Wednesday, 31 January 2018

#letstalk

I am sure that at some point in your life you have had to seek some type of medical help for a physical problem you were facing. In acute cases we act quickly without much time for contemplation; we need stitches; we get them, we break a bone, we get it cast. In chronic cases, treatment could involve an extensive process of healing or sometimes require a life long protocol to manage specific the issue. One common thing is most of these cases is that we generally feel comfortable to speak freely about them, we readily seek out treatment and ask questions. If we know someone going through a health challenge we offer our care and support however we can without judgement.


All that being said my question is: why, why when it comes to a mental health challenge do we treat it so differently? We don’t talk about it, we often don’t readily seek treatment because of self shaming and guilt. Often this can be because the times we are brave enough to open up a little we end up wishing we hadn’t because there is such a strong stigma attached to “mental health issues” that people often colour you a certain way, or judge you as being “weak minded”, “self centered”, “attention seeking” or just plain “lazy”. People can speak of mental disorders in hushed tones as if a terrible scandal has taken place. Some may question the person’s faith or moral character because they struggle with depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, or ADHD etc. Parents even, may refuse to seek help for a child because they themselves are afraid of the stigmas or they simply pass the child off as “bad”, “hard to manage” or “rebellious”(especially in cases of ADHD because often these kids have a really hard time learning from previous mistakes), or because they “knew someone with depression and it looked like “XYZ” and so there is no way that there child is depressed...which is kinda like saying someone couldn’t have cancer because they can’t see the tumor.

So why do we not respond the same as in any other health/medical issue? Is not the brain a physical organ? Does it not ultimately control all of our body’s physical functions? Why is depression labelled as an “emotional problem” but say, Irritable Bowel Syndrome, is not?  

I ask these questions just as much to myself as anyone reading. Because the truth is as much as we all wish the stigma was nonexistent it is alive and well. If you struggle with mental health you can already feel very isolated from everything you care about, to risk the possible conscience or subconscious recoil people are likely to have when/if they “find out”, can seem extra daunting to say the least.

I can appreciate people not being able to understand if they have not experienced a mental struggle however I don’t believe that this can be used as an excuse to not productively support someone. Do you need to have cancer to lend your support and care to a friend? Do you need to have had a chronic disease to be able to listen and appreciate the impacts on their daily life? I don’t think so...maybe I can’t fully appreciated someone else’s cancer on a experiential level but I can sit back and go “wow, you are so bad ass, somehow you manage to keep up with all the normal life things on top of all this. You are a fighter!”

Because there is such a strong stigma surrounding mental health many of us have to be our own cheerleaders...which can be a huge challenge because our mind can be our worst enemy. It can get stuck on negative thought patterns that are extremely difficult(and sometimes impossible) to overcome[without treatment], it berates us and plays mental comparisons to belittle our struggles. We are terrified of seeking help because we think we should be like everyone else and believe(or have been told) “there is something really messed up about people who struggle with mental illness”. Or we think we are just inherently flawed, lack the willpower to change, or maybe we really are just plain ol’ stupid. While the real problem lies within our physical brain and without treating that how can change take place? If someone is legally blind, can telling them to “try harder” make their vision any better?

Now I am not saying we don’t take responsibility for our thoughts or emotions, on the contrary I believe if we could break down the stigmas surrounding mental health and demystify the physiology of our brains by creating awareness around how they work and what could be either over/under working in certain “disorders” this could actually increase the number of people who seek treatment. I know that is the only thing that has ever given me the courage to step into a Dr’s office and admit, out loud, my struggles.
If I hadn’t I would have kept on thinking that I needed to hide my “dirty little secret”...until the next time I just “couldn’t go on like this” and made certain I wouldn’t..

So the next time you think someone with a mental illness is “weak minded” or somehow “lesser” in someway in comparison to you….I hope you remember this and ask yourself: do you have that same thought when thinking of your friend struggling with cancer? The man down the street that is paralysed from the waist down? The woman you met at work this week who is recovering from Lyme disease? The blind person you often see walking to the coffee shop every morning with their faithful service dog? Are they weak? Or do they simply have challenges that they have had to work around in life? Challenges that they have been able to find assistance and support for? Can they somehow help themselves less than than the person who ends up having to call into work sick because they have had another massive panic attack that has their body completely drained of energy, the child struggling in school because whenever they try to focus on what their teacher is saying their brain physically shuts down, or the woman who every single day wakes up feeling numb and dead inside and yet somehow manages to make it through another work day just to come home and crash again….if that’s not enough combine all three because often mental disorders like company.

Why am I saying this? To get attention? Have you feel sorry for me? To make myself feel better? No - but because I don’t want to be part of the problem anymore. I don’t want silence to prevent people from getting help, I don’t want the stigma to gain more momentum or power over anyone. I also don’t want us to define ourselves by our mental health issues or feel sorry for ourselves because we may struggle in this area…if we do that, we have given in to the stigma.

