Protecting mental health in crazy times A ToDo list

it’s waking up on the floor of a cold

prison cell

and having no idea how you got there

it’s hiding in the bathroom at work

because you’re shaking again and if

anybody sees you you’re going to lose

your job

and it’s that little girl who used to be

so sweet that now she’s punching the

other kids at school

it’s mental injury in this pandemic

a social fabric torn asunder it’s hard

to feel

stable when the world has been collapsed

at your feet

but it’s really important to take

concrete steps

to protect our mental health both on an

individual level

and also on a societal level and so i’d

like to share with you

my 10 points the first of which is to

take stock

now even before the pandemic roughly one

billion people were estimated to be

suffering from mental health issues

and of course that leads to

corresponding issues of poverty

criminalization discrimination but the

pandemic

cracked open the facade of mental health

and exposed the insufficiencies and

injustices that have been there and of

course

also rates of mental illness have

increased during the pandemic the

suicide rate

has increased across the board and in

fact it’s being called a shadow pandemic

but in the same way that we need to take

stock on

a societal level it’s also important to

take stock on a personal level

for me i can say oh man my burnout is

back

and it has brought a friend insomnia

it’s two o’clock in the morning staring

down the barrel

of my alarm clock knowing that i have to

wake up

in a couple of hours but i can’t sleep

it’s when the colors of the rainbow

turn to black and white which leads to

point two and that is to get context

now in my family we have a long lineage

of trauma

and an equally long history of denying

it

when my mother was a little girl in the

great depression

her father killed himself under the

weight of economic ruin

but her bereavement soon turned to

horror under the hands

of the man that her mother went on to

marry

incredible abuse that happened behind

closed doors for over 10 years

everybody was in denial about it my

mother went on to have profound

psychological problems and i took care

of her

and 60 years later i still can’t sleep

in the same way that we need to look at

the deeper context however

of our personal challenges we also need

to look at societal challenges

now under the pandemic alcoholism

child abuse domestic violence have

increased across the board but they are

seen as individual trends rather than

very clear signs of collective trauma

a societal failure in dealing with

mental injury

and of course people of color and those

of marginalized gender identities

face more discrimination in the mental

health system

it’s waking up on a cold prison cell and

having no idea how you got there it’s

your black skin

it is the post-traumatic stress that you

got from multiple military tours to

afghanistan it’s being triggered by

watching the murder of george floyd on

television and the voices that told you

to take that rock and break that window

and it’s the fact that when the police

found you

you were taken to prison rather than to

get the mental health care support that

you clearly need and deserve

so then the question comes well where

is the money this is number three follow

the money

it’s amazing because on average

countries spend only two percent

of their health budgets on mental health

that is nothing that is crazy

for example in the united states a

person with a mental health challenge is

10 times more likely to end up

in prison or at jail rather than in a

facility in which they are getting care

but meanwhile of course during the

pandemic billionaires have become even

richer as our social services have been

cut it is hard to keep your personal

balance in a world that’s so

imbalanced but we must and that

leads to connecting the dots now

social services have decreased jobs have

decreased during the pandemic

alcoholism domestic violence have

increased

it is to be expected that child abuse

has also increased

and all of this suffering that is

completely unnecessary and that clearly

is going to go on and have implications

for

generations individuals often however

are blamed

rather than seeing this as a systemic

problem

but if we don’t acknowledge that then we

can’t fix the structures that created

them

in my mother’s case after so many years

of vicious abuse she was called crazy

she was ostracized

institutionalized over-medicated

and of course you know she became

suicidal again and again

i grew up really fast but these echoes

of injury do not have to continue

now one way that we can change this

path is to redefine experts

people with lived experience and people

who are actually

service users should be involved in

designing the programs

that are for healing in this capacity

the world health organization obviously

has done so much great work

and its quality rights program is

fantastic

in terms of combining human rights with

mental health

in the same way grand challenges canada

is amazing regarding

you know innovation and impact tech

and humanitarian issues and the amazing

vikram patel has taken task shifting for

capacity building to an art form

so basically when we see the whole

person in the context of broader society

it leads to the next point and that is

to expand

the narrative and during this pandemic

anybody who needs to have their

narrative expanded is

frontline workers they have clearly

borne the brunt

of this pandemic it’s that nurse who is

hiding in the bathroom

of the hospital because she’s shaking so

much because now she’s got anxiety

