Disclaimer

We are not trained mental health practitioners. This site is not a helpline. While we do try to respond to comments, we are not always online. If you are in distress or worried about someone you know, please call your local emergency line (911) or a crisis hotline (1-800-273-TALK).

Thursday, 29 December 2016

Owning My Voice


Note: I am far too late in posting this. It doesn’t leave you with much time to do anything about it, and I apologize. But I do hope you will read and consider what part you might want to have in this important cause.


Holiday Hustle

J here. It's been a while since I’ve posted. Last month we made the move from our inner city apartment to a basement suite closer to work and church. Two weeks later we flew to California to visit relatives. We just got back from that, and suddenly Christmas was upon us. So I am grabbing a few moments for writing, between unpacking and decorating and list pondering.



What I want to write about today is a bit off topic for this blog. I won’t be dealing with a mental health issue per se, but I will draw a link for you, and I don’t think anyone will be upset with me for wandering a bit from the central point of this blog. (Right?) ;-)


But... it's still ERP

This month I have taken on an unusual ERP challenge. For those of you who don’t know, Exposure Response Prevention or ERP is basically the treatment for OCD, and it sucks. I have written a little about it in the past, and plan to write a more in-depth post as part of a recovery series in the future. Since this post isn’t really meant to be about my own mental health issues, I’ll just say very briefly that ERP is basically facing your fears.

My ERP this month involves restricting my wardrobe to just two dresses. OK, you say, that sounds a bit difficult, especially in the dead of winter in Canada, but scary? What’s so scary about that? Well, I have this admittedly weird compulsion to only re-wear a piece between washings after it’s been hanging in my closet for at least two days. I figure that gives the germs a good chance to die! It keeps my anxiety manageable, and cuts down on the laundry I do. But it’s ridiculous, and I know it. So this month, I am challenging that fear. I’ve even worn the same dress two days in a row, pulling it over my head and breathing slowly to calm my pounding heart, reminding myself that the germs probably aren’t dangerous, I have an immune system, it’s dry and they probably won’t transfer to my hair, my face, my lips.... And it is for a good cause.

The Dressember Campaign

The cause?


I am excited to announce that this year I am participating in the global Dressember campaign: an advocacy movement seeking to draw attention to the issue of modern human trafficking. It may be shocking to consider that slavery is just as rampant today as it was a hundred years ago, probably even more so. There are a lot of different estimates, but at least 20 million people live in slavery worldwide. Nor is it something that happens only overseas. Thousands of people are sold in Canada and the United States each year, mostly in the sex trade, but also for farm or factory work, or in smuggling rings.. It is truly a global issue. While it is not a gender issue--both male and female slaves are sold at about the same rate--some of the most horrific human rights abuses occur against women, since they are sold in overwhelming numbers in the sex trade.


The symbol:


Dressember uses a symbol of femininity--a dress--to draw attention to those whose femininity has been ravaged and exploited.

The industry:



In addition, the fashion industry is strongly implicated in human exploitation. Many textile and fashion companies rely on cheap overseas labor, and exploit their workers’ desperation by subjecting them to dangerous working conditions and impossible situations of job insecurity.

I have long been passionate about the issue of modern-day slavery, especially as it relates to the fashion industry. For several years I lived with the knowledge that many of my “affordable” (read: cheap) fashion choices were contributing to exploitation and potentially even outright slavery. I started looking for alternatives, and discovered an exciting online community of people committed to ethical consumerism. I found that the best alternatives were also the cheapest: second-hand. Buying second-hand not only keeps garments out of landfills, but most thrift stores are not-for-profit and exist to support local and global charities. When it comes to items not available second-hand, or things I would be uncomfortable purchasing from a thrift shop (like underwear), it does get expensive. But I believe that if I don’t pay the cost for my fashion choices, someone else will have to, and the cost they pay just might be their freedom.


The choice:



So this year, for every day of December, I have been limiting myself to a choice between just two dresses, sacrificing  a tiny bit of my freedom to restore real freedom to others. The goal is to raise money for IJM (International Justice Mission) and A21, both wonderful non-profit organizations that work with local justice systems and police to target slave traders and release slaves.



