Mending a Broken Mind
eBook - ePub

Mending a Broken Mind

Healing the Whole Person Who Suffers with Clinical Depression

Andrew Adam White

Share book
  1. 210 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Mending a Broken Mind

Healing the Whole Person Who Suffers with Clinical Depression

Andrew Adam White

Book details
Book preview
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

Do you feel down, depressed, or hopeless? Have you lost interest or pleasure in doing things? Do you know someone who might be depressed and want to help? Are you a Christian healer--health care provider, counselor, or clergy - and want to expand your knowledge base on depression? If you answer yes to any of these questions, this book may be of help to you. As a Christian family physician and educator for forty-three years and with seminary training, I have found that treating the whole person with clinical depression is the most likely way to be healed from this dreadful illness. There are now many real helps for those with clinical depression from the medical (including psychiatric), counseling, and pastoral care professions, especially from the Bible itself. I have suffered from seven clinical depressions, and most of my siblings and children have experienced at least one clinical depression--so I know what the issues are that face those of us who are depressed. I have also included real life examples of Christians who have suffered from depression, including me, as well as helpful quotations from Scripture and special prayers for those who are depressed.

Frequently asked questions

How do I cancel my subscription?
Simply head over to the account section in settings and click on “Cancel Subscription” - it’s as simple as that. After you cancel, your membership will stay active for the remainder of the time you’ve paid for. Learn more here.
Can/how do I download books?
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
What is the difference between the pricing plans?
Both plans give you full access to the library and all of Perlego’s features. The only differences are the price and subscription period: With the annual plan you’ll save around 30% compared to 12 months on the monthly plan.
What is Perlego?
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Do you support text-to-speech?
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Is Mending a Broken Mind an online PDF/ePUB?
Yes, you can access Mending a Broken Mind by Andrew Adam White in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Teologia e religione & Ministro del culto cristiano. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

