continue on with this theme. A friend suggested
he talk about what the grieving, depressed, or traumatized man
can do to help himself. “Having been through as much depression
as you have,” she explained, “you’ve got to have a few tips to
help others.” This article is a response to that request.
I
am not a professional mental health provider, and this
article should not be read as if I am. I am, however,
a traveler on a very long journey, and I can tell you what has
happened to me along the way.
The
first thing I can tell you is an important one. What the mind
goes through when a man is going through this type of despair
is not logical and does not make sense, so don’t
try to make sense out of it. One of the reasons a man going through
all of this is so severely misunderstood is because it’s so impossible
to understand if you have not yet walked that path.
Where
I’ve Been
When
the tragic events of the student rampage at Virginia Tech were
unfolding, leaving so many innocents dead, I watched with horror
and then with tremendous sorrow. What hit me the hardest, however,
was a few days later when I read excerpts of the killer’s videotaped
message.
In
complete shock I called my wife and tearfully confessed that as
I read those excerpts I heard each one of them in my own voice;
as if it were me speaking. Everything he said was as if from my
heart from ten years previous, when I first went through suicidal
depression! “I guess if I needed proof of how far I’ve come in
the past ten years,” I told my wife, “That would be it.”
What
was the difference between me and the student who went on the
killing rampage? The only difference I could see was that when
I had the chance to get help I took that chance. Ten years
later I still have bouts of depression, but I now know what to
look for and what to do. And that’s the journey I’d like to share,
pointing out some of the mile markers for others to watch for.
How
Men Set Themselves Up
One
of the surest ways we men keep ourselves depressed, grieving,
or traumatized is by thinking that we're not meeting some mysterious
expectation of how a Real Man would react in the situation that
has us distressed or despairing. All men are different and yet
are all equally men. Because we are all different, we all react
differently to negative events in our life. Don't let stereotypes
tell you how you should react and then make you feel a failure
because you didn't measure up to a stereotype.
If
I were asked what makes a Real Man, here’s the attributes I would
list:
- A
Real Man does what is best for him, his wife, and his family
— not just what is easy or “natural.”
- A
Real Man seeks his wife’s council, seeks the Holy Spirit’s guidance,
and follows his priesthood leaders in righteousness.
Notice
that these parameters still leave us free to be the best and most
manly cowboys, astronauts, policeman, firemen, soldiers, dancers,
and poets we can possibly become. So let’s throw out all those
other expectations and center our manliness on these simple things
that make a Real Man.
Hold
It In and Admit to Nothing!
Too
many men internalize their problem, trials, and fears and think
men aren't supposed to let them out. This is the surest, most
direct path to ulcers, depression, hopelessness, and suicide that
I know of. It may make you a man in someone's eyes, but it makes
you a dead man. Letting it out is more manly than dying for your
secrets.
Too
many men are afraid of their emotions. Fear, my brothers, is an
emotion all in itself. Our emotions are divinely given tools;
our challenge is to use them correctly.
Too
many men think it unmanly to admit to having a problem. This only
makes them liars, and that's not very manly either. The courage
it takes for a man to speak openly about a problem is a step that
builds the man and does not tear him down.
Too
many men don't believe anyone else can understand what they are
going through; therefore there's no one they can talk to. Do we
really as a gender believe that in the 6,000 years of Earth's
recorded history we have suddenly come upon a new and original
trauma? I don't know why, but yes, that's what we think.
Too
many men think it's unmanly to ask for help. Even as children
the male has trouble with this issue. I watch my grandson struggle
and cry because he's too short to get up into a swing by himself,
but he'd rather die than ask for help. I just shake my head when
he's told that all he has to do is ask for help, but through his
tears he puts on his defiant little face and refuses. I think
the Lord made us this way so that we’d develop initiative and
figure out how to do things to better take care of our families,
but that’s just my guess.
Dear
brothers, no man who has walked the face of this earth was perfect
except for Jesus Christ, and the fact that He was “man enough”
to ask for help is clearly documented in the Gospels:
Father, if thou be willing, remove this cup from me:
nevertheless not my will, but thine, be done.
And there appeared an angel unto him from heaven, strengthening
him. (Luke 22:42-43)
During
your journey though despair in whatever form, you will
plead with the Father to remove the cup you have been given. Do
not doubt that Heavenly Father sends angels to strengthen you,
because throughout my long journey I know I have not walked
alone. Heavenly Father does not leave us alone. Even if
we have not asked for or recognized them, angels are present and
waiting for us to turn to God and seek His help.