The dresses!


The dresses I chose are simple and un-fussy. Neither is representative of fast-fashion: one was a gift from a dear friend that I’ve had for about 7 years; the other, my LBD, I scored at a thrift store about 5 years ago.

 DSC_0762.JPG  DSC_0765.JPG


Neither is very warm, so I'll really be layering up!





Understanding and Owning



We need to advocate for slaves because they have no voice of their own. If you presently or ever have struggled with mental illness, you know what it is like to have no voice. Depression can sap all your energy, so everything is focused on survival and speaking out is an extra that you just can’t afford. There is always the possibility of rejection, of misunderstanding, of more pain on top of the pain that is already unbearable. When the energy is there, there is the nagging, often well-substantiated suspicion that no-one will listen to you anyway. Because of your diagnosis, they’ll dismiss what you have to say. Of course he has complaints--he’s depressed, and always negative. Or: She doesn’t know what she’s talking about--she’s paranoid!


Now that I’ve recovered somewhat, I am rediscovering my voice. I have energy back, and people are actually listening to me again (I'm not saying they should not have listened to me before. I am pointing out that human nature and social perceptions of mental illness make loss of voice a reality for many who suffer with mental illness). I am also discovering a passion for using the voice I have to speak up for those who can’t speak for themselves. That is why I write this blog. And for the same reason, I am wearing these two dresses throughout the month of December, and speaking up for those who don't have the freedom even to speak.


I'm getting close to my fundraising goal, but I do still have a way to go and only a few days to get there! As a fun little incentive and personal touch, I am offering a set of beautiful handmade greeting cards to the donor who contributes the largest amount this week. I will mail them to the winner in the new year! To help me reach my campaign goal, click here:


To find out more about the campaign, go to the official Dressember website here:



You can also read more about IJM and A21:


Monday, 17 October 2016

Please don't hide anymore

Ever since I heard about Allison Goldstein’s death, I have felt the urgent need to draw further attention to the conversation around Postpartum depression and suicide prevention. Allison’s life can still impact other lives. I look at her life and death and see unbelievable beauty, an iron will, and a pain so heavy and terrible as to crush the mettle of even such a strong woman.

The thing that shook me most about Allison’s story is that NO ONE KNEW there was even a problem. She managed to hide the kind of pain that could kill a person from even her closest family and friends. I have no idea how she did that. It must have taken incredible strength. I’m not sure what would motivate someone to bear that kind of pressure alone. She must have felt oh, so alone.

I imagine her decision to hide had something to do with shame. Shame is usually the motivation for hiding. Which leads me to wonder, what have we done as a society to pile up so much shame on a person in pain? Have we no pity?

I believe it is not pity our society lacks but understanding. I also do not assume that society is the only source of shame a person with mental illness feels. Much of the pressure is internal, much of the guilt inherent in the illness itself. The illness causes contortions of the brain that make the individual believe lies of shame: “No one else could be as bad as me.” And so the person keeps it all hidden, gives no one the chance to disprove the lies she believes, and thereby perpetuates those very lies. Since no one talks about it, the shame and stigma remain.

In this way depression is like a social virus, infecting individuals instead of cells. The afflicted person is of course unable to bring the lies into the light--she cannot recognize them as lies, since she believes them. Silence breeds shame, which feeds the lies, and they pass silent and undetected through our culture. The silent cells spread the very virus of shame that destroys them.

When I first heard Allison’s story, I soon noticed this shame creeping into my mind. Here was this incredible, beautiful, intelligent, successful woman who had been destroyed by this illness and had never even complained. And then there I was, blurting out all about my pain--online no less! I never was good at hiding my feelings. And I was so debilitated by the illness that those around me could not help but see how much I had changed. But notice how my mind twisted that truth: I let myself become debilitated. I allowed the illness to change me. I am bad at hiding my feelings. I asked for help.

Horror of horrors, I showed my feelings and asked for help. And I believe that is why I--and my child--are alive today.

Think about it. Since when was hiding a good thing? Since when did hiding require an admirable type of strength?

