Showing posts with label Dr. Michelle Bengtson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr. Michelle Bengtson. Show all posts

Monday

Dr. Michelle Bengtson: An Interview with the Author of The Hem of His Garment

 

Please welcome the award-winning author, speaker, and board-certified clinical neuropsychologist with more than 25 years in the diagnosis and treatment of medical and mental disorders, Dr. Michelle Bengtson. 

Though we have yet to meet face to face for that long-awaited chat over a cup of coffee, Michelle and I have gotten to know one another through our author connections over the years. I am deeply honored to count her as a cherished friend and prayer partner.  I know her as a woman of profound insight, deeply rooted wisdom, and unwavering faith. It is a genuine privilege to feature her on the blog today.

The Interview

Dr. B, you haven’t always been a published author. Before you began publishing books to encourage others on their painful journeys, what did you do?

I always knew I wanted to be a writer. I began entering writing contests in my pre-teen years. I was encouraged to write because I enjoyed word-smithing but to also pursue a career in which I could make a living. So I became a board-certified clinical neuropsychologist, first in the hospital setting and then in private practice, where I evaluated, diagnosed, and treated patients with any kind of suspected brain inefficiency including but not limited to ADHD, learning disabilities, developmental delays, stroke, traumatic brain injury, and dementia. 


You minister to people daily through your website, books, social media posts, and podcast. Do you have a mission statement? 


I’m grateful for each day God has given me, and it’s my desire to encourage others with the encouragement He has given me. My mission statement is the following: I seek to restore hope, renew faith, and encourage others to live in their God-given identity by teaching them how to renew their mind one transformed thought at a time.


Your first traditionally published book was about overcoming depression. Why did you decide to write about depression? 


I didn’t choose to write a book about depression…the topic and the publishing industry basically chose me. I had been planning to write a book to help guide parents whose children were diagnosed as being on the autism spectrum. But I was speaking at an event where literary agents and publishing house acquisition editors were in attendance, and at the time I was sharing how depression would be our greatest epidemic worldwide. After I spoke, agents and editors kept approaching me telling me that when I finished writing my book on depression, to send it to them because they wanted to see it.  I went home, began writing the proposal, and within two weeks, I became deathly ill. The further my health declined, the more depression got a foothold to the point that I cried out to God and told him that if that was going to be my life, I wasn’t sure I wanted to continue living. But our God is such a good, redemptive God, and because I endured a time of severe clinical depression, Hope Prevails: Insights from a Doctor’s Personal Journey Through Depression became a much more empathic, compassionate book concerned about those who also walked through the valley of depression.


How did you decide what to write next, after Hope Prevails?


Again, I didn’t really decide. My readers decided for me. After reading Hope Prevails, many readers contacted me and wondered when I was going to go even deeper into God’s Word and write a Bible Study. I didn’t consider myself a Bible teacher, but with God’s help, I went on to write and publish the Hope Prevails Bible Study. Then readers began asking when I was going to write a book on anxiety. So my next project became Breaking Anxiety’s Grip: How to Reclaim the Peace God Promises. When I was so ill and on medically prescribed bed rest, and wrestling with depression’s darkness, I began a daily practice of writing an encouragement that always began with, “Today is going to be a good day because …” And I followed that statement with one of God’s promises. I began what has become a daily ministry over the last six years of writing a “Good Day” post on social media, and readers resonated with the message, so the publisher asked me to write all new content for the book Today is Going to be a Good Day: 90 Promises from God to Start Your Day Off Right” to help us choose a mindset based on God’s Word.


Your books have all seemed to have been written after you came out of a struggle, sharing what you learned on that journey. How is that different from your most recent release? 


That’s very true. Hope Prevails, the Hope Prevails Bible Study, and Today is Going to be a Good Day were written after I came through the valley of depression. Breaking Anxiety’s Grip was written after I came out of anxiety. My husband and I are no strangers to pain: we’ve endured multiple cancer diagnoses between the two of us, have lost many friends and family to cancer, have gone through a miscarriage and job loss, have felt the sting of relationship issues, and I struggle through severe daily chronic pain. My publisher asked me to write my newest book, The Hem of His Garment: Reaching Out to God When Pain Overwhelms.  This book is different from any of my previous books because this book was written in the crucible of pain rather than through the rearview mirror of pain. 


Who did you write The Hem of His Garment for? And what do you hope readers take away from reading it?


