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Re: Good Morning!

anyway have as good as quit job, knee is not far off not being able to walk on that leg @Former-Member  so have told people, its their problem now.

here's one for You.

 

 

"We are living, we’re told, through a “mental health crisis”. 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. Even children are showing up at A&E in despair, wanting to die.

But there is another way to see this crisis – one that doesn’t place it firmly in the realm of the medical system. Doesn’t it make sense that so many of us are suffering? Of course it does: 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, still weighted with grief, contagion and isolation, while revelations about the police murdering women and strip-searching children shatter our faith in those who are supposed to protect us.


As a clinical psychologist who has been working in NHS services for a decade, I’ve seen first hand how we are failing people by locating their problems within them as some kind of mental disorder or psychological issue, and thereby depoliticising their distress. 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 (in a world where two women a week are murdered in their own home) 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.

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Individual therapy is brilliant for lots of people, and antidepressants can help some people cope. But I worry that a purely medicalised, individualised understanding of mental health puts plasters over big gaping wounds, without addressing the source of violence. They encourage us to adapt to systems, thereby protecting the status quo. It is here that we fail marginalised people the most: Black people’s understandable expressions of hurt at living in a structurally racist society are too often medicalised, labelled dangerous and met with violence under the guise of “care”. Black people are more likely to be Tasered, sectioned, restrained and over-medicated than anyone else in our mental health services today.

The UK could learn a lot from liberation psychology. Founded in the 1980s by the Salvadorian activist and psychologist Ignacio Martín Baró, it argues that 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, rather than being forced into a white, eurocentric and individualistic idea of therapy. It directly challenges the social, cultural and political causes of distress through collective social action.

This framework makes complete sense when we hear that the pandemic in the UK has affected poor people’s mental health most. Does it mean wealthy, privileged white men don’t experience suffering? Of course they do. We’re still learning about the complicated ways these structural issues affect our everyday lives. For example, how the pressures of individualism and capitalism may lead to isolation and substance abuse, or how colonial violence towards immigrant families plays out within homes and on bodies.

Let me be clear, I’m not saying people in distress should be out there on the picket line. Pain can be debilitating. But those of us who are supporting people in distress, such as mental health workers, have a key role in social transformation. 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. Universal basic income has psychological benefits, and recent studies show how it improves the “crises of anxiety and depression”. As a clinical psychologist, some of my most powerful work has been not in the therapy room but in successfully advocating for secure housing for, or working in the community with, queer, black and brown facilitators in organisations such as Beyond Equality, to prevent gender-based violence. The network Psychologists for Social Change shows us a practical imagining of this work. We also need social change that is preventive, such as investing in young people and community-led services such as healing justice london and 4front. They work to shift trauma in marginalised communities through building social connectedness, social action and creativity, towards futures free of violence.

 

None of this is to dismiss the value of one-on-one therapy (that’s part of my job, after all). But therapy must be a place where oppression is examined, where the focus isn’t to simply reduce distress, but to see it as a survival response to an oppressive world. And ultimately, I’d like to see a world where we need fewer therapists. A culture that reclaims and embraces each other’s madness. Where we take the courageous (and sometimes skin-crawling) risk of turning to each other in our understandable, messy pain.

Meaningful structural transformation won’t happen overnight, though the pandemic taught us that big changes can happen pretty quickly. But change won’t happen without us: our distress might even be a sign of health – a telling indicator of where we can collectively resist the structures that are hurting so many of us.

To return to the plant analogy – we must look at our conditions. The water might be a universal basic income, the sun safe, affordable housing and easy access to nature and creativity. Food could be loving relationships, community or social support services. The most effective therapy would be transforming the oppressive aspects of society causing our pain. We all need to take whatever support is available to help us survive another day. Life is hard. But if we could transform the soil, access sunlight, nurture our interconnected roots and have room for our leaves to unfurl, wouldn’t life be a little more livable? "

 

Dr Sanah Ahsan is a clinical psychologist, poet, writer, presenter and educator

Former-Member
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Re: Good Morning!

@TAB, firstly, we're here to support you in whatever way we can with your family stuff ❤️ 

 

Secondly, I cannot tell you HOW MUCH I AGREE WITH THIS POST. Strange that it's an advertisement, but sometimes I feel when therapists/the medical system only focus on changing thinking styles, it actually gaslights us into believing we are the problem. But there are so many problems which influence our mental health. Like this person notes: climate change, soaring inequality of all kinds, forced into a capitalistic system - the list goes one! So by making us think the problem lies with us, we don't focus on changing the world. 

 

I feel like things like CBT have a place and lots of people find it useful, but in the face of these big issues in our world, what else do we need to do to support each other? I have no idea, but definitely something for all of us to think about!

Re: Good Morning!

um it was an article in the Guardian @Former-Member  not an ad.

yes, seems to make sense. treat people as people.

also fits in with old stats of rates of depression eg during war, not that I am suggesting War as therapy jk lol.

Guess people were focused, busy and are treated as a people.

and it also harks back to the Old chestnut of Maslows Hierarchy of Needs

Former-Member
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Re: Good Morning!

oh my mistake @TAB ! I think I saw the words "advertisements" there but maybe that just happened in the copy-paste. 

 

100% Maslows Hierarchy of needs. If we can't meet the basic needs, how the heck are we supposed to achieve enlightenment (as it were)

Re: Good Morning!

On now I see what you mean @Former-Member   ..yes I copied it and pasted as 'text only' ..so where it said advertisement, there was an actual advertisement 🙂

Former-Member
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Re: Good Morning!

Hey @TAB wanted to say I really appreciated this post!  I checked her out online and shes a young 20's something queer muslim clinical psychologist.  So she would be highly politicised - they usually are. She has been nominated for lots of awards.  I would LOVE to read her poems.  I'll keep her bookmarked but her website has lots of free writings if you want to check her out.  https://www.sanahahsan.com/in-the-press

 

Picture: 

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I studied community development in the 1990s and it was a methodology around which oppressive structures could be overthrown by radicalisation of minority groups.  It mainly consisted of major social movements but as of now governments are making it hard for protest.

 

But yes I do agree with you, isolating the problem within the individual and not assessing someones context is structural violence.  Most of us here have experienced this sitting in cold clinical environments, having pills shoved down our throats while people ignoring the wider themes and circumstances playing out in our lives. 

 

I think it calls for people in that person's life rallying around that person, advocating for them and bearing witness to the external strife bearing weight on their coping mechanisms and their sanity. But psychiatry does not do that and people dont do that.  Its all about using a band aid approach setting someone on their way and ignoring the societal issues which plague that person.  This is why standing by people we love is so important.  Australia is a materialistic culture unlike family oriented societies such as Mexico and many others which informs the kind of social interventions available in a culture that does not care.

Former-Member
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Re: Good Morning!

ohh @Former-Member that's so wonderful. And now worried @TAB, glad it wasn't just in my head! 

 

After this post @Former-Member, I thought you might like this video. It's long, but very inspiring https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uuy96bAlkz8 

Shery Mead's keynote address at the Experts by Experience Conference 2011.

Re: Good Morning!

I had no idea re the author @Former-Member  yes, anglo western society is very materialistic and everyone for themselves and those who are "Have Not's'  must have Done Something Wrong ...

Re: Good Morning!

I see tabs @TAB
All the best with it
Former-Member
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Re: Good Morning!

Yes its true our country is very materialistic.  This prosperity consciousness trap is very hurtful and punishing to those who have little means @TAB