I am NOT saying that Allison was not strong, or admirable. Quite the contrary. I am saying that even someone as strong as she was could not stand under the pressure of postpartum depression.

Depression can break anyone. Anyone, no matter how strong, how well-adjusted, how apparently secure--having all the appearance qualities we admire and desire in our society--may be vulnerable to mental illness.

Can’t you see? Dear one, I pray that somehow the light will penetrate your darkness and you will see that there is no shame in mental illness. There is no shame in depression, and there is certainly no shame in reaching out for help. Your brain may be sick, but your mind and your soul still have great strength. If you have been bearing it all alone, it’s time to break the silence.  

Friday, 23 September 2016

I don't care

Here I am writing a blog post reflecting on a previous blog post. Sigh. What kind of a navel gazer does this make me?

The post I am referring to is here (Why I am a Complementarian...), in which I tell of an oath I took before God, and how I broke it. As soon as I published that post I almost chickened out and took it down. Now people know I’m a horrible person. They must think I’m not fit to be a mother.

Or they’ll say I’m being too hard on myself, and ridiculous: chill out girl! It was a different country, a different situation from the one you grew up in. You did what other expats said you should do. Sentiments which I know are mercy and kindness and sweet intentions, but have no power to expunge the guilt I have felt, and only invalidate the experience.

I have to confess, I procrastinated on that post for as long as I possibly could. I kept trying to write other posts, and kept finding that I couldn’t until I’d written That One. And That One was just too scary to write. So I ignored the nagging feeling that essential things were being left unsaid, until there really was nothing more I could say without saying That.

You see, the story I told about a simple orange juice stand and a solemn vow involved the confession of the very darkest point in my memory. Nothing else has the power to fill me with more shame. I drank that roadside orange juice despite my better judgment. I should have known better. I did know better. I had lived in Africa all my childhood; I remember my parents teaching us to refuse any un-bottled drinks whenever we went visiting in the village, or even to a restaurant. I recall a time they wouldn’t let us buy sealed freezies on the road because they might have been made with questionable water in a questionable facility. But hard on the heels of the thought, “That might be unsanitary,” came the thoughts, “It’s probably fine since all the other westerners here talk about having it,” “I am SO thirsty, I NEED that o.j.!” and “The poor roadside-orange-juice-boy will be offended if I back out now.”

So I drank it. And what do you know, 48 hours later I’m sweating and shivering and crying because I could have killed my baby with one drink of that delicious orange juice.

I don’t write this to defend myself to you. To tell the truth, I don’t care what anyone thinks anymore. Don’t get me wrong dear reader, I do care what you think--and that’s the reason I write. But at another level, actually I don’t.

I know the One who knows me best, and He has told me it’s all okay. God is gracious. He gave me my lily-girl, whole and perfect, a grace-gift and every day a reminder of how He sees me. And you need to know that no matter what you’ve done or how much shame or guilt you feel, He can see you the same way. He can, and He will.

So despite my fear, I published the story, both because I love you, dear reader, and because I don’t care what you think.

Saturday, 17 September 2016

Beauty Is.

When Nae was 3 days old, I had an epiphanous moment. She had woken early in the morning for a feeding, it seemed silly to go back to sleep after I fed her, and she was ready to start her day. The house was quiet, A. and Grandma were still sleeping down the hall. I laid out a blanket on the floor, placed Nae  on the soft pink fabric and lowered my aching body next to her. And then we just stared at each other in one of those moments seemingly frozen in time. I was overcome by her perfection. It brought to my mind all of those feelings I'd had about myself growing up. I thought about how my perfect, beautiful daughter would feel about herself as she grew up. I realized, in that still and quiet moment, that there wasn't anything that would change how completely beautiful she was. And in that moment a bit of healing took place for me: beauty was no longer a Hollywood-fixed image in my mind, but a fact. My daughter is beautiful. I am beautiful. People are beautiful.