The Hem of His Garment was written for those enduring physical, emotional, relational, financial, and spiritual pain, grief, or loss, and need a hand to hold, hope to cling to, and a voice in the darkness to encourage them to continue putting one foot in front of the other. The Hem of His Garment focuses on the stories of the woman with the issue of blood, and to a lesser extent, Job because they both endured every one of the different types of pain mentioned above. The world is inundated with people walking their own painful journey. The question we try to answer for the reader is, “How do we hold onto our faith, like the woman with the issue of blood or like Job, when we know God can heal, but he hasn’t yet?” and “What lessons or gifts does God offer us amid our painful circumstances?” 


Why did you focus on the woman with the issue of blood in The Hem of His Garment? 


Having gone through physical, emotional, relational, financial, and spiritual pain, I could relate to this woman because she also experienced each of those kinds of pain. In addition to her physical pain, she likely also endured emotional pain from the years of rejection and ridicule such a disorder promoted in those times. She likely experienced relational pain resulting from others choosing to not associate with an unclean woman, likely leaving her single or divorced. We know she suffered financial pain because Scripture tells us she spent all her money on doctors but continued to get worse. She may have experienced spiritual pain as a byproduct of knowing God could heal but for whatever reason hadn’t. And she probably experienced grief not just from lost relationships and lost opportunity to provide for herself financially, but also from loss of hopes and dreams for her future.


Speaking of the woman with the issue of blood, what do you think is one of the key takeaways from her story? 


When Jesus went to people, we saw them get the healing desired (the blind man could see again, the lame man could walk again, Lazarus could live again). But when the woman with the issue of blood went to Jesus, she received much more than she probably imagined. This woman held on to her faith over twelve years of suffering, knowing that if she could just touch the hem of his garment, she would be healed. In that moment Jesus said to her, “Daughter, your faith has healed you.” (Luke 8:47-48 NIV) Jesus not only healed her physically, but he saw her, he validated her and her worth, he offered her a future, and he gave her a testimony, none of which would she have experienced in the absence of pain and suffering. Perhaps in our longing for healing of our pain, God is beckoning us to exercise our faith, to come to him and touch the hem of his garment. Perhaps he has something more waiting for us.


What do you hope others take from reading The Hem of His Garment?

 

It’s my prayer that readers realize they aren’t alone in their pain and suffering, they have a hand to hold, and a fellow sojourner to walk with them through their pain. I want them to learn practical steps they can take to continue reaching out for the hem of Jesus’s garment. Their pain may not change but their perspective of it may.


Are you working on another project? 


In terms of The Hem of His Garment, I’m working on book club/study materials to make it easy for groups of people to go through the book together while encouraging each other in their pain. I’m also working on the next book! I’ve turned in the manuscript and the first round of edits for what many will consider a sequel to The Hem of His Garment. While this next book can definitely stand alone, it will also serve as the logical next step after The Hem of His Garment. Many have believed the lie that our past pain disqualifies us from God’s service or living the abundant life Jesus came to give. In this next book, we’ll actually take a deeper look at how God uses our past pain for good!


If you are struggling with physical, emotional, relational, financial, or spiritual
pain, grief, or loss, and don’t know what to do, let me encourage you to pick up a copy of my book The Hem of His Garment: Reaching Out to God When Pain Overwhelms for additional insight on how to maintain your faith as you walk through this painful time. 



Michelle, Where can my readers find your books and find out more about you?

I blog regularly on my Website: https://www.DrMichelleBengtson.com and you can find me on these social media channels: 

Facebook

Twitter

LinkedIn

Instagram 

Pinterest

YouTube


You can listen to Your Hope-Filled Perspective on Apple Podcast as well as on her website here:  https://bit.ly/3ef2fvs


Make sure you go check out all of Dr. B's books here: Amazon



If you have questions, or comments for Dr. Michelle, please leave your comments below. I know she would love to hear from you. 


Dr. Michelle Bengtson is a hope concierge! Whether as a board-certified clinical neuropsychologist, host of the award-winning podcast Your Hope-Filled Perspective, or the author of several award-winning books including Hope Prevails and Breaking Anxiety’s Grip, her passion is to share hope and encouragement with othersHer newest release is The Hem of His Garment: Reaching Out to God When Pain Overwhelms. She loves all things teal, spending time with friends and family, taking long walks, or sitting by quiet shores, and it’s a bonus when any of those are accompanied by sea salt caramel chocolate! You can find her and her hope-filled resources at DrMichelleB.com


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Friday

Michelle Bengtson: An Interview with the Author of Hope Prevails


Please welcome author, speaker, and board-certified clinical neuropsychologist with more than 25 years in the diagnosis and treatment of medical and mental disorders, Dr. Michelle Bengtson. 

