Sleep deprivation contributed more to my one and only complete mental breakdown
than anything else. But without the catalyst of a failed marriage, a wife who
no longer wanted me, the sleep deprivation would have been easy to deal with.
So there I was, barely able to move, a watery mess, and so disconsolate I was
unable to communicate. It was 8 October, 2003. And as it worked out, this was
only one of several rock bottom experiences during this season in my life.
The above
experience is not the only time I have succumbed to the brokenness of
breakdown. Many times since I suffered burnout in 2005 I have had periods of
hours, and up to a day or two, where spiritual attack or mental overload have
rendered incapable of reliable cognition. Significantly, I have not suffered
any significant breakdown since I confronted my minor social phobia in the
recent years.
There is
hope in the brokenness of breakdown if we can invent the space we need.
We need
to find safety, where we are not so vulnerable. And whilst it’s easy to be
vulnerable when we have all our faculties, the absence of faculties means we
not only have nothing to give, but we also have plenty more to lose.
If we can
find a safe refuge – one of practical means – and, importantly, we have someone
to share with, someone who will listen – then we have hope of recovery.
There is
great solace in getting away from the pressure points of life when we are
particularly weak. It’s not as if we are running away when we need to get away.
And getting away is about taking stock and finding rest.
When Hope Is Rest
There is
not much sense in pushing ourselves to breaking point and continuing on through
the brokenness of breakdown. We are so vulnerable in this sort of place we do
ourselves no favours to continue to do what has clearly not worked.
Hope is
rest. When we have succumbed to the strains of life and we literally have
nothing left, God is imploring us to stop as we grind to a halt.
When we
are sick and tired and at the end of our hope, our hope is rest to recover for
a new day to come when we are well and refreshed.
God can
do a lot with us and for us from the position of our brokenness; to give us rest
whilst restoring our hope.
© 2014 S.
J. Wickham.
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