Thursday, October 17, 2019

Overcome Depression Blog Tour


About the Book


Book: Overcome Depression
Author: Margaret Lalich
Genre: Non-fiction/self-help/Christian growth
Release Date: March 22, 2019

BREAKTHROUGH SCIENCE SHINES NEW LIGHT ON HOLY SCRIPTURES. “…pulls back the curtain to clearly & simply reveal how our mind works… A fun and eye-opening book” Karl Benzio, M.D., Medical Director: Honey Lake Clinic & Lighthouse Network.

This faith-based, reader friendly guide offers more than 100 self-help strategies and recovery skills for coping with depression. Brain Science and evidence based therapeutic practices offer hands-on, practical tools for immediate use.

“Amazing book! I have read so many books on depression and this is the only one that has truly helped me.”—Wendy Freeman, California

“…an amazing book on overcoming depression… deep, and yet understandable… a very practical and encouraging book about a very dark subject.”—Bill Walden, Pastor Cornerstone Ministries, Ca.

Click here to purchase your copy!

My Review

This book contains a wealth of information. As the author notes, the book is a resource for faith-based self help. It provides suggestions for coping skills. It does not replace professional help nor is it a cure. What it does is shed light on the path to recovery through information and practical suggestions for action.

Lalich has included a great deal about brain science, such as some of the latest discoveries. She provides a number of strategies at the end of each chapter that have been proven to be useful in combating depression. Scriptures for meditation are also included at the end of each chapter. Journaling is one of the tools she advises I have found to be useful. Evidence based therapies are also defined and evaluated. She includes information and suggestions on exercise, nutrition, and sleep too.

This is a good collection of material informing us what we can do to battle depression. My favorite part of the information is about thoughts and how we can change them. She includes practical exercises to change negative thought patterns. Her suggestions have been proven by experience so we know they will be useful.

This is a book that is meant to not just be read. It is a book full of suggestions requiring action to be effective. Overcoming depression will require effort but Lalich has provided many resources to get a reader moving in the right direction.

My rating: 5/5 stars.

About the Author


Margaret Lalich is a believer, a lover (family, friends and others), a relentless optimist, and a Certified Laughter Leader. Before becoming a college freshman (in her 30’s), she chose a teen marriage over graduation.  Later adventures, and mid-life corrections, led to completion of her M.S. and M.A. degrees and a 31-year career as a clinician and teacher, within mental health. Laughter and tears are both found in experience. Tears can wash away emotional rubble, and laughter can be a ‘bungee-cord’ safety-life-line. If we fall into a pit of despair, laughter helps us rebound and boosts our climb. Margaret loves to share it. Margaret is a mom, Grandma, and Great-Grandma who writes stories and non-fiction – highlighting experience, science, strategies, and hope. She wants to connect with readers — helping them find (and use) their gifts, and to live their own definition of ‘success’ – to the Glory of God.

More from Margaret


I have been asked WHY I wanted to write this book.  It’s because I ache for believers who suffer the pain of depression – and then add guilt, embarrassment, loss of hope, or helplessness to it. I want them to know they are heroes – not zeroes (no matter how they’re feeling). I want to share strategies, encouragement and the sheer excitement of scientific discovery that proves we have more power than we may have imagined, to help us climb out of the ‘pit’. Yes, I am a bit of a cheerleader, and at times a clown – but I’m also a researcher and a clinician who has shared the wonder of such discoveries with more than a thousand patients. I have also been asked how long it took to finish this book. Not too long … just 31 years to learn and live it – and 3 years to research and write it.  Here’s an excerpt from Chapter 1. First Things First:  Christians and Depression “ For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind.”  2 Timothy 1:7 Church is not a museum for perfect saints — it’s a first aid station for sinners who keep trying. I can’t recall the name of the pastor, who delivered that line, but his message resonated with me then and it still does today. I want to contribute to First-Aid supplies God says He is for us, and we are loved. We can trust, and we must believe His Word. But, it can be hard to reconcile faith with depression, anxiety or other mental health issues. If you have struggled with this – you’re not alone. Right from the start, you need to know you are loved. We’re in this together.   Doubts and fears can seed questions such as: “What’s happening?” “Why?” “Now what?” If you ask these questions, be assured God hears the cry of your heart. By His grace, we will explore answers together. Yes, there are answers. Yes, there is hope and help that you can use – right where you are, starting now. …Blame is a distraction. We cast blame on ourselves with hurtful thinking when we think or say things like: “If I had enough faith this wouldn’t happen.” Or, “ I should be stronger …  blah, blah, blah.”  Don’t surrender to this way of thinking.   WHAT’S IT ALL ABOUT? There has been a revolution in the study of the brain (neuroscience). We’ve started to understand brain-works, and can now answer the first of our opening questions: “What’s happening?” With today’s technology and new imaging systems we can see the brain in action as thoughts, and new learning, form physical links, creating neural patterns and pathways within the brain. The glory of God is revealed as we discover more of His divine design, and watch new scientific findings align with the old wisdom of God’s word for mankind.  Proverbs 23:7 says: “For as he thinks in his heart, so he is.” We have learned that what we think helps to form who, and what we are. We can use this knowledge to build recovery skills.

Blog Stops




Donny Abbott, October 19
Artistic Nobody, October 20 (Author Interview)
EmpowerMoms, October 22
Texas Book-aholic, October 24
janicesbookreviews, October 25
A Reader's Brain, October 26
Simple Harvest Reads, October 27 (Author Interview)
Mary Hake, October 27
Kelly Harrel, October 30

I received a complimentary digital copy of this book through Celebrate Lit. My comments are an independent and honest review. The rest of the copy of this post was provided by Celebrate Lit.

7 comments:

Melissa W said...

Sounds like a very practical book. Thanks for sharing!

Debbie P said...

This sounds like an amazing read. And I can't wait to read this.

Dianna said...

My sister reads self-help books often. I will have to tell her about this one.

Emma said...

This sounds really good! We had an autistic, depressed man move into our home for several months this year, and felt quite helpless to know what to do for him. Maybe this would have been a help.

Bea LaRocca said...

Thank you for sharing your wonderful review and the book and author details. This sounds like a book that I need to read.

missy2ell said...

Good review, on what sounds like a good book that could help alot of people, myself included.

Caryl Kane said...

Thank you for sharing this timely resource!