While we have yet to meet face to face for that long-awaited chat over a cup of coffee, Michelle and I have gotten to know one another through our author connections over the years. I am honored to count her as a cherished friend and prayer partner.  I know her as a woman of great insight, wisdom, and strong faith. It is a privilege to introduce her to you, my readers. 

The Interview...


Why did you choose to write about the topic of depression?

Depression will be our greatest epidemic worldwide by the year 2020. Yet whether it is world hunger, cancer, or any other catastrophic event, difficulties and hardships never quite have the same impact on our hearts as they do when we go through them ourselves. The same was true for me when I went through depression.

As a neuropsychologist, I have been diagnosing and treating patients with depression for over 20 years. I had great empathy and compassion for their suffering when God called me to write a book about overcoming depression as a resource that would extend beyond the four walls of my private practice to those who couldn’t make it into my office for help. But then He revealed that there were too many books already written from a doctor’s perspective and that I needed to share my own story. At that point, my story amounted to growing up in a home with a mother who was depressed my entire childhood, as were her sister and her mother. At that point, I had also suffered my own bout with severe postpartum depression after the birth of our first son. Little did I know that after surrendering to God and telling Him that I would write this book for Him and willingly share my story, I would go through one of the most difficult times in my life and a most severe case of depression.

Going through the valley of depression, I tried all the treatment recommendations I had suggested to my patients for years, only to find out that while they helped, they weren’t enough. This led to the inevitable question, “Why?” and “What is the missing piece? What is the real answer?” What God then showed me in the journey through my own valley of depression was that as long as we treated physical or mental disease but didn’t address the spiritual component, we were really only putting a band-aid on the issue, and we could never really expect real healing to come.

Once I started applying God’s truth to my situation, freedom came, and I knew I had to share what I had learned, both from the perspective of the doctor who treats patients and also as a fellow sojourner.

What is one lesson that you hope readers will walk away with after reading Hope Prevails?

If you will allow me the liberty of sharing two lessons: 1) Our feelings cannot be trusted, but God can. 2) In our darkest days in the valley, because of Him, there is still always hope.

What has been one of the hardest things about holding onto hope in your own life?

Our feelings are the outward manifestation of the thoughts we believe, and when our thoughts do not line up with God’s truth because we have unknowingly believed a lie, then our feelings will lead us astray and away from the hope that God offers. That is why we must take every,, every thought captive and make sure that it lines up with God’s truth. When we do that, hope does prevail!

What is your favorite Bible verse about hope and why?

Without a doubt, my favorite verse about hope is Jeremiah 29:11, “For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord. Plans to prosper you, and not to harm you, plans for a future and a hope!” I have held on to this verse for nearly three decades through moves, through cancer, through miscarriages, through the MOST uncertain of times. It has lent me such hope and comfort because even when I cannot see a way, even when I do not know how things will get better, I can put my trust in my unfailing God who does know the way, who does see the finish line. HE knows the plans He has for me, and He promises that those plans are good. It gives me such peace despite the chaos of my circumstances!

What is one of your favorite lines from Hope Prevails?

Honestly, there is no way I can choose just one. It would be hard to choose just one. It would be hard to choose even one per page. As I re-read the book as a reader and not the author, I get inspired as I hear the words God speaks to my heart to encourage me, and it’s my prayer that He does the same thing for everyone who reads it.

“I’m here to tell you the secret is out: even Christians get depressed. Unfortunately, Christians are often the ones who most feel they must hide their pain and pretend that nothing is wrong.”

“If you want freedom from depression, you have to decide you are ready to dispel some myths and lies and replace them with truth—God’s truth.”

“The enemy isn’t only concerned with strong-arming Christians. He seeks to separate believers and nonbelievers alike from God. Both Christians and on-Christians often unknowingly open the door to the devil through the things they do, say, or believe, allowing the “roaring lion” to enter and wreak havoc in their lives. This is where the spiritual roots to depression start, but it’s not where they end.”

“We are destroyed when the enemy knows more about the roots of depression than we do. We cannot fight effectively until we understand what we are fighting and have the weapon to engage in battle.”

“Jesus is the only one who has the authority to speak about our worth.”

“While we may feel broken and wounded in our despair, God promises to heal those places in us.”

