Depression and Mormon Women
Essay title: Depression and Mormon Women
Depression in Mormon Women
âMolly Mormonâ is the perfect woman. She never raises her voice. Her house is always sparkling clean and she excels in every church calling. Sheâs understanding and supportive of her husband and children. In essence, âMolly Mormonâ is the ideal wife, mother, helpmate, PTA leader, quilter, baker, and casserole maker; she is consistently well-groomed, cheerful and bright (Egan 1).
For many Latter Day Saint (LDS) women, the overwhelming pressure to be âMolly Mormonâ is unbearable. LDS women are likely to develop depression due to the demanding and stressful role of being a Mormon mother in the twenty-first century. The standard answer for LDS womenâs high depression rate is that they are overworked, heading large families, and struggling to meet expectations of perfection that are too high, said Dr. John H. Dickey, Ph.D. and professor of psychology at Idaho State University during an interview.
The subject of LDS women suffering from depression is a thorny matter; the LDS community bristles at its mention while many women feel the grip of the icy fingers of depression grow increasingly tighter. âIn any dominant culture, particularly a religious one,â Dickey speculates, âthereâs a lot of striving for an ideal thatâs often unobtainable, whether itâs a spiritual one or has to do with lifestyle. The body needs an escape valve.â In most cases, the women suffering from depression donât have an escape valve, let alone any idea of where to find
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one, instead they often self-destruct with prescription drugs.
Anna Figureoa, 59, has kept her feelings suppressed for most of her life. Figureoaâs bloodshot eyes extended out of their socket as she struggled to recall how her depression began. She bit her fingernails, then stuffed them ashamedly between her ratty couch cushions before revealing she spent her childhood and teenage years in foster homes. Five different men, including three who were LDS, molested Figureoa repeatedly. She blamed those experiences on herself, thus starting the swift spiral downward into despair.
After attempting suicide for the eleventh time last November, she was sent to Sacramento, Calif. to a depression specialist. Everyday for two weeks, Figureoa underwent Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), in which electric currents are briefly applied to the brain. This procedure is used to help ease only the most severe cases of depression. It had no effect on Figureoa except to rob her of memory and personality.
Figureoaâs marriage to a Vietnam War veteran who suffered from Post Traumatic Stress