We Are Never in Control
It
is a wonder that we men do not need to be “in control” when positive,
happy things are happening to us — we lose all need to be in control
and are simply able to go along for the ride. But let one negative,
bad thing happen and suddenly our need to control the situation
is out in full force! I think one of the reasons that being in
control is so ingrained into the man is so he can better care
for and protect his family. But anything can be taken too far!
We
must realize that there are situations we can never control,
no matter how hard we kill ourselves trying. All we can do is
control our reactions to them. This is what a mental health professional
can teach us to do. It is not a shame to learn how to control
our reactions; it makes us better men to do so.
What
we can't control we feel we need to fix. But what about the times
it's ourselves we need to fix and not the situation?
Never
Let Anger Win
There
is a point in this dark journey in which we perceive that everything
happening to us is everyone else's fault. You are angry at the
people you perceive as making you depressed. You are angry at
the people who traumatized you. You are angry at the dead or dying
who are causing you to grieve. You are angry at the people you
think should care but don’t appear to. You are angry with everyone
in the world.
I
will not lie to you: this level of anger feels good! It overpowers
you and fuels your mind like nothing else can. Its seduction is
greater even than drugs or sex. It makes you feel all-powerful.
It is addictive and does not let go. Just the memory of
it from a decade ago makes me feel powerful.
In
every good science fiction or fantasy story, there is always a
bad guy who becomes all-powerful through hate and anger, and that
power eventually destroys him. Picture the demon in the “Night
on Bald Mountain” segment of Disney's original
Fantasia. Picture Anakin Skywalker becoming Darth Vader.
That is a very small glimpse of the gratification that anger gives
the depressed, traumatized, and grieving man. And it feels far
too good to not let it have its way.
Do
not get into a fight in this stage of your journey! Don’t go looking
for a fight, and avoid fights that come looking for you. Your
mind is not in the condition it needs to be in to determine
if you’re facing a legitimate threat! You will end up in
jail for taking the fight too far. Your anger is so deliciously
gratifying that you will not stop until you are stopped
by an external force — a policeman’s bullet, for instance.
When
you walk away from a fight that your emotional and mental state
is telling you to jump into, then you are walking away from the
darkness of the world and into God’s manhood.
From Anger to Hopelessness
Once
you realize that the only truly satisfying outlet for this ungodly
level of anger is to either hurt someone (or a whole group of
someones) or to hurt yourself, if there is a shred of sanity left
in you then you realize that either path is not right and you
simply cannot do it. All that power and nothing you dare do with
it! This leaves you feeling more hopeless than the sane being
can understand — hopeless for the now and hopeless for
the future. Suddenly, life is no longer worth living or
functioning or even trying.
This
hopelessness is as devastating as the anger was powerful. Whereas
anger left you feeling as if you were the true master of the universe,
hopelessness makes you feel so impotent that you believe you don't
even control the level of hopelessness that is overwhelming you.
You go from feeling in control of everything to having lost control
of everything — your mind, your heart, and even your bodily functions.
It is as nightmarishly horrible as the anger was gratifying.
This
hopelessness leaves the man feeling as if he is useless. He is
a thorn in the side of all who know him. Everyone would be better
off without him.
In
my personal experience, this is when the choice to suicide engulfs
your mind and seduces you. Suicide is viewed as an escape — a
rescue! — from the hell of hopelessness and from the pain and
anguish of everything the sufferer is experiencing. Where anger
was power and hopelessness was impotency, suicide is a sweet,
calm, siren song of seduction that promises to take away all pain.
Because it feels as if it is the only calm in such a violent storm,
there are those who mistake it to be the same calm that the Holy
Spirit brings, leaving the sufferer to believe that God wants
them to do it.
I
am in no way trying to endorse suicide or make it look
good; I am trying to show the reader how the sufferer is viewing
it as an alternative and how far gone their thinking process is
when they get to the point that they consider it as an escape.
Trust
Those around You Who Care About You
How
many television shows have we watched in which the policeman who
was recently wounded or whose partner was recently killed is having
a hard time handling life but is too manly to admit it until he’s
hooked on pain-killing drugs, is suicidal, and is on the verge
of losing his job — and only then does he finally break down in
tears and beg for help? I think every program I’ve ever seen has
at least one episode with this plot. If only he’d first trusted
his wife, children, sergeant, and new partner when they all told
him the same thing: You need help!
