guest interview
		
		Chonda Pierce: Laughter's Not the Only Good Medicine 
		
		By Cynthia Savage and Mia Evans 
                	The 700 Club
       	
		
		
		 
		CBN.com 
			  As an award winning Christian comedian, Chonda Pierce is  constantly surrounded by spotlight and laughter. Yet in 2004, Chonda was in an  unfamiliar place.  A cloud of depression  took the light and laughter away.
		Mia Evans interviews Chonda Pierce:
		Chonda: It just seemed like it came out of no where. I think  depression was an indicator of some things perhaps that I had not dealt with; or  a life change that I needed to make that I was not willing to make.  
		Chonda: And I can remember the first time my doctor said, ‘I  believe you are clinically depressed.’  And  I go, ‘Well I believe not!’  I mean this  is true.  I’m a comedian.  I don’t get depressed.  And that’s really going to throw a kink in my  job. 
		Mia: Walk me through the period when you were out of order,  physically and emotionally.
		Chonda: You have a conscience effort to hold your head up  where it’s not just something you think of to do. But you’re conscientiously  going, ‘I have got to snap out of this.’ Or, ‘I have been sitting in this chair  for three hours. I’ve got to get moving.’ And then the worse stages of  depression - I call it despair, for me. I was thoroughly convinced that I didn’t  need to be in this world. And you have these suicidal frightening thoughts that  you never dreamed, especially as a born again Christian, that you would have.
   
	    Chonda’s family noticed her suicidal tendencies and checked  her into a clinic.  
		Chonda: You had to go to group three or four times a day, which  was life changing for me. You had to reveal yourself in gut wrenching honest  tones, and words. And you had to tell exactly how you felt, not the church  version, not the ‘well I’m blessed’ and you leave to go to your car and cry. You  had to tell absolutely the honest truth. And you were in an atmosphere where you  could find medicines that were not working against you but working to bring you  toward healing.
		Mia: What was going on inside?
		Chonda: It became a humbling thing, to tell you the  truth.  It’s one thing to say you rely on  God but yet you’re taking medicine. And I used to think, well that looks like  I’m not relying on God. But you see the opposite can be true. If you are not  humble enough to take your medicine and allow God to work in that way then what  you’ve done is dictate to God how he’s supposed to help you.
		Chonda: I had to write on that medicine bottle, ‘God is  working in ways you may not see, so take your medicine.’
		Chonda took off work for about two months.   Her new plan of action helped her regain  love for life.
		Mia: After you came back to work, was it hard to go back on  stage?
		Chonda: I had to let my body tell my mind that it was lying  to me. In other words, if I went through the step-by-step motion that it takes  to either get on an airplane or get on a bus - then somebody would hand me a  microphone. They’d say, ‘Here put some make-up on. It’s time. I’d do my 20  minutes and the crowd would laugh and I could hear them laugh and I’d go, ‘Well  this is crazy.’ I’d step off the platform and begin to cry. And so was I two  faced? No, I don’t think so. The great thing that it did was it certainly let  me know who’s God.  
		Chonda: This is my job. I hope it glorifies God. I’ll do my  best too, but if I fall flat on my face He’s not going to care. He’s just going  to be glad that I get up and try again.  
		Mia: That’s so freeing.
		Chonda: Makes you relax.
		Mia: It’s making me relax more.
		Chonda: Well good. Take your shoes off!
		Mia: I am.
		Chonda & Mia share a laugh.
		Chonda is back doing what she does best. This time she’s  armed with a healthy work schedule and a new perspective on life. Closer to  home, Chonda works at Branches   Recovery Center.  She helped found this center to share the light of Christ during difficult  times.
		Chonda: Worship is such a vital part of the healing  experience. We want to show you what it’s like to worship beyond yourself and  just worship the King of Kings.  
		Mia: How do you feel today after coming through everything  you’ve been through?
		Chonda: You know today is a good day and I say that very,  very honestly. You have to take it one day at a time. And that sounds so trite  but it’s so true. This has been the first time in my life that I can serve God  and love Him and adore Him irregardless of what is going on with me. That it  truly is now all about Him. 
		
		
		
CBN IS HERE FOR YOU!
	Are you seeking answers in life? Are you hurting? 
	Are you facing a difficult situation? 
 A caring friend will be there to pray with you in your time of need.