Now I'm sure by this point at least half of you are thinking that I'm putting too much emphasis on beauty, particularly because I'm raising a girl, and shouldn't I be placing more emphasis on other qualities; her intelligence, her spunk, her strength? Well, sure, all of those things are very important, and of course I don't want my daughters growing up believing that beauty is all-important. That being said, it's going to come up because it's saturated our entire society, it grips us, dazzles us, and misleads us. I've seen it happen, and it's happened to me. J has shared briefly her battle with anorexia and I have had my own struggles with disordered eating. It is everywhere. So as parents, and especially as mothers of daughters, we need a plan to confront society's misinterpretation of beauty and bring truth into our daughters' lives.
My plan mostly centers around things I try to always do, or rather, never do. I never talk about how I feel about my own body. I try not to talk about food as being "good" or "bad" and I try never to chastise her for her food preferences or choices. I never talk about anyone else's body, either--or at least I try really hard not to: "Oh, isn't she gorgeous/ugly" is never a phrase that exits my mouth. The rest of this post might seem to contradict that last statement, but what I said I said only because I had a very controlled environment and a willing participant.

Yesterday morning Nae, still in her pyjamas, her hair uncombed and teeth unbrushed, came up to me all gussied-up: bracelets to her elbows, lip gloss carefully painted over her mouth, wearing my highest heels, and asked me, "Mommy, am I beeeeautiful?"

Honestly, it was a sucker-punch to the stomach. It always is... every time she comes up to me, dressed to the nines, with such a simple, innocent question. Normally, I say something like "Of course you are, Sweetie!" But this time, I picked her up and told her:

"You are always beautiful. You are beautiful when you first wake up, and you are beautiful when you're fast asleep in bed. You are beautiful when you are happy and you are beautiful when you are sad. Your clothes don't make you beautiful. Clothes aren't beautiful. Clothes are plain or comfortable or fancy or fun. Clothes aren't beautiful. You are beautiful. You are beautiful just because God made you, and He made you just right."

Then we talked about all the people in her life, "Is Emma beautiful?" I asked.

"Yes," she replied.

"How about Grandma? Is Grandma beautiful?"

"Yes!" She said.

We went on like this for awhile. I tried to include people she knows of every skin tone, body shape, age, hair color, makeup and style preference that I could.  There was no doubt in her mind that all of these people were truly beautiful, so I'm not sure she understood the point of the exercise, which is perfect, because that was the very point.

Saturday, 10 September 2016

Today is World Suicide Prevention Day

Today is World Suicide Prevention Day, and I have just one thing to say:

Your life is beautiful. It's an on-purpose work of art. And it is not finished yet.

And please please please, let's talk. Let's all talk. Let's talk about mental illness until there is no more stigma. Let's talk about our struggles until no one thinks they are alone anymore. Let's talk about our darkness and let some air and light in! Let's talk about grace until the sound of it drowns out the voices that tell so many that their life is not worth living.

OK, so that was sort of more than just one thing.

I feel I can do no better on this Suicide Prevention Day than to link to a couple of posts by others. The first is the recent story of a new mom who lost her life to postpartum depression. Let's stop devaluing and ignoring the pain of so many precious mothers by calling it "the baby blues." This needs serious attention, serious thought, and tremendous effort to prevent more tragic deaths.

The second is a phenomenal poster I saw on Facebook a while ago that apparently hangs in a therapist's office. It should be posted everywhere. Please, anyone who has though.t about ending their own life, you are NO coward. Your thoughts are far from selfish. You are anything but weak. Go and ask for that stick.

With all of my heart,
J

Tuesday, 23 August 2016

Why I am a Complementarian (And Other Thinly Veiled Attempts to Start Fights in the Comments Section)




Photo credit Stacy Brumley



(I do hope you read that tongue in my cheek).

Deep into the Woods

This post should be at least two different posts, and most of it is really a rabbit trail, but for some reason I cannot pull it apart in my mind. Maybe because my brain is like spaghetti (I’ve actually never read this book, but it looks kind of connected, and do I ever relate to the title!) This post started its life in my head as a tribute to my husband and the way he pulled me through the worst of my illness. Then I realized I’d have to explain my beliefs in more depth, and then, with a pang, that I had not yet been specific about those beliefs. What a sad omission. I intend to remedy that now: to explain my faith and a bit about how it has been vital to my recovery. I hope to do it in a way that leaves you in no doubt whatever that no matter your beliefs, I sincerely welcome and desire your readership, your input and your discussion.