One
does not have to be a policeman as portrayed in all those television
shows for this formula to play out; it is typical of what most
men go through until they finally break down and cry for help.
To
bypass all this pain, a man needs to be able to trust his wife,
children, coworkers, and friends when they say: “Bruce, we’re
worried about you!” or “Bruce, you need help!”
For
me it was a fellow Air Force man who stood a head and a half taller
than me and was as big and strong as an ox. He lowered himself
down to my desktop and said, “Bruce, I care about you. You need
help; go get it.” He paused. “If you don't I will drag
you there.” And he would have! So I did! I wanted to get help
but I was afraid to take the first step. All I needed was to know
someone cared, and he cared enough to make sure I went. Sometimes
all a man needs to know is that someone cares enough to say something,
and then they are empower to do it.
Many
men cling to the myth that “nothing is wrong with me” until they
get to the point that they honestly believe the whole world is
wrong and they alone of all humans on Earth are right. Fortunately
when I went through this phase a shred of logic kicked in and
helped me “do the math” and realize that maybe, just maybe, I
was the one who was wrong.
Be
a man and trust your wife, your friends, your coworkers. And just
in case it turns out you were right and they were wrong, you will
then have a new topic to brag about. Yes, it’s scary admitting
you need help and then seeking it, but it’s less scary than the
pain and agony awaiting you if you don’t. I promise you this.
“What a Friend We Have in Jesus Christ”
If
you think you are the only man who has been despised, misunderstood,
and rejected, then read this scripture. If you think you are the
only man who sorrows and grieves, then read this scripture and
pay attention to my italicizing:
He is despised and rejected of men;
a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief:
and we hid as it were our faces from him;
he was despised, and we esteemed him not.
Surely he hath borne our griefs, and carried
our sorrows:
yet we did esteem him stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted.
But he was wounded for our transgressions, he
was bruised for our iniquities:
the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes
we are healed.
(Isaiah 53:3-5)
Jesus
Christ knows what it is to carry sorrow and griefs, because he
has borne our griefs and sorrows and is willing to continue to
do so. He has offered to take them from our shoulders.
Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden,
and I will give you rest.
Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me;
for I am meek and lowly in heart:
and ye shall find rest unto your souls.
For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.”
(Matthew 11:28-30)
Notice
Jesus made no exceptions as to who can cast their burden upon
Him. He doesn't even refuse one burden over another — we will
take all burdens from all of us. No one is too depressed, traumatized,
or grieving to turn to Him. His shoulders are broad enough and
strong enough for Him to take our load as He then takes our hand
and leads us home. He already knows how heavy our load is and
still He is there to shoulder it for us.
If
you meet with a mental health professional, be sure to include
the Savior in the process. Report to Him in prayer and plead for
His continued guidance and assistance. He is there, and His shoulders
are big enough to carry the load while letting you also cry on
them. His arms are strong enough to hold you as you cry, and He
never tells anyone what you tell him or how you've cried. He is
the ultimate confidant.
When
I was a young missionary in Japan
there was once that I found a private place and cried in prayer,
pleading with Father to know that there was just one person on
Earth who loved me. In answer to my plea, I felt in the most literal
sense His arm around my shoulder as He has comforted me.
And
He is waiting for you.
Natural
Man versus Man of God
All
these things I’ve discussed as to how men set themselves up for
problems are the “Natural Man” within us, not the Man the Lord
is about to create.
For the natural man is an enemy to God, and has been
from the fall of Adam, and will be, forever and ever, unless he
yields to the enticings of the Holy Spirit, and putteth off the
natural man and becometh a saint through the atonement of Christ
the Lord, and becometh as a child, submissive, meek, humble, patient,
full of love, willing to submit to all things which the Lord seeth
fit to inflict upon him, even as a child doth submit to his father
(Mosiah 3:19).
Oh,
that “meek” word just makes us stumble, doesn’t it? As men we
wince at that “Blessed are the meek” passage in the Sermon on
the Mount! It may have been the best translation in the 1600’s,
but today a far more accurate rendering used in most modern biblical
translations is “blessed are the gentle.” So take heart
— we don’t need to give up our Superman outfits to become a “meek
and mild” Clark Kent; we just need to remember to be “gentle”
while wearing our superhero personas.
