Every Thursday I’ll post an article having to do with either relational or emotional matters. Hope it helps.
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The Dark Plunge
“— a thorn in the flesh was given to me, a messenger of Satan sent to buffet me, lest I be exalted above measure.” – I Corinthians 12: 7
I’ve wrestled with depression since I was a teenager. I mean real depression, mind you, not the occasional “blues”, moodiness, or sadness we all experience from time to time. Depression is to a blue mood what a migraine is to a headache, which is to say there’s no comparison. When you’ve got a headache, you can relieve yourself with a couple aspirins and a quick nap. But when a migraine mugs you, you’re out of the game for hours on end, consigned to a near comatose state of throbbing misery. Anyone can relate to a headache; only true migraine survivors can commiserate with a fellow sufferer.
So it is with depression, a point I make only because I can’t count the number of well-meaning folks who’ve advised me, in the middle of my serious bouts with the monster, to do what they do when they’re feeling a little sad: think positive; take vitamins; say a prayer. All good ideas if you’re having a bad hair day, but not helpful when you’re flattened by what I affectionately call the Dark Plunge. When that hits, telling me to think more positively is like advising someone lying on the road after a car accident to count their blessings. Thanks, and perhaps you’re right, but please be quiet, you’re not helping.
Of course, there’s a place for genuine sadness, isn’t there? And with so much in this life to grieve, who’s to say there’s anything neurotic about occasional tears and sorrow over the whole human condition, much less the human race. The news is enough to send anyone running for their meds: another shooting, more scandals, less economic hope. Then there’s your own unique list of woes, from family matters to illnesses to rejection, disappointments, setbacks. Sadness is as normal to our existence as breath, and to my thinking, refusing to recognize that is far less healthy than being emotionally affected by it.
But depression can make an appearance when all seems well, even great. My worst bout with it, for example, came back in ’94 when I was en route to a speaking engagement. I’d just finished the manuscript for my third book, my clientele was at an all-time high, I’d recently had a wonderful reception from thousands at the national Promise Keepers conference, and our newly purchased home was, predictably, our new pride and joy as well. Yet while sitting in the terminal at Los Angeles International Airport, the Dark Plunge came over me and, like the Wolfman making his transition, I went from joyful to hopeless within minutes. I started tearing up, moaning, and obsessing over everything I had to do and how impossible it suddenly seemed to get it all done, and how many people I was going to let down, and why on earth was I going to speak at a conference when I have nothing to say, so why don’t I just find a phone booth and call to cancel, or better yet, why don’t I just kill myself quickly and make room for someone more productive?
And, I kid you not, I calmly decided to stand up on my chair and start screaming. I resisted the urge, but I get chills to this day thinking how close I came. I sleep-walked through that conference, then flew home, staggered into my office the next morning, and laid my head on my desk sobbing loud, noisy wails.
Everyone in my life, from my wife on down, demanded I take a month off, get therapy, heal up. I was put on anti-depressants from a psychiatrist who demanded to see my daytimer (“Show me a man’s calendar and I’ll tell you about the man” he said in a thick Dutch accent) and, upon reviewing my schedule, he glared at me and said “You’re killing yourself with this routine. You want to die? Keep these hours. You want to live? Slow down.”
All of which is a long winded way of saying I burnt myself out. Often, those of us susceptible to depression wear down doing good things but obtaining bad results, particularly in the damage we do to ourselves.
St. Paul described life with his thorn. I have mine, you, yours. Perhaps like you, I find that my thorn defies prediction, so I need to be prepared for it to flare up at any time. Regular exercise, schedule management, and daily devotions all help, but the thorn remains, sometimes pricking me, sometimes all but invisible. And darned if I don’t have to admit that it does temper me, just as Paul’s did. I’m pretty sure I’m mellower, a little humbler, more gracious with others and less judgmental, all because of my occasional dark plunges into depression. For all of that, and the grace He and my loved ones show me when I most need it, I am indescribably grateful.
I’ll be even more grateful when this mortal puts on immortality, never again to feel depression’s despair. May the day be soon, but meanwhile, may we all learn to value our thorns, knowing, as Paul did, that in our weakness, His strength is indeed made perfect.
Comments
Shannon Royce | Feb 21, 2013
Joe, this is beautiful. Thank you for your transparency about your unique form of brokenness. We all are broken -- for some it is a hidden disability like depression that is less understood. Thank you for your honesty about what helps and what hurts as people try to encourage you. Our ministry serves those living with various hidden disabilities from a Biblical worldview -- read that, a worldview that begins with our brokenness and His amazing grace -- not a worldview that just tells you to pray or have more faith. God is great and we are needy. So grateful for His grace in our lives. God bless you and your family. Warmly, Shannon
Julie Rodgers | Feb 21, 2013
Fantastic post, Joe! Thank you for sharing with such honesty about the despair we often try to hide behind spunky smiles. I often feel plagued by many of the same monsters that discourage me from walking down the paths God's called me to walk down. And when I feel the weight of darkness closing in, I think to myself: "I need to give this crap up and leave it to the Joe Dallas figures of the world."
Your vulnerability about your weakness is a source of strength to those of us who share a similar posture of weakness. Can't thank you enough for humbling yourself and reminding us that we're not alone in the struggle between the now and not yet.
Janis | Feb 22, 2013
Dear Joe, I am a 61 yr. old woman who was rescued by Christ when I was 9. I have also been a life-long struggler with deep depression. I have even renamed my middle name to "Wrestling", because that word sums up my life battle. But, today, after all of these years fighting - I can add the adjective "Victorious" to Wrestler. Because Jesus Christ has always come to my aid, even though sometimes it has been walking through the "dark plunge" with Him holding my hand and leading me out over long periods of time. .He has none-the-less been my closest Companion, and has taught me how much He truly loves me as He has walked with me through the fire. Today, I am a happy child of His - only- because of this Thorn that He has allowed. I wouldn't know HIm so sweetly if He had not allowed this trial. So, I can thank God for my deep depression, because it is how I have learned of His deep love and deliverance. Like you, I anticipate the day He says to me, "Janis, come Home!" I will gladly say, "Yes, Lord!"
Love you and always am blessed by your posts...
Victorious Wrestler
P.S. My youngest son, Zac, is currently living with his boyfriend in California, and I am praying for him to respond to the words from His Lord, "Come Home, my beloved!"
Warner Pierce | Feb 22, 2013
Joe, I know you only from having read your books and hearing you speak at conferences. I NEVER would have guessed you struggle with depression! Your writing has helped me greatly in my own journey. I'm currently unemployed and that has left me dealing with depression myself. I've been unemployed twice before, but this time has been particularly difficult. Thanks for sharing!
Warner
Jim Dickinson | Feb 22, 2013
Thank you, Joe, for sharing your story. At 62, I'm in my eighth year of clinical depression, brought on by a number of things, among them ministry burnout and a lifetime of dealing with ssa. I've heard all the platitudes and the hurtful things said to the hurting. I'm grateful to God, my wife, my psychologist, my medications and my service dog for having been leveled out for the past year, though there's still work to be done. It's helpful to read your honest words. They make me feel less alone and less of a freak. Thanks for sharing these words, and all the things you write here.
Jim
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