1

My Story of Recurrent Depression

There are common themes that run through all depressed people’s stories, and yet every person’s journey is unique. Sometimes there are small variations in our stories and sometimes the chasms seem wide. Just telling your own story of depression and listening to others’ can open a closed gate, through which you can walk toward healing. So here is mine.
I have struggled on and off with depression since age eleven. My father was a medical missionary to the Belgian Congo (now the Democratic Republic of Congo). My mother homeschooled the three older siblings including me, the eldest. When I was about to enter the fifth grade, my mother no longer felt adequate to teach me. I traveled about three hours from home and entered a boarding school in the capital of the Congo, Leopoldville (now Kinshasa). After school each day for the first few months, I would climb up into the attic of my new home and cry until I lay spent and exhausted. The hosting family tried to include me in their daily lives, but they were not my family. This may have just been homesickness; if so, it was extraordinarily severe and prolonged. In one letter home, I asked my mother to send me a picture of the family because I was forgetting what everyone looked like. I was heartbroken and felt abandoned.
Youthful Despair
At the age of fourteen, when I lived in Marquette, Michigan, I took one puff of hashish (my first and only experimentation with illicit drugs), which triggered a panic attack that led to a severe depression. Because it was precipitated by drug use, I was afraid to tell anyone about it and so suffered alone for the six months it took me to recover.
For me, depression is not just the usual depressed mood, loss of interest in pleasurable activities, low energy . . . which is bad enough. For me, depression is hopeless despair, searing mental agony, extreme anxiety and agitation, paralyzing helplessness, and a disabling inability to concentrate and remember things.
I was nineteen years old when I started medical school at the University of Michigan in 1973. Toward the end of my first two demanding years, I slowly slipped into a mild depression. The week after finishing my second year, I suffered a panic attack that triggered a depression so severe and so prolonged that I had to take a year-long leave of absence. I had been scheduled to do a medical student summer clerkship at Massachusetts General Hospital. Though I was frightened to go, my parents thought it might snap me out of my nervous breakdown (that is what clinical depression was often called back then). During the first three days at Mass General, I felt as if I was in a house of horrors, terrified almost every moment of the day. A mental wreck, I resigned and took a same-day flight back home.
I was unable to study medicine or work because of concentration and memory problems, in addition to the mental agony. I did almost nothing except ruminate about depressing and terrorizing things. My mother says that during that time I would sit for hours with my Bible open in my lap, wet with tears from crying out to God for healing. Jesus had healed so many people, why wouldn’t he heal me? I would not even turn the page of my Bible because I could hardly read a sentence or two.
Several different psychotropic drug regimens were ineffective (there weren’t many antidepressants in those days). Psychological and spiritual counseling resulted in no improvement. In deep, hopeless despair from the torment of the depression, I attempted suicide. I had a loaded handgun pointed to my temple but could not pull the trigger. I did, however, take a lethal overdose of a sedative that I found in the medicine closet of our house (remember, my father was a physician). As the sedative took effect, I noticed a slight improvement in my mental agony and terror, which gave me a sliver of hope that I might be healed. I told my younger brother what I had done and was soon in the emergency room. After three days in the intensive care unit, I was given electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), commonly known as electric shock therapy. On the fourth treatment, I suddenly, dramatically improved. I was placed on an antidepressant and mood stabilizer to reinforce the healing from ECT. The anxiety and panic attacks, however, continued for some time, due, in part, to my great fear of a relapse. Fortunately, I was able to return to my medical studies later that year. After a year, my medications were discontinued. It wasn’t known back then that recurrent or especially severe depression needs to be treated for life.
When I completed medical school at the age of twenty-four in 1978, my new bride, Fenni, and I moved to Charleston, South Carolina, where I started a three-year combined internship and residency in family medicine (then called family practice). During the orientation before starting my internship, I rapidly developed another severe depression. I thought I would have to delay my internship, but fortunately the medication I was prescribed kicked in fairly quickly. I didn’t miss any days of my internship though I was very distressed for several months. Again, after a year my medications were discontinued.
Mission Madness
In my second year of family medicine residency training, I went on a medical mission trip to the Thailand side of the Thailand-Cambodian border during the refugee crisis precipitated by the Communist Khmer Rouge (Cambodian Red) genocide. A Vietnamese offensive into Cambodia in the early spring of 1979 violently pushed the Khmer Rouge, along with many of the terrorized civilians they controlled, over the Thailand border. One of the Khmer Rouge-dominated refugee camps was Sa Kaeo. There were other refugee camps that housed some Cambodian military who opposed the Khmer Rouge, along with civilian followers. They were all escaping from the truly evil Khmer Rouge and from the greatly feared but, in retrospect, much less evil Vietnamese.
Early in the spring of 1980 at our church, Fenni and I heard about the terrible conditions on the Thailand border. On the way home that Sunday, on the radio we heard more about this humanitarian crisis. I immediately felt called to go help, but we both knew there were no opportunities for mission service until I graduated from my residency program. But then, that very next day, I found in my residency mailbox a letter from the dean of the medical school. The dean encouraged us young doctors to consider going to the Thailand-Cambodian border with all costs paid by the Southern Baptist Convention and with residency training credit given. Within a week after the dean’s letter, three of my extended family members wrote, saying they had heard of the crisis and wondered if there was some way I could go to Southeast Asia. None of the three was aware of what had just transpired in my life. It seemed obvious that God was calling me to go to the Thailand-Cambodian border, so I signed up. Our mission team was comprised of seven resident physicians and one faculty physician. For several weeks, we met regularly to bond together and prepare for the mission trip.