Each
man has to be the man he was born to be to fulfill his purpose
in life, but within that framework there are traits all men need
to develop that keep us pointed towards the goals the Lord has
set for us. Those traits are contained in this remarkable passage
quoted above and as summarized here:
- yield
to the enticings (guidance; influence) of the Holy Spirit
- put
off the natural (worldy) man and become a saint (seeker of Christ)
through Christ’s atonement
- regain
the innocence of a child by being submissive to the Lord, meek
(gentle), humble, patient, full of love (charitable), and willing
to submit to all things the Lord sends his way (face our challenges)
Jesus
Christ is our example of Manliness in all things. If He did something,
then it’s the manly thing to do. The above passage outlines exactly
what He did in mortal life as He showed us the way to return to
our Father in Heaven.
Accept
You as You are and Go from There
As
much as I would love it, I will never have a Chippendale body.
Nor will I ever be a cowboy. Nor will I ever sing with Josh Groban’s
amazing voice. I am, however, an artsy poet whose two great aspirations
in life are to be the world’s best Primary chorister and the world’s
best Grandfather. I have accepted me as I am, and after five decades
I am almost beginning to like me.
I’m
reasonably sure, however, that the Lord has further plans for
me. So I will follow His lead in faith that He knows what He’s
doing better than I. I will allow Him the privilege of improving
me as we journey through life together. He may even surprise me
with hidden talents and abilities I still don't know I have.
I
also accept that I am burdened with depression as one of my mortal
challenges and must find a way to achieve and live a happy, healthy
life with this thorn firmly implanted in my side. So, I study
the subject to see what else I can do to better myself, take my
medicine, and allow the Lord to guide me.
Recognize
and Correct Incorrect Thinking
One
of the first things I was taught at the mental health clinic I
attended was to recognize, analyze, and correct incorrect thinking
and its inherent chain reaction.
To
simplify what I was taught:
- First,
an event happens.
- Second,
you have a reactive thought that can be either good or bad,
depending on how your mind has been trained through the years
to react to that event.
- Third,
an emotion is generated.
- Fourth,
you have a physical reaction (you take action) based on that
reactive thought and the emotion generated.
In
this chain of events the only thing you can't control is the event
that happened. With the help of a mental health professional you
can learn to change and control all the other steps. Your mind
can be retrained to react in a more correct way. It takes effort.
It takes guidance. It takes faith. But it can be done. Your mental
health provider will help you see which reactions are good or
bad and help you re-teach your mind, emotions, and body how to
react in the way they should.
But
right now you need to understand that your prolonged depression
and trauma are caused by incorrect reactions to the events that
are triggering the reactions. So once again, trust those around
you when they try to help you in this regard.
Identify
the Source and Control / Eliminate It
Part
of teaching your mind how to react correctly to the events occurring
around you is to also eliminate as far as possible the activities
around you that are negative. If you are in an abusive or neglectful
marriage you need to step back long enough to allow you to make
a healthy decision as to continuing in the relationship. If you
are surrounded by violence, then you need to remove yourself from
it. If you are under undue stress on the job, then you need to
learn to combat the stress or find a new work situation in another
office. Your mental health professional and your family will be
able to help you with these decisions. Trust them while you also
allow the Spirit to guide you.
Situations
from which you cannot escape must be dealt with and your reactions
to them must be properly managed. You cannot just quick working;
you cannot abandon your family. You have to learn to handle inescapable
situations and stress. Seek the Spirit and the council of those
around you, and act in the way that is correct.
Make
Changes to Your Environment
Along
with eliminating the source of your despair and distress as much
as you possibly can, you must also remove as many of the other
negative influences around you as you can. They are competing
with your new-found positive attitude and must not be allowed
to continue.
I
have always had a love for music; it's one of my greatest passions
in life. I can literally change my emotions by the music I listen
to, and I was doing this long before sociologists were talking
about it during the Rock Era. When going through a depressive
bout there are certain of my favorite albums I simply don't listen
to, because there will be just one or two songs that are negative,
and even that is too much.
Those
things with which I surround myself when battling depression —
especially music! — must pass a test that I established for myself:
- They
must inspire me
- They
must lead me to positive aspirations
- They
must make me hope.
- They
have to leave me smiling — inward or outward
I
have discovered hymns to be the greatest musical fulfillment of
these requirements when I am depressed. I have collected a good
number of gospel albums that I play on a regular basis because
of the positive energy they bring into my life. I do not confine
myself to the few hymns in our hymnal, but I actively seek out
the beauty in hymns of all styles and sources that touch my heart
and build me up. And from this renewed love for hymns I have discovered
the joy of writing hymns myself.
