The Black Pit : How to stop digging deeper and learn to claw your way out

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Links to my video series “Learning To Be A Happy Person” may be found at the bottom of this post.

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I often get emails and comments asking how I stay so positive. Those who have read me for a while know about my somewhat epic battles with depression in the past and that creates even more questions as people who are in the battle now want to know how I manage to maintain victory over it.

I have truly been at that place in my life where I felt no hope – I have been in the very bottom of that dark pit where I found myself desperately looking for even the smallest ray of light and found none.

To feel totally without hope is one of the most painful places to be and unless someone has been there, they have no idea how excruciating it is. Everything aches, from your heart to your spirit to every muscle and bone in your body.

If you are there now, I have a few things that I would like to say to you – if you are ready to hear them. It is up to you to determine if you are. If you have any doubt, maybe you should come back to this post later because it is not gonna be a soft cushy blanket.

It will be more of a battle cry.

Even though you feel exhausted, if you are ready for this post, it will cause you to have to work harder than you ever have before – But for a goal you’ve longed for.

If you think you are ready, here goes…

I know you’re hurting. I know you’re sad and I know you’re tired. I know you feel like you’ve been fighting, struggling, day in and day out for so very long and yet have gotten nowhere.

I know your heart desperately longs for hope or warmth or some sort of reprieve from the constant ache.

I know because I’ve been there.

I wish I could hold your hand and walk you out of this, but I can’t.

I wish I could look into your life and tell you exactly how to handle each situation, but I’m not able.

But I can tell you how I got through it and I can tell you that if you are in that pit, you are not meant to remain there.

God has a plan for you.

He has a purpose for you.

And He can take this pain and use it for good.

He can take the darkest moments of your life and use them to make you stronger, wiser, and happier than you ever dreamed possible, so much so that you will find yourself years down the road looking back and being grateful for this moment, because so much strength and joy came out of it.

A lot of people end up looking so hard for a person to hold their hand in the darkness that they miss out on the opportunity to hold God’s hand instead. Sure, there might be people in your life you can lean on and that is all good and well, but when it comes down to the big battles…I’m talking the life and death battle between me and the hopelessness, if I have a choice to have the creator of the universe as my coach and team mate, I’m going with those odds.

I learned a long time ago that going to people (friends, relatives, etc) with my problems might help on a temporary level, but they can’t do anything for me. Instead, I started taking my problems directly to God because He is the only one who can actually help me. If He leads me to a person then, so be it, but it is about you and him solving this together.

There is no easy way to get from point A to point B, but it begins by realizing that this is a journey that you are on and you deciding that you are ready to get to point B and dedicating yourself to do what it takes in order to do that.

1. Do you really want to change? 

I know this seems like a ridiculous question at the onset, but it is a valid one. Most people claim they want to change but then only really want to do so if happiness drops out of the sky and lands in their pocket like a lucky lottery ticket. They don’t want to do the work it takes to get there. There was a time when I’d rather continue to complain and moan and lay flailing on the ground because that is what I knew and what was comfortable.

I was like that for years. In fact, I blamed my life for every problem I had rather than realizing that it all began with me. Read more about how I changed my view of depression on this post.

Change requires someone realizing that the very nature of existing and being an adult does not validate our personality.

We are a work in progress and if we don’t work on us, we make no progress.

So the first question is, do you want to change and if so, do you want it bad enough to actually start the process and stick with it?

 2. Are you ready to accept responsibility for your own actions, thoughts, and words?

I had to learn that me losing it in a traffic jam is not the fault of the traffic jam, it was a lack of self control and character flaw on my part. I had to realize that my yelling at someone was not that person’s fault, no matter how I felt they prompted me to yell. My voice is controlled from within, not without.

A man without self-control is like a city broken into and left without walls. ~Proverbs 25:28

3. Is complaining one of your primary activities and if so, are you willing to give that up?

There is an old saying that some people find fault like there was a reward for it. There are a growing number of people like this in our world today and they love every second of it. They get power trips off of how many things they can find to complain about and a twinkle in their eye when things go the wrong way as they mentally build up their story and how they will spin it.

I used to be like that. There was an odd satisfaction in complaining. In a strange way,it makes the complainer feel superior to a circumstance or situation, or even another person. But you know what? The ability to control my tongue is a much greater satisfaction.

Daily, I see people complain about having a job, traffic, and a house payment and now I can’t help but think “Wow, you have a job, a car, and a house!”

A gentle tongue is a tree of life, but perverseness in it breaks the spirit. ~Proverbs 15:4

You have got to want to be happy.

You’ve got to want it so bad that you are willing to do the hardest thing there is, discipline yourself.

