Just Fight One More Round!
It happened over 120 years ago. On September 7, 1892, James J. Corbett won the first heavyweight championship prize-fight in which the contestants used boxing gloves rather than their bare fists.
I Will Come Through This Bitter or Better
How unfair, how cruel . . . of God to take me through this long, drawn-out ordeal. It’s been a tormenting endurance for months, years. I feel trapped in a lose-lose deal.
Things You Might Not Know about Mental Illness, Depression, and Bipolar Disorder
Most people with severe mental illness are not permanently incapacitated, infantile, helpless persons whom we need to protect.
How I Have Coped with the Effects of My Bipolar Disorder
I desperately wanted to get better, mostly for my family’s sake, and was willing to go to any length to reclaim my life. I longed to be the husband and father they deserved.
This Is Not the Life I Ordered ... But It’s Never Too Late to Begin Again!
Several years ago, I endured one setback after another: medication problems, relationship issues, and personal projects that failed to materialize.
Why Planning for the Future Doesn’t Mean You Lack Faith
What should I say to a friend who believes the Bible teaches that it’s wrong to make plans? She quotes Jesus’ words as proof that Christians ought not to set goals or make plans,
How Spirituality Can Help You Heal from Bipolar and Depression
Where do you go for help, hope, and meaning when painful struggles erode your confidence, shake your faith, and taint your happy times?
Seven Reasons God Allows Us to Suffer
If God is all-good and all-loving and all-powerful, why is there so much pain and suffering in the world? Why do good Christians lose their jobs or experience disastrous financial reversals?
An Ode to Three Lemons (A Poem)
You pucker and squintAt the slightest hintOf a lemon’s bitter taste.So why not throw it in the waste?Life deals its harsh lemons as well,
The Stories We Bring to Our Marriages
In every marriage, both the husband and wife bring their own problems into their new relationship: life’s past wounds, unmet expectations, misplaced priorities, and countless other issues.
How Bipolar Disorder Has Affected My Marriage
Sometimes marriages fail suddenly due to an unexpected physical or mental illness, an act of unfaithfulness, or some other dramatic event. But most marriages die a slow death.
32 Ways to Heal Your Marriage From the Effects of Mental Illness
While there are countless things you can do to repair your marriage, here are the ones that have worked for my wife and I and people we know. You don’t need to use them all,
Why Talk about Mental Illness and Marriage?
While divorce statistics vary somewhat from study to study and year to year, their numbers aren’t too far apart. In the US and Canada, at least 40 percent of all marriages fail.
What I Have Done to Heal My Marriage Despite My Mental Illness
I realized pretty quickly that I’d have to take personal responsibility for healing our marriage. Although I have messed up plenty of times, I’ve worked really hard to heal and rebuild our relationship.
How My Wife Coped With the Effects of My Bipolar Disorder
How did I cope with the negative effects of Jim’s bipolar disorder? Well, Jim frequently says that education is over half the battle in dealing with bipolar disorder or other brain illnesses.
What My Wife Has Done to Heal Our Marriage Despite My Mental Illness
Restoring a marriage that has been injured by mental illness starts with a deliberate choice to begin again and again and again. As a couple works at rebuilding their strained marital relationship,
What to Do if a Mentally Ill Spouse Is Unwilling to Get Help
Healing and rebuilding your marriage may seem like an impossible task. Your energy and optimism are probably depleted, if not demolished. Your emotions may be frayed to the breaking point.
How to Start a Ministry to the Mentally Ill: A Brief, Practical Guide
Every religious leader can reach out to help the mentally ill persons and their families in his or her congregation/temple and community.
My Personal Faith Journey
Many people diagnosed with a mental illness come from well-adjusted “normal” families—I did not. My mental-emotional meltdown occurred in my 40s, but its seeds were planted early.