The Professor's Bayonet
https://www.jannaherron.com/services https://48bconsulting.com/ Janna Herron’s brief memoir of her struggles with mental health is timely to say the very least. Entitled Brokenness Restored: The Path to Recovery is a Healing Journey, Herron’s open rumination on what it took to come back from the brink of mental collapse is as raw as it is insightful. She joins the chorus of so many young folks who, sadly, do battle against mental and spiritual snares alone, shining a light on the despair that goes unnoticed. If anything, hers is a needed voice in today’s society – a voice with which to empathize, a voice to identify as a friend, someone who knows. Herron’s ideas on loneliness, for example, are sure to land well with those in her generation who are becoming or have already become disaffected with the narrative that social media unites. One does not have to look very far to see how isolation has become an epidemic in and of itself – how lonely people really are despite having access to the world, as it were, at their fingertips. Herron writes that “isolation merely increases the symptoms of depression and anxiety.” She is correct. Indeed, she adroitly points out that so many instances of depression are cyclical: depression leads to isolation, and isolation leads to a deeper depression. Interestingly, Herron shares that her father was once a correctional officer in a prison and that this experience served as the impetus for growing feelings of distrust. She admits to not knowing how his experiences as an authority figure behind bars affected him internally, and she certainly extends an impressive level of grace when she recognizes how his time as a correctional officer negatively impacted his relationships at home; however, she does not excuse him from inadvertently setting a tone that would eventually engulf her, resulting in her own scuffle with weighty and unpleasant thoughts. I would submit with Herron’s book, however, that an analysis couched in her relationship with her father – something she mentions from the very beginning – might be deeply relevant. It is no small detail, in other words – a bit of information that could provide helpful context for how her struggle played out. She admits, after all, that she does not “overlook the pain and hurt that he has caused.” Could this have been the catalyst for something bigger? Herron writes that soon after arriving at Texas Woman’s University, the conviction of being unsafe persisted. The change in location did little to ameliorate her anxiety. To be sure, she soon found out that those feelings were justified, which led to a downward spiral that left her considering the unthinkable. She overdosed on some medication. Herron writes that she wanted to go home – not where she was from but heaven, her celestial home. What many tuck away in the recesses of their psyche, Herron puts on full display for her readers to consider. In doing so, I would argue that she names it for what it is (attempting to take one’s own life) thereby neutralizing the ideation. What is hidden is more dangerous – she makes that clear throughout the book – so exposing it defangs it considerably, making her story more approachable and, as a result, the path toward healing clearer to those facing similar challenges. Herron’s road to recover is circuitous. It is not a direct shot. Like ivy that winds itself up a tree trunk, her indirect route only made her stronger and more resilient. God wants resilient people, and just like He did with Herron, He assures us that we were, in effect, built for the trials in which we find ourselves. Toward the end, Herron reminds us that suppressing our emotions is no good for anybody and that what God desires is for the truth to come to light. It will oftentimes take great effort for that truth to emerge, but, Herron writes, the endeavor is worth it. Because you are worth it, the child of God that you are.
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