I am a Christian--a Christ-follower, Jesus-lover, baptized believer. Christie and I grew up with parents in full-time Christian ministry. We both chose early, and re-committed later more fully, to follow Jesus. I’m sure I can say for both of us that we could not have recovered without integrating our faith into the process. Because my faith in God is such an essential part of who I am and how I make sense of my illness and recovery, it will feature often in this blog. For me, wellness and faith had to coalesce, but not in the same way some of my Christian friends insisted they should.

I do plan to explicitly address some blog posts to the Christian community because I believe that we are lagging sadly behind the secular western world in understanding mental health. As I see it, the Church has had uniquely terrible responses to mental illness. While secular society is working hard to conquer the stigma surrounding mental illness, correcting popular vocabulary that mocks the mentally ill, and beginning to accept that mental illness is in most respects no different from physical illness, the Church is still condemning the mentally ill. Still telling people with depression to “buck up and rejoice in the Lord.” Still demanding that they repent of their worry and fear. Still frightening young girls struggling from eating disorders with talk of demon oppression, and in general over-spiritualizing mental illness. I’m dismayed to admit that the church is decades behind the rest of society in terms of accepting and reaching out to the mentally ill.

I’ve been hurt by the Church, but I still love it. I love it because my Savior loves it, and sees so much potential in it, as He sees potential in me (now there’s the real difficulty!). Mental illness is not a sin. I do not believe anxiety is necessarily a sin, nor is depression. Many disagree with me, and so throughout my writing on this blog I will attempt to explain my position and convince my Christian brothers and sisters. My hope is that some will reconsider their views on mental illness and the way they talk to their fellow Christians who struggle (or may be struggling--you never know!) with mental illness. For many of us, our healing needs to come within the Church. God wants to be our source of healing, but if His character and message are misrepresented or undermined by the Church, an individual’s faith can actually become a barrier to healing.

With that basic explanation of where I am coming from, let me now explain the complementarian bit, and why I am not actually trying to start a fight with this post.

Back onto the Bunny Trail...

There is a lot of discussion in the Christian community over the roles of women in the church. Traditionally, women have accepted a deferential role of service and giving, while men took on the leadership roles. This practical interpretation comes from an understanding of the Bible which states that since woman was created after man, woman is subservient to man.

Modern feminism has of course called into question this interpretation of Scripture, leading to much heated debate over which roles women can hold in church and family life.

Egalitarianism counters the traditional understanding by pointing out passages which show that there is no favoritism in God’s view of men and women--the best example being Galatians 3:28 which says: “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is no male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28; compare also Romans 3:22 and 1 Cor 12:13)--and that Christ’s own attitude towards women was revolutionary in the extreme patriarchal culture of his time. Egalitarians insist that women should have all the same privileges and responsibilities as men. Both men and women should be preachers and teachers, and in the marital relationship both must submit to each other and lead their family together.

Complementarians by contrast, insist on the clarity of verses of Scripture which state that man is the head over woman (1 Cor 11:3), and that men are therefore to take the leadership roles. It is not that women are of lesser importance or position than men, complementarians argue, but that they are different and therefore necessarily fill different roles. Men and women have complementary roles to play in both church and family: men as leaders, women as helpers.

Most of you will see this as a rather extreme oversimplification of the situation, but that is as far as I am able or willing to go in this blog post.

To be honest, I do not consider the role of women to be a central issue of dogma. I don’t think God cares all that much which side we land on in the debate--He cares much more that we recognize Him as the ultimate Head, and that we all equally submit to Him.

In this blog post, I present the weakest argument I know to support my complementarian stance, because I consider a weak argument sufficient.

So with that caveat, I will now present my argument. It is, as I said, one of the weakest forms of argument according to philosophy--an argument from personal experience. As such, it need not sway your thinking much. The experience was nonetheless significant to my healing.

Once Upon a Time

It began with an oath I took before God. I had just been scratched by a strange cat in Africa. I knew nothing about the cat, and next to nothing about diseases from cats that might be harmful in pregnancy, but I had heard of such a disease, and I was terrified. I believed I could have prevented the scratch, so I made a promise to God to be more vigilant about protecting my unborn child.