You’ve got to be willing to do whatever it takes, chastise yourself when you complain, make yourself step out of your comfort zone.

We’re not talking about having someone hold your hand here. That is what we do for children crossing the street. We’re not kids anymore. We’re adults and an adult that is not capable of disciplining themselves is a train wreck waiting to happen.

Chances are, if you are depressed/negative life right now, you are a current train wreck. You feel it. You know it.

But you can get out. You can be happy.

I PROMISE you.

Believe in yourself and all that you are. Know that there is something inside you that is greater than any obstacle.” ~Christian D. Larson

To get there, you’ve got to want it like a starving dog wants a hambone. You’e got to be wiling to work for it, to uproot that tree you are chained to and drag it to that bone centimeter by centimeter, taking as long as it takes to get there and then, once you get it, you clench your teeth around that bone and you don’t let it go. You do whatever it takes to keep that because you’re not going back to starving again.

You’re not going back into that pit again.

You’ve got to realize that you are sick and you need to make yourself healthy again. You’ve got to realize that your mind is not thinking right and you have got to train it how to think.

Yes, I do believe that negative people who complain all the time are mentally ill. What is worse, this is an highly contagious mental illness and we are potential carriers.

Medical Disclaimer: To begin, go see a doctor. Make sure there isn’t a chemical imbalance that they can help you with.

Then, no matter what that doctor says, even if they give you a prescription to help,

you’ve still got work to do. A pill may help and may even be needed, but you’ve still got to tidy up this house you’re living in.

Are you ready?

Here is how I did it. 

One of the most common threads among depressed and negative people is our ability to blame our lives, our family, our circumstances, and our environment for our misery. Rather than looking inward and taking any responsibility whatsoever for our own crappy thinking process. Pardon my language here, but that word seems to suit best when thinking about how my own thought process used to be. 

The world may have been hard on you in the past, but now it is time to get tough with yourself. I had to stop coddling myself, nurturing my sadness and self pity. My inner drill sergeant (which is actually the Holy Spirit) had to grab hold of that blanket I was wrapped up in, pull it off, and say “Stand up. Your life is beginning today and you’re going to live it.”

Before anything could get better in my life, I had to be willing to take responsibility for my life. I had to be willing to say: “I can’t change this but with God’s help, I can change me.”

Until I was at that point, until I was ready to stop blaming everyone and everything else, I wasn’t ready to claw myself out of that hole. For a long time, I preferred to stay at the bottom of that pit and spend my time trying to find someone else to blame for putting me there.

Once I sunk low enough and got desperate enough, through God’s grace, I began my journey out.

But it was not quick and it was not easy. It took a few years (not days, not weeks, not even months) and it took some definite determination on my part and it takes daily consideration to keep from going back.

I realized that I was prone to depression and negative thinking and I needed to find a way to recover from that.

Just as an alcoholic recovers from alcoholism, I had to look about my life, identify triggers, and set boundaries.

You know how some people are meticulous about every little bite of food that goes into their mouth? I had to become that way about what I allowed into my head.

No more tv shows that feature negative people or showcase characters that represent who I didn’t want to be. No soap operas, no “reality” tv with its manufactured crisis every five seconds. I stopped ingesting that mess. It is not shown on a television in my house, I will not serve it to my family, and I won’t be around where it is being served.

I stopped listening to at least three different genres of music altogether.

No more sad songs. No more getting in the car and cranking up the soundtrack to my pity party. Only encouraging and uplifting music.

I had a few friends who were enablers. Like an alcoholic might have to give up the friend who drank constantly and didn’t see it as a problem, those who wallowed in complaining, negativity, and woe is me were just people I couldn’t be around anymore once I decided I was going to live out the purpose of my life. These people encouraged me to stay the way I was and saw nothing wrong with it. I had to get away from them in order to be able to recover (drug addicts who want to recover do not maintain a relationship with their dealer).

I began watching what I read, how I spoke, what words I chose. I began seeking, actively seeking, to find something to be grateful for in every moment, in every situation. For every one complaint I thought – just thought – not even said, I made myself find at least two things to be grateful for.

I began training myself.

I learned how to shut my mouth so that my own voice did not become something negative to my own ears. There have been so many times when I have opened my mouth to say something and I literally forced it shut before I could, because they were words that were not worth the energy of my voice.

 Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen. ~Eph 4:29

If any of this seems extreme to you, if there is any step here that you just can’t imagine doing, this is a sign that you’re comfortable where you are, enjoying your depression and negativity, and you don’t want to get away from it bad enough to do anything about it just yet.