Redesign
or rearrange the environments in which you live and work into
as calm and peaceful situations as you can. Unclutter your rooms
and desks into calmer things to look at and live in. This will
in turn help your mind remain calmer.
One
thing that was drilled into us over and over again in the depression,
anger, and stress management groups I attended was this: Do not
stay within a work situation where you are isolated from other
workers. You must get into a situation where you are interacting
with others. Left to yourself you turn your mind more and more
into yourself and your problems. Talk to you supervisor and bring
a note from your doctor if needed, but get yourself moved out
of any isolated situation.
Evaluate
those you associate with and determine if they are surrounding
you with positive or negative influences, and take action accordingly.
At this stage in your life you need to associate with those who
are building you and not tearing you down. Explain to your friends
that you are not judging them; you are simply trying to heal yourself
and must take the actions you are taking to increase the positive
feelings around you. A mental health professional can help you
make these decisions and take these actions. Again, trust those
around you who love you or are counseling you.
Take
Your Medicine
Facing
a lifetime of taking medicine is totally repugnant to many men.
That’s kin to being controlled by that little medicine bottle
instead of being the one in control. We need to adjust our thinking
to understand that by taking our medicine we regain control
— control of our mind — from those forces that would take that
control away from us. Every time you sigh and think you want to
go without your medicine, remember that you are doing it for your
wife and children. You are doing it so that you can return to
being a fit servant to assist the Lord in service in His kingdom.
My
wife suggests that the manly man should think of medicine as a
tool. She's says it's a tool to fix what's wrong inside your head.
As men, we do understand the proper use of the proper tool.
Present
Yourself to the Lord on a Regular Basis
This
is one of the hardest things to do. You feel so unworthy of talking
to God or even thinking He's near you. But He is near you
and He does love you. He loves His hurting children with
a fierce, loyal love that is unexplainable in its grandeur and
completeness.
It
is a time-worn phrase that you should pray when you don't feel
like it. This is so true at this time in a man's life! God already
knows the things in your heart, but He needs you to speak them
to Him. You will find great solace in the tenderness of a very
compassionate Heavenly Father, even if you don't feel it from
anyone else.
Attend
your Sunday meetings no matter how much your pain and agony beg
you to stay home. The primary purpose of attending our Sabbath
meetings is to “offer thine oblations and thy sacraments unto
the Most High” (D&C 59:12) — “oblations'” being defined as
“any thing offered or presented in worship or sacred service;
an offering; a sacrifice.” (Webster's 1829 Dictionary)
Come
to church and offer God your heart — your broken heart and contrite
spirit, to be exact. You will be surprised how He can fill it
and return it to you. It is a command that we come to His house
to perform this oblation, and by doing this simple thing we bring
His blessings down upon ourselves, “...inasmuch as ye do this,
the fulness of the earth is yours...” (D&C 59:16). Part of
that fullness is a healthy, sound mind and spirit.
Unless
you are a bishop currently serving in that office, you are not
a judge. If your bishop, who is called to be a “judge in
Israel,” has determined you
worthy to attend the temple, then trust his judgment (even if
you don't agree) and make regular temple attendance part of your
routine and part of your healing process. Not only are you giving
yourself in service to others, but you are also spending time
in a sacred, reverent, and calm environment where the Spirit
can more easily penetrate the haze you are living in and nourish
your mind and heart.
The
Holy Spirit as Your Companion
There
is a reason that one of the greatest titles worn by the Holy Spirit
is that of “Comforter.”
The
Comforter is the third member of the quorum of the Godhead. It
is He who brings to our mind and heart all the communications
from the Father. It is He who brings divine comfort and love to
us. It is through trusting and following His guidance that we
have faith enough to take cautious, fearful steps forward into
the dark that eventually lead us into the light.
I
testify with every fiber of my being that the Comforter will be
there to guide you through all the pain and suffering. How well
I remember the many nights my mother played her piano after getting
all of us to bed, and one of her favorite hymns was “Teach Me
to Walk in the Light of His Love.” Thank you, Mother, for teaching
us where to look for help! Such a simple testimony through song
has constantly reminded me to trust when I had no trust left.