When I stepped off the plane in Thailand, I had a panic attack that triggered yet another severe depression. Despite my condition, God used me as a leader in a Christian revival among some of the vilest people in the history of the world, the Khmer Rouge. In terms of percentage of the population murdered violently or by forced labor and starvation along with the fatal diseases that accompany starvation, the Khmer Rouge were the worst in modern history; this genocide was every bit as horrible as the Jewish Holocaust. (For more on this genocide see the movie The Killing Fields and/or read the book Intended for Evil.)
I was initially assigned to a mission hospital in Thailand to help me understand Thai culture and local medical practice. Fortunately, I surreptitiously found some imipramine (an antidepressant that had helped me in the past) in the hospital pharmacy. Unfortunately, it takes four to six weeks for the antidepressant to really begin to take effect.
Two weeks later, I was stationed along at a non-Khmer Rouge military and civilian refugee camp. Because there was such an outpouring of medical humanitarian aid, there was almost nothing for our team to do. Of course, I could not understand why God had given me such a clear calling to what seemed to be a useless mission. Not only that, but I was reeling from being away from the support and security of my wife, still at home. After two weeks, a request came from Sa Kaeo, one of the hated Khmer Rouge-dominated refugee camps. The request was for a physician to serve in the place of a physician who had become ill.
Now the worst thing depressed people can do, from a psychological perspective, is to leave their support groups. I knew this, but I also felt the same clear call from God that I had felt when I originally signed up for the mission. My calling to Sa Kaeo was confirmed when none of the other team members were willing to go. Of course, I had to quickly overcome my abhorrence of the Khmer Rouge, which was no small thing.
Thankfully my medical responsibilities at the Sa Kaeo camp did not require much concentration—concentration that was severely lacking because of my depression. I ran a tent hospital malaria ward with about fifty patients; thankfully almost everyone needed the same treatment so my concentration was not an issue. My seemingly more important though small role was in the Christian revival, which started on my hospital ward, that miraculously took place at Sa Kaeo. The first day, the patients assigned to my ward (Khmer Rouge military and civilians alike) were too ill for me to share the gospel with them. On the second day, most had improved medically and could understand what I was saying. I simply asked each patient through an interpreter, “Do you know you are a sinner?” One hundred percent said yes. Can you imagine that response in the modern Western world? Then I told each one of them, “Tomorrow I will bring you good news.” Those fourteen words were literally all I could manage to say—being so severely depressed. Amazingly, approximately one-quarter of the patients on my ward couldn’t wait until the next day to hear the good news. They went to our hospital ward chaplain and, upon hearing the good news, started a new life in Jesus. The chaplain had been a missionary in Cambodia before he retired. Though he had not had a very fruitful ministry, he had translated the New Testament Gospel of John into a Cambodian dialect understood by the refugees at Sa Kaeo.
On the third day, the one-quarter of my patients who had met with the chaplain had big smiles on their faces, eager to share with me their newfound faith. To the remaining three-quarters, I shared the gospel of salvation by faith in Jesus Christ that would cleanse one from all sin no matter how terrible. This time God gave me a few (but not many) more words regarding God’s grace to share with my patients. Another one-quarter immediately accepted the good news and began a life-transforming relationship with Jesus. I directed them, of course, to the hospital ward chaplain to ground them in their newfound faith.
One of the Khmer Rouge leaders with malaria experienced a spiritual rebirth. He would often read aloud from the book of John, which the chaplain had translated, to the entire ward. This reading was miraculous, because the Khmer Rouge had routinely killed anyone who could read. Those who were literate were perceived to be an intellectual threat to the Khmer Rouge Communist ideology.
God also raised up a Cambodian evangelist. He had been a believer for only three weeks, but he was daily discipled by our hospital ward chaplain. This evangelist went from home church to home church (more accurately home shack church to home shack church) sharing the gospel from sunrise to sunset. His life was in great danger. Some of the Khmer Rouge leaders had told the people that they would have to “sleep on the ground” if they converted to Christianity. This was a euphemism for digging your own grave. Probably from a combination of fear and mental exhaustion, this evangelist would come to my ward each night physically shaking and unable to sleep. He needed a shot of a tranquilizer (Valium) to calm down and get some much-needed rest.
Four improbable vessels were the leaders of this miraculous Sa Kaeo revival: (1) a severely depressed family physician resident who could hardly speak, (2) a retired missionary minister to Cambodia who had seen little fruit in his ministry there but was our hospital ward chaplain, (3) a miraculously alive Khmer Rouge leader who regularly read aloud from the Gospel of John given to him by its translator, our hospital ward chaplain, and (4) a newly converted Cambodian evangelist who was mentally exhausted and afraid for his life. I later heard that when the Sa Kaeo revival had run its God-ordained course, two to three thousand people in the camp had come into a personal relationship with Jesus Christ.
At the time of this miraculous revival, I experienced no joy because of the severity of my depression. God apparently did not need my joy to bring about the revival. But today I am filled with great joy every time I remember Go...

Table of contents