Once you are ready to recover, you have to realize that there are things that are fine for other people, but they are not fine for you. It may be alright for someone who has never suffered from an alcohol addiction to go into a bar. It is not for a recovering alcoholic. You will have to be meticulous about identifying your own triggers and keeping those off limits to you.

It is a process, and it won’t be easy but it will be worth it. If you are reading this and identifying with what I am saying, God has brought you to a fork in the road. One path is as dark as the one you have been traveling but the other is bathed in light. It is hilly and unknown, but the views are spectacular and there are gardens of fragrant hope all along the way.

It is time to make a choice.

Pick up your foot and decide where you are going to set it down.

It is possible to take the other path.

But get ready because that day will come when you will find yourself standing in the sun again. You’ll still feel the pull of that dark cave but you will have taught yourself how to stand firm and refuse to go back.

And the moment you turn towards that darkness and declare that the sun is shining, you’ll hear someone in the cave call out “Don’t listen to them, they don’t have any idea what its like in here”

When you hear those words, remember when you were there, and show them grace.

“Most folks are about as happy as they make up their minds to be.”

~Abraham Lincoln

“Sometimes, if you really wanna be happy, you’ve gotta get stubborn about it.”

~Christy Jordan

For more tips and help on how Learning How To Be A Happy Person, please see the videos below.

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124 Comments

  1. Thank you so much for sharing this — you cannot even begin to know how much I needed to hear this. I feel as if you were speaking directly to me. I have been dealing with several issues that have left me feeling totally hopeless and alone. Each day has become a struggle just to get through. I have been wishing there was someone I could share my situation with in hopes that it would lessen my burden just a little bit. I have been a Christian since childhood, and I totally believe in God and the power of prayer, but I have failed in totally turning my situation over to Him. I have asked for His help, but then turned right around and started feeling sorry for myself, again. You have made me realize that between God and myself, WE can get through this. I do have hope in Him! Thank you!

  2. This is so true. And I think it’s something you really never are cured of..it’s a lifelong battle. When life gets hard we have a choice of facing it or going back into the pit. Some days it’s easy to give in but we always have a choice.

    A very hard thing

  3. I am so very impressed. I struggle daily to have the life I want. You hit the nail right on the head-no matter what, you have to want to live better very badly. I have depression and PTSD, and plenty of “reasons” to be miserable. I do take medication, I go to counseling faithfully, take vitamins, sit under SAD lights, avoid the news and triggering situations and people. When I “hear” a negative, defeatist depression-talking thought, I mark that puppy with my mental highlighter, so I know it’s not real. What happens eventually is that the smallest things give me joy. I thank God for the privilege of being alive every day.

  4. I had no idea that you have suffered from depression until today. I just thought you were one of those upbeat personalities who has always been that way. I have suffered with depression for as long as I can remember. Negative thinking is definitely a daily, hourly, moment by moment battle. I too have noticed that I have to be careful about what tv shows I watch, especially when I am struggling. Thank you for sharing your story today. It is definitely an encouragement to me as I battle the negative thoughts and talk that keep me in the pit of depression. I have come a long way in the past year and will continue to fight with God’s help!

  5. Christy,

    I have been reading your post and using your recipes for a while now and everyday I find inspiration in them. I have admired your spunk and your zest for life. I would never have thought you had any problem with depression. Thank you so much for sharing this with us. I fight depression every day and some days are harder than others. I really have so much to be thankful for and you just made me realize it even more. I plan to keep this post so I can read it often. You are such a blessing!! You inspire me daily. Keep up the good work.

  6. Christy I have been fighting this problem for years. It is one step forward and two steps back. But I keep trying to move forward. I am under a doctors care. I have been for years. I also have serious back problems. When the pain from my back is bad the overwhelming sadness is at its worse. I’m not making excuses. It is the cycle of my life. I try to be cheerful. It sounds at times to be phony, but it helps me stay focused on the now. I am working with God. I am going to church. I am reading the Bible with Daily Audio Bible with Brian Hardin. I am grateful I heard about this pod cast. He is wonderful. I am finding people like you and Brian to help start my day on a positive note. I also am grateful for my wonderful husband who has been at my side for 28 years. He has seen me at my every worst and at my best. We are working back towards the best of times.

    Thank you for telling me/us your life story. It truly was an answered prayer from God. Thank you helping me know that I too can beat this sadness/depression problem.

    1. I love Brian Hardin as well! God puts each of us where He needs each of us to be, at the right time to either speak life into others or have life spoken into us. During these trials, I think we are actually in training for the “speak life into others” part of our journey. Either way, there is a purpose and a plan, and we can allow God to use it or we can go the other way. I’m honored to be going God’s way along with you!

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