Tuesday, September 06, 2022

Mental Health

 


Mental health services cannot cope with the explosion of demand over the past two years: 1.6 million people are on waiting lists, while another 8 million need help but can’t even get on these lists. 

 We are living in a traumatising and uncertain world. The climate is breaking down, we’re trying to stay on top of rising living costs.

Will six sessions of CBT, designed to target “unhelpful” thinking styles, really be effective for someone who doesn’t know how they’re going to feed their family for another week? Antidepressants aren’t going to eradicate the relentless racial trauma a black man is surviving in a hostile workplace, and branding people who are enduring sexual violence with a psychiatric disorder does nothing to keep them safe. Unsurprisingly, mindfulness isn’t helping children who are navigating poverty, peer pressure and competitive exam-driven school conditions, where bullying and social media harm are rife.

If a plant were wilting we wouldn’t diagnose it with “wilting-plant-syndrome” – we would change its conditions. Yet when humans are suffering under unliveable conditions, we’re told something is wrong with us, and expected to keep pushing through. To keep working and producing, without acknowledging our hurt.

In efforts to destigmatise mental distress, “mental illness” is framed as an “illness like any other” – rooted in supposedly flawed brain chemistry. In reality, recent research concluded that depression is not caused by a chemical imbalance of the brain. Ironically, suggesting we have a broken brain for life increases stigma and disempowerment. What’s most devastating about this myth is that the problem and the solution are positioned in the person, distracting us from the environments that cause our distress.  Medicalised, individualised understanding of mental health puts plasters over big gaping wounds, without addressing the source of violence.

We cannot isolate “mental health problems” from our broader societal structures. Suffering emerges within people’s experiences and histories of oppression. Liberation psychology sees people not as patients, but potential social actors in the project of freedom, valuing their own lineages, creativity and experience.  It directly challenges the social, cultural and political causes of distress through collective social action.

Social action is the medicine that relieves people’s personal and collective distress. Instead of trying to change “mindsets” in therapy, we need to change race- and class-based hierarchies, the housing and economic system.

ADAPTED FROM

I’m a psychologist – and I believe we’ve been told devastating lies about mental health | Sanah Ahsan | The Guardian


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