Service
is a Powerful Medicine
All
those books that instruct you to center your mind and your thoughts
all on yourself to build your self-esteem are mostly wrong. To
dwell on '”me” is to become self-obsessive and unforgiving of
every little mistake you make as well as the perceived mistakes
others make in their association with you. These books can quickly
become a prison from which few escape.
Fight
to stop dwelling on yourself! It only intensifies the pain and
the hurt. Instead, give yourself over to others so you can forget
about yourself. Be of service to others so you can feel good about
yourself and be satisfied that no matter how bad off you are you
are still of worth to those you have served and who loves you.
What
did the Lord say for us to do to “find ourselves”? He was, in
fact, very specific — so specific that it's repeated several times
in the Gospels:
He that findeth his life shall lose it:
and he that loseth his life for my sake shall find it.
(Matthew 10:39; Luke 9:24)
For whosoever will save his life shall lose it;
but whosoever shall lose his life for my sake and the gospel's,
the same shall save it.
(Mark 8:35
Whosoever shall seek to save his life shall lose it;
and whosoever shall lose his life shall preserve it.
(Luke 17:33)
See
also Matthew 16:25 and Luke 9:24. Consider also:
Let no man be afraid to lay down his life for my sake;
for whoso layeth down his life for my sake shall find it again.
And whoso is not willing to lay down his life for my sake is not
my disciple.
(D&C 103:27-28; see also D&C 98:13.)
As
the hymnal teaches us,
Stript, wounded, beaten nigh to death, I found him by
the highway side.
I roused his pulse, brought back his breath, revived
his spirit, and supplied
Wine, oil, refreshment — he was healed. I had myself
a wound concealed,
But from that hour forgot the smart, and peace bound
up my broken heart. (HYMNS 1985: The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, #29. I suggest a careful reading of all verses
of this hymn to understand the healing power of service and charity.)
While
in service to his fellow beings, the distressed brother's mind
is diverted from obsessing on himself and his pain, and for that
short time he centers himself on others. By doing so he brings
Heaven's blessings down on himself; thus he is reassured of God's
love as well as his neighbor's appreciation. Service is
powerful medicine and through it you discover who you are (a loving
servant to all mankind) and what you can become (a servant of
the sort Christ is and has commanded us to become). To be anything
else is to betray who are while wasting the purpose of our creation.
While
we were on a death watch for our seventh child (a baby of only
a few weeks), we took time from the hospice one Sunday to attend
our church meetings. Hearing that a chorister was needed in Primary,
I practically ran to Primary to announce that I was there
to lead the music. (I'd been a Primary teacher in that ward, so
they knew my love for Primary.)
“Are
you sure you're up to it?” the loving, concerned sisters asked.
My reply was that the Lord had blessed us so much that how could
I not help? I also explained that I also needed the spiritual
nourishment of those innocent, pure spirits singing to me. I was
immediately handed the songbook, and I spent the following two
hours singing to and being sung to by those precious little angels.
What healing occurred that day! Peace did bind up my broken
heart.
Forgive
Everyone You've been Angry Towards
By
this point in your life you have a lot of people to forgive. According
to your despairing perception, pretty much everyone on Earth has
offended you, misunderstood you, laughed at you, criticized you,
condemned you, run away from you, abandoned you, and otherwise
hurt your feelings.
In
your mind say to the Lord: “I forgive everyone for being human
and not knowing what they were doing, because I now understand
that they really didn't know what they were doing. And
in return, Father, please forgive me for judging them so wrongly.”
Then, take out a pair of large mental scissors and cut the stings
that bind all that resentfulness and hurt to you and cast it to
the winds so that you can never run after it and gather it back
up. Throw it all away and turn in friendship to them and rejoice
together in the beauty of your new-found life.
A
very wise Sunday school teacher used to teach that when we forgive
we are freer than at any other time on our life. We are free from
every force that has tried to control us and hurt us. And that
includes depression.
The Power of Love
George
Lucas and J. K. Rowling got it right when they did not write about
Good verses Evil. Instead, they presented us with incredible tales
of Hate (anger) verses Love. The Star Wars sagas as well
as the Harry Potter tales are all about this surprisingly
simple concept.
Luke
Skywalker knew there was good left in his father. To find that
remaining love, an innocent, untrained farm boy toppled an empire
built on Hate to save an unsaveable father. The Emperor himself,
in all the strength and power of his Hate and Anger, failed to
turn Luke to the Dark in his quest to redeem his father.
