Multiple people in society suffer from mental health issues. They can feel the tremors of depression coming on them. Like ominous storm clouds building in the distance, depression comes on in waves of darkness suffocating hope. It is a place of isolation as depressed people often withdraw from those around them. Depression cripples people mentally, emotionally, spiritually and physically.
Many suffer from such illness. Well meaning but ignorant people say things like, "Just snap out of it. Trust God and overcome. Look at all the things you have to be thankful for all around you." While these things may be said with good intentions, they offer little to no hope, but heap mounds of condemnation on those suffering through the dark cloud of depression.
Depressed people may even be convinced that God wronged them, failed them, and forsook them in their moment of need. They wonder why God did not answer their prayers in the way they wanted. They question why God allowed the suffering to continue. They even blame God for adverse circumstances. They become convinced that God cannot be trusted, and therefore instead of finding hope in God, they find their perceived failure of God to be another reason for melancholy thoughts.
What does a person do when they find the tremors of depression creeping into their thoughts? The Bible exhorts us to take every thought captive in obedience to Christ. II Cor 10:5. We must be disciplined about the thoughts we entertain. Dark toxic thoughts may come randomly, but we determine whether we dwell on those thoughts. If they bring us down, we need to get rid of them as quickly as possible. One way to do this is by constantly filling our minds with truths that combat toxic thoughts. A great source of truth is the Bible with passages like Ps 27:13-14, Ps 30:5, Ps 34:18-19, Ps 42:5, Ps 50:15, Is 41:10, Jer 32:17, Matt 6:25-32, and Matt 11:28 just to name a few.
Another thing depressed people need to do but often don't want to do, is to talk to someone. Talk to a family member, close friend, a pastor, or a professional counselor. Sometimes just talking about the source of depression helps just getting it off your chest. At other times, it may take professional help over a longer period to work through issues of despair and anxiety.
One other tip to help is to remember that dark seasons for most people do not last forever. Those seasons come and go. Just as suddenly as the tremors of depression come they can also leave. That's hard to believe when you are in the middle of it. It feels like hope will never return. Many people who were drowning in depression can testify that they were rescued and God restored hope to them. He can do the same for you.