LDS Perspectives Podcast: Depression and Mental Health Myths
FEATURES
- “Crawling Over, Under, or Around Section 132”: The Debate Over Joseph Smith and Polygamy by Daniel C. Peterson
- A Mother’s Memories: Those Things Happen by Maurine Proctor
- The Quiet Voice of Heaven: A Legacy of Listening to the Spirit by Tanya Neider
- The Man Who Entered Alone: How Israel’s High Priest Pointed to Christ by Patrick D. Degn
- Gathering Israel: Special Moments Need to be Shared by Mark J. Stoddard
- An Open Letter to the Mayor of Fairview, Texas by C.D. Cunningham
- What Are the Most Cited, Recited, and Misunderstood Verses in Deuteronomy? by Jeffrey M. Bradshaw
- Your Hardest Family Question: How can I say “no” and still be Christ-like? by Geoff Steurer, MS, LMFT
- Hastening Now: A Weekly Church Report by Meridian Church Newswire
- The Fiction of Self-Knowledge by C.D. Cunningham
















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DavidFebruary 23, 2017
It seems as though many in the LDS culture had the attitude that if you were having problems in life, you weren't living the Gospel properly. The idea that there are times when medical or mental health professionals need to be brought in is a welcome one.
Michael ColemanFebruary 23, 2017
Church leaders everywhere, take note. This is a much bigger problem than you realize. Yes it's real and no I'm not exaggerating. I lived with your ignorance on it long enough. Time to wake up.
CathyFebruary 22, 2017
Thank you for running this. I have watched mental illness destroy the lives and happiness of so many friends. Instead of helping the suffering member, our culture in the Church seems determined to judge, to condemn and to lecture. Shaming the mentally ill is its root passion. I hope you will spend some time on some of the more serious mental illnesses. Church members need to be better educated.
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