If you were sitting across from a woman who is struggling physically, mentally, and spiritually right now, what would you say to her?

I’ve been there. The reason for our struggle may not be the same, but I’ve been in the place where I wasn’t sure I wanted to go on. I’ve been in the place where I wasn’t sure I could. I’ve been in a place where all I could whisper in my prayers was a feeble, “Help.” But what I learned through that time was that God always meets us there in our desperation.  And truly, it is in our weakest times that we get to see Him do His greatest work. And there is NO shame in admitting we need help. The Bible even encourages us to ask for help when it says, “Call to Me and I will answer you, and I will tell you great and mighty things, which you do not know” (Jeremiah 33:3). And to “Give all your worries and cares to God, for he cares about you” (1 Peter 5:7).


What has been one of the most challenging aspects of writing this book?

Hope Prevails really draws attention to the spiritual aspect of depression and how the enemy of our soul seeks to steal our joy, kill our peace, and destroy our identity, in the book I share how we combat the enemy’s attacks to take back the joy that Christ died so that we could have. I can promise you that the enemy has NOT been pleased about the writing of this book, so the most challenging aspect of writing this book has been the near-constant attack from the enemy that my family and I have endured in seeing this project to publication.

The very day that “Hope Prevails” released, my husband was diagnosed with cancer. I don’t think that was a coincidence. It was like the enemy was saying, “Do you REALLY think hope still prevails?” I’ve said many times that when you write a book, your conviction to your message will be tested. But as long as I have breath, I will declare that Hope Prevails!

What has been one of the most rewarding aspects of writing Hope Prevails?

Without a doubt, I can say that the most rewarding part of writing this book has been hearing from readers that it has helped them experience freedom from the chains of depression that have kept them locked up in despair for so many years. It’s time that we say “No more!” to the rule and reign of the enemy’s influence in our lives and stop it in our generation so that our children and our children’s children will not have to suffer!

Is it true that that is why you wrote the new Hope Prevails Bible Study?

That’s exactly right! Many readers wrote to me and asked, “When are you going to write a Bible study to go with “Hope Prevails?” At first, I responded by saying, “I don’t write Bible studies.” But then I really felt the Lord nudging me, as if He was saying, “You don’t write Bible studies but I do, and I’ll help you.” So in response to reader requests, I’ve written and published the new companion “Hope Prevails Bible Study.” I wrote it very intentionally so that if you haven’t already read “Hope Prevails,” it doesn’t matter, you can do the Bible study anyway, but if you have read the original book, it will make the Bible study just that much richer. I also wrote the Bible study so that someone could go through it on their own, or it makes a perfect study to be done in a small group like in a church Bible study or through a counseling group.

Michelle, where can we find your books and find out more about you?


at Barnes and Noble or Christian BookDistributors or 
most major book retailers. 

The Hope Prevails Bible Study is also available on Amazon or Redemption-Press or many major book retailers. 










I blog regularly on my website, www.DrMichelleBengtson.com and you can find me on all major social media channels: 

For a Free eBook on How to Help a Depressed Loved One, click here: How To Help a Depressed Loved One eBook

For more helpful information about what you need to know when you have a depressed loved one, read here: 10 Things to Know if You Have a Depressed Loved One

For more about what not to say to a depressed loved one, read here: What Not to Say When a Loved One is Depressed while here are suggestions about supportive things you can say to a depressed loved one: What to Say When a Loved One is Depressed

Michelle, thank you for these wonderful resources! I know my readers will benefit greatly from your wisdom and expertise. 


Dr. Michelle Bengtson (PhD, Nova Southeastern University) is an international speaker, and the author of best-selling “Hope Prevails: Insights From a Doctor’s Personal Journey Through Depression” and the newly released companion “Hope Prevails Bible Study.”  She has been a neuropsychologist for more than twenty years and is in private practice in Southlake, Texas where she evaluates, diagnoses, and treats children and adults with a variety of medical and mental health disorders. She knows pain and despair firsthand and combines her professional expertise and personal experience with her faith to address issues surrounding medical and mental disorders, both for those who suffer and for those who care for them. She offers sound practical tools, affirms worth, and encourages faith. Dr. Bengtson offers hope as a key to unlock joy and relief—even in the middle of the storm. She and her husband of 30 years have two teenage sons, and reside in the Dallas/Ft. Worth area. She blogs regularly on her own site: http://www.DrMichelleBengtson.com

If you have questions, or comments for Dr. Michelle, please leave your comments below. I know she would love to hear from you. 





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