Faith, Mental Health & Real Transformation: A Conversation with Counselor Patrick Eilers
Episode 8 of Unmasked with Wesley Farnsworth
Mental health is one of the most universal struggles of our time — yet it’s also one of the least openly discussed, especially in Christian spaces. Shame, fear, and misunderstanding keep many people suffering in silence when what they need most is a safe place to be honest and get help.
That’s why Episode 8 of Unmasked is so important.
I sat down with licensed professional counselor Patrick Eilers, MA, LPC, to talk about the intersection of faith, mental health, addiction, healing, and real-life transformation.
Patrick has been counseling individuals, couples, and groups since 2016. His specialties include anxiety, depression, and sexual addiction recovery — but what makes his voice uniquely powerful is the way he integrates clinical psychology, Christian worldview, and practical tools that people can actually use.
This conversation is rich, honest, and deeply needed.
Why Mental Health Still Carries a Stigma — Even in the Church
One of the first things I asked Patrick was simple:
“Why is mental health still so hard for people to talk about?”
His answer was clear and painfully accurate.
Many people — especially believers — still see mental health struggles as a “temperature gauge” for how well they’re doing spiritually. If they’re depressed, anxious, battling addiction, or overwhelmed, they assume it reflects a lack of faith.
Patrick explained that this mindset keeps many people silent. They fear judgment, they fear appearing weak, and they fear failing in their walk with Christ.
But the truth?
Mental health struggles don’t disqualify anyone — and they certainly don’t mean God is disappointed.
Instead, they are often invitations into deeper healing and intimacy with Him.
Getting Help: What Counseling Really Looks Like
Patrick also addressed the fear many people feel when considering counseling.
He was honest: not every counselor fits every person. But the goal isn’t perfection; it’s connection.
He encouraged listeners to:
Look for a counselor who aligns with their values
Give the process time (10–15 sessions is a realistic starting point)
Be open about what they need
Communicate what is and isn’t helpful
Understand that therapy isn’t magic — it’s collaboration
“Counseling is an opportunity,” Patrick said. “When the door closes, you get a safe space to explore what’s happening inside. But healing also requires applying those insights the other 23 hours of the day.”
It’s honest, practical advice — the kind many people need to hear.
Tools for Anxiety and Depression
Patrick shared several practical strategies listeners can use immediately, including grounding exercises, present-focused thinking, and “slowing down” the mental loop that fuels anxiety.
For depression, he emphasized:
Purpose
Routine
Community
Healthy boundaries
Avoiding isolation
Rebuilding self-care
And from a faith perspective, he reminded us that Scripture calls us to set our minds on truth — not on fear or despair.
“We’re not built to live in yesterday or tomorrow,” he said. “God meets us in the present.”
Addiction, Boundaries, and Breaking the Cycle
When we shifted to addiction, Patrick shared one of the most helpful analogies I’ve heard — the “point of no return” windmill from Back to the Future 3.
Every person, he explained, has emotional or situational triggers that signal danger. When we don’t recognize those “windmills,” we pass the point of return and fall into relapse.
Identifying windmills is a major key to recovery.
We also discussed the role of phones in addictive behavior — especially pornography and doom-scrolling. Patrick stressed the need to:
Create physical boundaries
Keep phones out of intimate spaces (like the bathroom or bedroom)
Rediscover offline habits
Break cycles of isolation
Healthy boundaries aren’t punishment — they’re protection.
Forgiving Yourself and Others
One of the most powerful parts of the conversation centered on forgiveness.
Many people overcome destructive behaviors, but they continue to live under the weight of shame. Patrick emphasized that forgiveness is not a single moment — it’s a process.
And you can’t hear this enough:
Knowing God has forgiven you is not the same as believing it.
Taking on your identity as a child of God is what bridges that gap.
He also shared practical exercises for forgiving others, including writing a letter you never send — a way to process the wound without reopening old conflict.
“Forgiveness doesn’t erase the past,” he said. “But it does allow you to move forward.”
“Every Breath Is a Second Chance”
Patrick ended the episode with a quote from the Switchfoot song Always:
“Every breath is a second chance.”
It’s a perfect summary of the hope woven throughout our conversation.
You’re never too far gone.
You’re never too broken.
You’re never beyond God’s reach.
As long as you’re breathing, there is hope.
Listen to Episode 8
🎧 Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/3eHboKDDsxejrxdbH9cRfS
🍎 Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/unmasked-with-wesley-farnsworth/id1851549420
📺 YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/@Unmasked-WF-Podcast
📌 Facebook (Podcast):
https://www.facebook.com/UnmaskedWFPodcast
If this conversation encouraged you, please share it with someone who needs to know they’re not alone.