I later received a comforting email from my midwife assuring me that I could not get the dreaded illness from a cat scratch. However, the promise I had made still stood. A few days later, when I was offered a drink of the famed roadside-stand-fresh-pressed orange juice of the area, I took it even though I was unsure how sanitary the stand could be. Later I lay in a fevered fit, full of guilt and shame for having taken that drink. My still-fresh oath compounded my shame. I vowed then that I would never again do anything if I was uncertain it would be good for my child.

This oath hung like a giant’s gavel over my head. In the following weeks, I discovered I was unsure about most things. On second thought, I was unsure about everything. How could I be sure that the water the airplane stewardesses handed out was clean? How could I know I had not brought back a deadly germ in my suitcase? That I would not pass a harmful toxin to my unborn child if I used that shampoo, touched that doorknob, ate at that restaurant, got out of bed in the morning?

In response to a question from my mom one day, I told her and Jem about the vow I’d taken. Jem’s immediate response was, “That was a really stupid vow to make.”

My mom kindly tried to temper his remark. No, it wasn’t stupid. No Judy you aren’t stupid. But in spite of an initial sting, his gruff words were actually what I needed to hear. There was an ancient solidity, an authority, about his response.

I don’t remember if it occurred to me right away or if it took a few days, but I recalled an obscure passage in Numbers chapter 30:

If a woman vows a vow to the Lord and binds herself by a pledge, and her husband hears of it and says nothing to her on the day that he hears, then her vows shall stand, and her pledges by which she has bound herself shall stand. 8 But if, on the day that her husband comes to hear of it, he opposes her, then he makes void her vow that was on her, and the thoughtless utterance of her lips by which she bound herself. And the Lord will forgive her.

I needed my husband to repudiate the oath from the beginning. I leaned into his authority. I asked him later if he had been thinking of that passage. No, he said, his reaction had been entirely out of his gut. I knew then that I’d been set free.

I didn’t live free right away. The fears had already carved deep striations through my brain that would take many months and much practice to heal. But there was never again a question in my mind that my vow held no power over me.

There were other similar moments throughout those months, when Jem stepped up in a rather knightly way to slay my dragons. One day he told me that God never expected mothers to protect--that was a father’s job. He declared himself responsible for my health. On another occasion, he came home early from work to carry me bodily into bed when I could do nothing but stand shaking and crying. His presence and wisdom through that dark time is unparalleled in any of the fairy tales. It wasn’t exciting or beautiful or romantic in the fairy tale sense, but it was a real-life, albeit earthy, rather dreary, fairy tale.








Tuesday, 9 August 2016

Worry Olympics

You’ve probably heard that the water the athletes in Rio will be rowing and swimming in is pretty gross. I have a morbid curiosity about such things, so I went looking online for more information. (Typically online research is a really bad idea for someone with OCD. I’m not supposed to be Googling health risks, and I don’t recommend you do either. In this case, it worked out in my favor, but...). Luckily, I came across this article.

The article states that people who ingest 3 teaspoons of the water at Rio’s Olympic venues could get violently ill. The title includes the word “just” (just 3 teaspoons), but it might as well read “as much as” for the effect it has on me. 3 teaspoons sounds like a ton! Granted, it may not be much when you consider how much water a swimmer is likely to ingest. But it is about ten thousand times more than the amounts I worry about, and in much less extreme situations--situations like water splashing out of my sink while I’m doing dishes, or my girl throwing stones in our city’s beautiful river. The article goes on to say that even though it would take 3 teaspoons to make illness a high probability, “whether they actually fall ill depends on a series of factors including the strength of the individual’s immune system.” My mind is blown. A whole three teaspoons and they might not even get sick?

Don’t get me wrong. I feel tremendous concern for the Rio athletes. But I don’t think I’ll worry about my girl splashing river water anymore. In fact, I just took her to throw stones in the river. Check out the size of the one she threw in. You can bet she made a splash.

"Aha!"


"Should I? Or not?"


Mud puddles are also a perennial favorite