Likewise
in the Harry Potter series, Professor Dumbledore never
gave up on those who wandered and were enveloped by the power
of Hate, knowing that Love is the greatest power in the universe.
Through the power of Love a neglected, abused orphan named Harry
Potter has faced the most evil wizard in a century several times
now and won. (We have certain expectations for the final book!)
No
wonder so many of today's readers have been held spellbound by
these two incredible storytellers! What timely messages for today’s
confused and hate-filled world!
The
power of Hate/Anger leads a man to either control or destroy everything
around him, while the power of Love leads him to build up all
that is around him. Love eliminates the selfish quest for strength
and power and turns the man to the path of service, charity, and
sacrifice. Instead of sacrificing others to his dark, hellish
emotions, the man turns to sacrificing himself for the benefit
of others. Instead of seeking authority he seeks to acknowledge
He who holds all authority and to do His will. Instead of taking
life, the man seeks to offer his life.
For
me, the power of Anger has a far more powerful physical
feeling than Love, but the feeling of Love is accompanied by a
calm and peace that Anger will never contain. I no longer
need the power that comes with Anger, as all true power
belongs to God. I do, however, need the calm and peace that comes
with Love, and all such calm, peace, and Love also belongs to
God, and He has told us what to do to bask in it with Him. That
is what I need.
Such
is the awesome power of Love. When this has finally been obtained
then the man knows he has finally put off the natural man and
has become a saint through the atonement of Jesus Christ (ref.
Mosiah 3:19) This is the moment that Life begins anew for the
depressed, troubled, and grieving man. He may not be all the way
to the end of the journey (few of us ever are), but he knows where
he’s going and how to get there and how to stay on the path. Let
us continue to extend our love, fellowship, and hand to help him
continue on the path.
When
will it end? When will I know I’m cured?
Midway
through my group sessions for depression management, I asked the
councilor running the class how would I know when I was no longer
depressed. Would a light come on and an angel chorus sing? Would
I suddenly just feel good? How was I to know?
He
told me that so far he'd not seen any angel choirs. But he said
that one day I would simply realize how long it had been since
I had been sad. I would be surprised to find myself happy for
no reason. I would realize I hadn’t cried for a least a week.
I would realize: “Gosh, how long has it been since… (fill in the
symptom)?”
Although
many who go through these things will reach a point when they
are cured, I do not believe that a person such as myself, diagnosed
with chronic depression, will ever complete my journey until death
takes me home to Heavenly Father and I am rewarded with a brain
whose chemical systems have a better warranty than the one I’m
currently using. My hat is off to those who complete their journey
here in mortality, and my only request is that you don’t forget
the rest of us.
Finally,
a Real Man Beings to Emerge
Midway
through my therapy for my first suicidal depression, I was assigned
to return to work and send an email to all my co-workers, explaining
what I was being treated for and asking if they’d seen any progress
in me. I did not think I had made any progress, and a wise doctor
needed me to understand that I had. So, with great fear, I sent
the email.
I
will never forget one reply. It was from one of the ranking men
in the office — tall, handsome, muscular in all the right places,
and hair and a smile that wouldn’t die. He even had dimples. He
had been in a combat unit that was highly decorated, and he even
rode a Harley-Davidson motorcycle. What else could a man want
to be than a drop-dead gorgeous combat soldier with a big, manly
motorcycle, spewing testosterone wherever he went? Standing next
to him, I would never have dreamed of calling myself a “man.”
His reply to my email astounded me:
Dear Sergeant Forbes:
I have known for some time what you are being treated
for. I want you to know I have greater respect for you than for
anyone I have ever known. I have fought in two wars and survived,
but you are facing demons I can’t even imagine, and without a
gun to protect yourself. I would never have the courage to do
what you are doing. You are more of a man than I will ever be,
and I am proud to have known you.
So
my dear brothers, I want you to know that seeking treatment and
making the journey from the Dark to the Light is a very manly
thing to do. To reiterate my view of what a Real Man is, he is
someone who seeks what is best for himself, his wife, and his
children; not what is convenient or easy. He seeks his wife’s
council and the guidance of the Holy Spirit. And, he follows his
priesthood leaders in righteousness. Seeking help for depression,
grief, and trauma fulfills all of this while making yourself a
fitter vessel for the Lord to use in His service. And that
is the man the Lord wants you to become.
May
God bless you on your journey, and if we should meet somewhere
along the way, then know that there will be yet one more hand
to help you along.
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