Best-selling  author, latest, Loved Back to Life (2015)
					 Featured speaker with Women of Faith, she has ministered  to more than 5 million women
					 Grammy-nominated vocalist
					 Former 700 Club co-host and Heart to Heart host
					 Currently  completing her Masters of Theology
					 Married to Barry
					 Son, Christian 
									 			
			 
			
			
			
			
					 
		
		
		Guest Bio
		
		Sheila Walsh Escapes the Darkness of Depression
		
		
		 
		CBN.com 
			THE PAST
		 Sheila grew up in Scotland. When she was five years old,  her father suffered a brain thrombosis that changed his ability to live a  normal life and drastically changed his personality. He went from being a warm,  fun, kind dad to an angry, unpredictable, violent stranger. He would spit in  Sheila’s face or pull a chunk of her hair out. He died a few months later while  a patient in a psychiatric hospital. Although Sheila missed her father, her  mom’s faith and sense of humor helped to fill her childhood home with love.  Sheila gave her heart to Jesus when she was eleven years old. Sheila threw  herself into serving God – it was the one place she could hide. At nineteen,  Sheila left Scotland to study at London Bible College. On the weekends, Sheila  would sing in a Christian band with some of her friends in college gymnasiums.  After she graduated from college, Sheila joined Youth for Christ as a music  evangelist singing and speaking in schools, universities and churches. For the  next ten years she traveled all over the world and released several record  albums. She also served for three years as the host for a show called the Rock Gospel Show on Britain’s number one  network the BBC. Sheila came to America to settle in Los Angeles in 1986 since  most of her touring was in the United States. Then in 1988, Sheila was asked to  audition for the position of co-host on The  700 Club. She was hired the same day and a month later moved to Virginia  Beach. Sheila loved her job. “On the surface I had it made, and everything  looked fine – but I was not fine. I had not been fine for a long time.”
        DOWNWARD SPIRAL
          
        As  co-host on The 700 Club, Sheila was  working most days from early in the morning until six in the evening. Then she  would fly out on the weekends to do concerts. The frantic pace of her life  began to take its toll. She began to feel numb and distanced from people. Her  desperate prayer became, “Lord, please hold me. I’m falling into a dark well.”  Although Sheila was still functioning on the job, her distress was beginning to  show. During an interview on The 700 Club,  Sheila remembers staring at a guest who was talking and wondering who she was.  She couldn’t remember what she had asked the guest or what she should say next.  Another time, on the show Sheila began to cry as she was interviewing a guest.  Later that summer, Sheila received a letter from a viewer saying, “I don’t know  what it is that is causing you so much pain, my dear, but I can see it in your  eyes. Please get some help, I am praying for you.” Sheila says to this day that  is one of the most precious gifts she received. Somebody noticed her pain. As  her condition continued to decline, Sheila began to feel overwhelmed by fear,  she couldn’t eat or sleep and it became clear that she could not continue as  she was. “For a Christian who wrestled with a disease of the mind, it was  assumed that something in your behavior or a perverse lack of faith had brought  it on,” shares Sheila.
        
        Sheila  finally did reach out for help. Pat knew a little bit about Sheila’s situation  and had expressed a desire to help. Sheila went to see Pat. As she talked about  her situation, Pat listened, prayed for her and told her his office was always  open to her. “At the weakest point in my life, Pat was incredibly supportive of  me. He never judged or questioned me. He was kind and fatherly and supported my  decision to get help and was always in my corner,” shares Sheila. Pat suggested  a doctor that Sheila already knew and trusted. The doctor recommended she be  hospitalized and suggested a particular Christian hospital program in  Washington, DC. 
        After  entering the hospital, Sheila went through therapy and evaluation. Along the  way, she discovered things about herself that were harmful. For example, when  she was unable or unwilling to deal with what was true about her life, she  buried it. “You can try for years to deny the things that are tearing at your  soul, but they will not go away. They thrive in the shadowlands, and if you  don’t deal with them, they will one day deal with you.” Her doctor told her  although he saw no signs of bipolar disorder he determined that she was severely  clinically depressed. She had all the classic signs: insomnia, loss of memory,  loss of appetite, overwhelming feelings of hopelessness, loss of emotional  control, and an unbearable sadness. Sheila’s doctor helped her understand that  mental illness is a reality, a treatable reality, and there is no shame there. Through  prayer, reading the Word, therapy, and medication Sheila began to manage her  depression. At the end of thirty days, Sheila left the hospital and returned to  CBN to say goodbye.
        THE NEXT CHAPTER 
          
        After  leaving the hospital, Sheila felt a desire to go back to the very basics of her  faith and build a better foundation. She applied to the Fuller Theological  Seminary in California and was accepted. She also returned to the The 700 Club to say farewell to the  viewers. After her final appearance on the show, Sheila received more than five  thousand letters from viewers telling her about their stories. “I am glad that  my last appearance on The 700 Club gave some people the courage to tell their own stories,” shares Sheila. 
          A  few years later, she met and married her husband, Barry, and they became  pregnant. Her son Christian was born in 1997. Six weeks later, Sheila joined America’s  largest women’s conference, Women of Faith. As a featured speaker, Sheila spoke  at events with over 10,000 people in attendance.  After her first event, Sheila was overwhelmed  at how other women could relate to what she was talking about. In fact, they  were waiting to talk with her after the event. They shared familiar words, “I,  too, struggle with depression.” “I thought I was the only one.” Sheila felt as  though she had found a home with Women of Faith, now in its 20th  year. “I felt like this ministry pulled back the dark curtain in women’s lives  and allowed them to tell the truth,” reveals Sheila. She went on to write  several books including: the award winning Gigi:  God’s Little Princess series and God  Loves Broken People. 
        
        Although  Sheila does not consider herself a counselor or psychologist, she encourages  those struggling with anxiety and depression to get help. The Centers for  Disease Control (CDC) says that one in five Americans is being treated for  depression and anxiety. One of the greatest challenges to those who suffer with  this disease is that many people do not believe it is a legitimate disease. “I  can assure you, it is,” shares Sheila. She says, “There is nothing to be  ashamed about in reaching out for help. It takes a lot more courage to step out  into the darkness than to stay in the prison in which you may currently be  living.” 
      
		
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