If you are struggling with a brain issue - you deserve as much help as anyone. You are not fundamentally broken, you may just need “glasses”.

Most people wake up and tackle the world, we battle ourselves and then tackle the world with whatever we got left. We are not “weak minded”...we are warriors!

#letstalk but then take action and get healthy from the brain out!

Tuesday, 8 December 2015

Put it in your window for all to see....


Happy Chanukah!



So over the last several years I have been building and adding to my "Chanukah music playlist". I thought I would share one of this year's new songs as I believe it captures so very well one of the main themes of the holiday.

Every time I light the chanukkiah I am reminded that is it only by Yeshua's work(The Servant) that I have any light in me and there by can spread that light to the world.

Carry Your Candle
Kathy Troccoli
There is a candle in every soul
Some brightly burning, some dark and cold
And there is a spirit who brings a fire
Ignites a candle and makes his home

Carry your candle, and run to the darkness
Seek out the helpless, confused and torn
And hold out your candle for all to see it
Take your candle, and go light your world
Take your candle, and go light your world

Frustrated brother, see how he's tried to
Light his own candle some other way
See now your sister, she's been robbed and lied to
Still holds a candle without a flame

So carry your candle, and run to the darkness
Seek out the lonely, the tired and worn
And hold out your candle for all to see it
Take your candle, and go light your world
Take your candle, and go light your world

'Cause we are a family whose hearts are blazing
So let's raise our candles and light up the sky
Praying to our Father, in the name of Jesus
Make us a beacon in darkest times

Carry your candle, and run to the darkness
Seek out the helpless, deceived and poor
Hold out your candle for all to see it
Take your candle, and go light your world
Take your candle, and go light your world

Carry your candle, run to the darkness
Seek out the helpless, confused and torn
Hold out your candle for all to see it
Take your candle, and go light your world
Take your candle, and go light your world
Take your candle, and go light your world








Saturday, 7 November 2015

Personal Parshah - Chayei Sarah

This week's parshah is Chayei Sarah (Sarah's life)...however we only hear of her death, burial etc. Immediately following is the famous "Isaac and Rebecca" (as most call it) narrative....in which both parties receive little air time. In fact the star of the story seems to be Abraham's servant, I mean if we are going to judge the "star" by the character with the most dialog.

Anyway the first thing I noticed was that Sarah died...obvious yes but hang in there....and just give some thought to the life of Sarah. All this time of waiting for some evidence of the promise of HaShem, hoping in the covenant of G-d to give them offspring....I don't think it is a stretch to say that this promise was just as important to Sarah as it was to Abraham, you can sense it in the urgency in which she hopes to gain seed through Hagar...whoops! A for motives...but pretty much a fail for "good plan". However She had complete faith that HaShem would deliver on what He said He would do even though she may have wavered(as well as Abraham) on the method. But by and by Isaac is born and the first morsel of the covenant is actually tasted!

Now Isaac grows up but Sarah goes to the grave before even seeing Isaac marry...for her there is really no "tangible insurance" that Isaac's name will continue. For some people that may have cause them to have a few doubts...my opinion here but I don't believe this was the case with Sarah. She had taken hold of HaShem's covenant and, I believe, she went to her grave in full faith that HaShem would bring about what he promised in the life of her son becoming a great nation and in ultimately One would come to crush the head of the serpent...the Redeemer Himself.

We would do well to follow in the footsteps of our mother Sarah, having assurance in those things hoped for, and the conviction of things not yet seen.

Yeshua said to him, "have you believed because you have seen me? Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed. John 20:29

By faith Sarah herself received power to conceive, even when she was past the age, since she considered him faithful who had promised. Hebrews 11:11

Abraham also had this strong covenant focus. We see in the beginning of chapter 24 that "God had blessed Abraham in all things". It could have been quite easy for him to begin to "rest upon his laurels" so to speak, but just the opposite! All the wealth and earthly possessions did not in the least detract from the focus he had on the promises of HaShem and so he instructs his servant regarding a wife for Isaac. He is covenant minded not earthly minded.

Abraham knows by faith that HaShem had prepared a wife for Isaac, one that would be a help mate suitable, equally yoked and ready to carry on the covenant to the next generation and she was not to be found in Canaan but in the land of his kindred. Like himself she too would be called out from the land of her forefathers to go to a land that she knew not...she would be one who would walk by faith.

Even Eleazar, Abraham's loyal servant, has his eyes fixed in faith before him on these covenant promises as he obediently sets out to seek a wife for his master's son. Confident that the L-rd has gone with him and would bring him to the one He had selected.

Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God. Hebrews 12:1,2


My son, be attentive to my words;
incline your ear to my sayings.
Let them not escape from your sight;
keep them within your heart.
For they are life to those who find them,
and healing to all their flesh.
Keep your heart with all vigilance,
for from it flow the springs of life.
Put away from you crooked speech,
and put devious talk far from you.
Let your eyes look directly forward,
and your gaze be straight before you.
Ponder the path of your feet;
then all your ways will be sure.
Do not swerve to the right or to the left;
turn your foot away from evil.
Proverbs 4:20-27


Christ is the end(goal) of the Torah so that there may be righteousness for everyone who believes. Romans 10:4




* I have no idea what is causing the white highlighting in the post...I have tried unsuccessfully to reformat the post so it would appear but to no avail *

Saturday, 17 October 2015

So much for silence

Here it goes I am going to do my best to break the blog silence! Why have I not been writing for so long? Well many reasons I suppose, lack of time and energy being a main one.

It is a funny thing how life takes you through cycles. When I started this blog I seemed to be blessed with perspective and just enough extra time to give it a coherent voice! Lately, (and by that I mean at least the last year) that has just not been the case. Its been more of a "hanging on for dear life" kind of time ....I hope that means G-d has just added another brick to the load because I have gotten stronger, but I'll be honest, it feels more like I have gotten weaker as I struggle to remain centred on this little Rock of mine as everything swirls around me. I feel like I've been on the proverbial rack emotionally -- And am no longer living, just surviving. And that is not the most conducive to clear articulated inspiration thoughts(as this entry proves), even when they do occur the energy it takes to convey them often evades the ponderer long enough for the thought to vanish as quickly as it appeared.

Now you may think that sounds rather defeatist and you are entitled to your opinion but can you blame the pot for burning because all the water boiled away? 

But this too is fleeting and it too shall pass, but what is the conclusion of the matter? Fear G-d and keep His commandments, for this is the whole duty of man. 

I'll live because He lives.

Shalom

Wednesday, 8 April 2015

Matzah Granola


Ingredients 

roughly half a package of matzah broken into small pieces(if you like it sweeter use less)

a big spoonful of honey

1/2 cup of butter

1/4 tsp salt

1/4 cup sesame seeds*

1/3 cup sliced almonds*

1/3 cup dried cranberries*

* or any nuts, seeds or dried fruit of your liking


Mix broken matzah, nuts and seeds in a shallow baking pan

Melt butter, honey and salt in a saucepan then stir into matzah until well coated.

Bake at 300 degrees stirring about every 6-10 minutes until toasted, around 25 min. Add any dried fruit 1/2-3/4 of the way through baking time.



Thursday, 1 January 2015

10th of Tevet


Today, the tenth of the Hebrew month of Tevet, is the anniversary of the day Babylon laid siege to Jerusalem in the year 3336(425-BCE) which ultimately led to the destruction of the Temple(9th of Av) and our exile to Babylon for 70yrs.

This sad day on our calender is traditionally marked with fasting and reflection, both on those sad events of the past and also on our own personal path with HaShem.

The Sages explain:

  “Every generation for which the Temple is not rebuilt, is as though the Temple was destroyed for that generation.”

Just as at Pesach we are to celebrate the feast as if we personally came up out of Egypt, our Sages want us to also personally connect with the tragedies of our people as well. I think that is very wise. In any family there are going to be bumps and potholes, and also times for joy and celebration. What kind of person would one be if we showed up only for the celebrations and never for the deaths, the hard times, the losses etc?

Now I will be honest I did not grow up with this calender...and in many ways it still feels foreign...and unfortunately it is usually mostly at these times, the times of mourning. I don't want it to be that way, I want the words of my Master to be fulfilled in my life when He says: Blessed are they that mourn, for they will be comforted!" . When these days are turned into days of gladness and joy as the prophet Zachariah* says I want to be able to experience that to the full degree.

For more information on this day here are a few other links to check out:

http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/102698/jewish/10-Tevet.htm



 "Only take care, and keep your soul diligently, lest you forget the things that your eyes have seen, and lest they depart from your heart all the days of your life. Make them known to your children and your children's children..." -Deut. 4:9

Tuesday, 13 May 2014

Music Room Reno


Finally getting around to posting before and afters of the music room reno! 

It all started when I was held up in my "music room" and just couldn't take the outdated wall paper and the lack of space anymore and just started ripping the paper off the wall...

                          
Before: (I kinda forgot to take pictures before I started ripping but you get the idea...)


During:



and FINALLY after:



Absolutely NO regrets going red. I made the speaker shelves, desk and storage bench myself out of pallets! Recycled our old couch cushions for the bench. The total cost outlay was only in my primer, paint and screws. :) I am planning on adding a shelf or two under the turn table and perhaps one under the desk as well later on.