One of my favorite quotes on mental health:
and more about the imbalances in the way we live.
and the solutions need to go deeper, too.
Your depression is not a malfunction; it's a signal...
Your depression is telling you something.
With the right help, we can understand these problems,
and we can fix these problems together."
~Johann Hari, TED Talk
As a mental health student, client, professional, and leader, one common mental health misconception that I feel called to correct is the idea that people who seek counseling are somehow "crazy" or “trainwrecks” or that their lives must be falling apart. FALSE.
Carelessly-placed negative labels can be so damaging, and I consistently wish people were more cautious with their words. God reminds us that our words hold the power of life and death -- to uplift and heal, or to dehumanize or devalue hurting people.
The stigma I mentioned above is harmful and unfair. Many adults who seek counseling are emotionally mature people who value personal growth over personal comfort. Maybe they're working toward a better future or seeking to change harmful patterns learned in a dysfunctional family system. And yes, some clients are truly in crisis - maybe they are legitimate victims of neglect, abuse, sexual assault, or other trauma, and they need safety and support and healing before they can move from a victim mindset to a thriving survivor mentality. Not broken or weak, but people (who are created in God's image and deeply loved by Him) with unmet needs. Changing our habit patterns or learned identity is incredibly difficult work. It's also deeply valuable, and seeking support through counseling shows healthy self-awareness, humility, strength, and courage!!
Another myth I would love to correct is the idea that any strong negative emotion is a sign of poor mental health. FALSE. As M. Scott Peck wrote, “Mental health is the dedication to reality at all costs.”
That means experiencing the full range of emotions and responding in a balanced, healthy way to whatever you are facing in the present moment. True mental health is not about trying to convince yourself everything is fine when you're hurting. Sadness, anger, and grief are all part of a mentally healthy life. We do not have to force positivity or plastic smiles or put a positive spin on everything. It is about learning to face the joys, sorrows, and confusion we feel with honesty and grace.
Pretending to be happy and okay when we’re not is actually an unhealthy denial of reality. And a mentally healthy person does not avoid or trivialize their own pain; they acknowledge it, name it, and work through it... sometimes with the help of medication and/or a trusted friend, family member, or counselor!
❤ ❤ ❤

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