The Fifth Pillar of Psychiatric Recovery: Spirituality
by Sarah Hancock
So
far we've covered four of the Five Pillars of Psychiatric Recovery:
hope, empowerment, choice and accountability and creating a recovery
environment. Although every pillar is vital, I think I'd like to
change my visual image to an arch and refer to the fifth pillar,
Spirituality, as the arch's keystone.
If
you are unfamiliar with a keystone, it is the stone placed at the top
of an arch. It absorbs the instability of the pieces below. It is
the last piece placed in an arch and it is what provides strength to
the entire arch, stabilizing and holding all things together.
As
a person who has a strong testimony in our Savior, Jesus Christ, and
the plan of salvation, the gospel has always been a part of my life.
I served a full time Spanish-speaking mission in Dallas. I went to
the temple regularly, attended church weekly, served in various
callings and tried to live the gospel as I understood it.
When
I began to have symptoms, my brain chemicals were so off that feeling
the spirit was impossible.
For
me, coming to terms with the Plan of Salvation is what finally helped
me progress on the road to psychiatric recovery. I was thinking about
how Heavenly Father taught us everything we needed to know before he
created the world. I thought about how it wasn't until He knew that
He'd taught us everything and that we couldn't progress more until we
tried out our knowledge that He created the world and gave us the
opportunity to come to earth.
We
were sent to earth to prove ourselves (Abraham 3:25).
Here on earth we get to prove to ourselves
what we are really made of. But do we need to prove it to God? He
knows all! I think we are proving it to ourselves (this is the gospel
according to Sarah).
I
think about how He wants us to return to live with Him and so He
won't give us anything we can't handle. We may not feel like it, but
deep down within each of us is that knowledge of how to succeed. He
wants us to succeed so desperately that he allowed our older brother
to come to earth and sacrifice himself for our safe return.
Our
Savior would not have done it if he didn't believe it us. If in the
premortal life we didn't believe in ourselves — that we were
capable of successfully graduating from earth life, we would have
fought on the other side with a third of the host of heaven who
believed we'd never make it unless we were compelled to return to our
Father's presence.
Instead
we believed in ourselves so much, having the confidence in what our
Father taught us and the confidence in what we
knew that we
risked it all and joined two-thirds of the heavenly hosts, fighting
valiantly for our Father's Plan. If we didn't know
we could do it, we would have joined the other side.
Our
Savior has so much confidence in who we really are that He willingly
gave Himself up on our behalf. I promise you, He wouldn't have done
that if He thought we were a lost cause. He has confidence in us. In
you!
Confidence that we will listen to our true character, buried deep
within, and find out what we are really
made of.
Heavenly
Father has confidence in us too. Were it not so, He would have never
even given us the opportunity until He knew we were ready. You are
here now, proving you are ready to fight the good fight.
Next
time you get those nasty intrusive thoughts (believe me — I
struggled with them for 14 years before they finally went away), just
keep chanting "Heavenly Father sent me to succeed.! He Knows I
can do it. I just need to remember what I already know!"
(John 14:6).
In
an effort to help you see life from a spiritual perspective I would
just like to really delve into this topic in greater detail with my
next column.
Sarah Price Hancock, a graduate of San Diego State University's rehabilitation
counseling Masters of Science program with a certificate psychiatric
rehabilitation.
Having embarked on her own journey with a mental health diagnosis, she is
passionate about psychiatric recovery. She enjoys working as a lector
for universities, training upcoming mental health professionals.
Sarah also enjoys sharing insights with peers working to strengthen
their "recovery toolbox." With proper support, Sarah
knows psychiatric recovery isn’t just possible — it’s
probable.
Born and raised in San Diego, California, Sarah served a Spanish-speaking
and ASL mission for the LDS Church in the Texas Dallas Mission. She
was graduated from Ricks College and BYU. Sarah currently resides in
San Diego and inherited four amazing children when she married the
man of her dreams in 2011. She loves writing, public speaking,
ceramics, jewelry-making and kite-flying — not necessarily in
that order.