attacks and if somebody sees her she

might lose her job

it’s the long and grueling shifts that

she has to work

the fact that she’s been treating and

burying her colleagues

it’s her intense fear of catching covid

and then giving it to her

elderly parents and her child within

that context

of course she would have anxiety and we

should be dealing with that

and another element of expanding our

narratives

is to redefine target groups and the

united nations

secretary general guterres has done a

great job

in saying that we must focus for example

on the elderly we must focus more on

youth

and to that extent the youth envoy ms

vikramana yaki has also been

just done a great job during this

pandemic when the narratives are

expanded

holistic approaches to mental health

follow suit

and that leads to the next point which

is to find

synergies for example in zimbabwe

there’s this fantastic thing called a

friendship bench

where a grandmother sits on one side and

the person suffering

from anxiety sits there and then they

just talk and

the person feels better in italy there

have um

psychotherapists have come up with an

online platform

providing free consultation to those who

need it

and there are all kinds of really great

initiatives focused on the educational

system

for example the born this way foundation

lady gaga

and cynthia germanotta founded this and

they’re

in public schools doing amazing work

similarly

generation mental health is mobilizing

on campuses

we’ve got to find unique ways of

reaching out

and ultimately this means to go global

now mental health connects societies in

ways we cannot even

understand we are connected

across borders across generations across

belief

these challenges are global and

international

and intersectional so the solutions have

to be as well

now in this regard for example

generation unlimited

aims to bring cognitive behavioral

therapy to underserved youth globally

and united for global mental health is

doing amazing work

but that also leads to a really

important point and that is

to make noise every single person needs

to do

what we can to break the stigma i’m

always really really happy when famous

people come out and say hey i’m having

some challenges

thank you adele thank you beyonce thank

you the queer eye guys

you know for every time somebody who is

well known comes out and says hey

i have this then it just makes it easier

to talk about

and a special shout out to bts

for informing and motivating its army

supporting

unicef and its love myself campaign at

the un general assembly this stuff

really really matters

and of course in the very same breath

thank you very much to rani ali for

connecting

tolerance with mental health thank you

to every single person

who discusses lived experience

breaking the stigma one voice at a time

and that leads to the last point and

that is taking action

now i have lived experience with mental

health on an intergenerational level i

have it in my own personal burnout

but you know what i don’t have i don’t

have shame

i have pride i have conviction i have

determination

that i’m going to make a difference i am

going to

do anything in my power to protect

other people regarding mental health now

that means that on a personal basis

i need to finally take care of my

burnout

and i will do that i will break this

chain of trauma

now on an activist basis i will continue

advocating for mental health and that

means addressing social

failures that means advocating for

funding

on a work basis as a psychotherapist and

also a virtual learning expert

what i really want to do my focus now is

to bring

cognitive behavioral therapy to

underserved youth across the world with

an emphasis on people of a refugee

background

and in really innovative ways and i’m

currently developing

projects in that regard and i’m so

inspired by the work

for example of queen matild of the

belgians

intergenerational and focused on the

sdgs both very important and of course

queen rania of jordan

linking education and health

basically all of these things are

critical but it leads to

the single most important point of all

and that is how about you how

are you doing in this pandemic

have you had any mental injury are you

getting the support that you need

does your community have services

available

if not is there anything that you want

to do to try to create them

because look just keep in mind you are

so not

alone there are so many people across

the world

going through the same thing and

thinking the same thing and together

we really are stronger when the whole

world has crashed and burned at your

feet and

splintered into a thousand pieces it is

that

crystalline moment of brutal honesty

yet impossible beauty when you realize

that you’ve got the opportunity

if not the responsibility to pick up

those pieces

and put them back together in a way

that’s even better

a way that is more just and more humane

and more inclusive and ultimately more

sustainable

thank you

you

它在冰冷的牢房的地板上醒来

,不知道你是如何到达那里的,

它躲在工作的浴室里,

因为你又在发抖,如果

有人看到你,你就会

丢掉工作

,就是那个小女孩 谁曾经

那么可爱,现在她

在学校里打其他孩子

这是这次流行病中的精神伤害

社会结构被撕裂

当世界在你脚下崩溃时很难感到稳定

但采取

具体

措施保护真的很重要 我们在

个人层面

和社会层面的心理健康,所以我

想与大家分享

我的 10 点,其中第一点是

在大流行之前

进行评估,估计大约有 10 亿人

患有 心理健康问题

,当然也会导致

相应的贫困

定罪歧视问题,但大

流行打开了心理健康的门面

,暴露了不足和

不公正 已经存在,

当然

,在大流行期间,精神疾病的发病

也有所增加,自杀率全面上升,

实际上它被称为影子大流行,

但就像我们需要

在社会层面上进行评估一样 对我个人进行评估也很重要

我可以说,哦,伙计,我的倦怠又

回来了

,它给朋友带来了失眠,

现在是凌晨两点,

盯着闹钟的桶

,知道我必须

醒来

几个小时后,但我无法入睡

,当彩虹的颜色

变成黑色和白色时,这导致了第二

点,那就是

现在在我的家庭

中获得背景信息

当我母亲还是个处于大萧条中的小女孩时,

她的父亲在

经济崩溃

的重压下自杀

了 10 多年来发生在闭门造车的可信虐待,

每个人都否认这一点,我

母亲继续有严重的

心理问题,我

照顾她

,60 年后,我仍然无法

以我们需要的方式入睡 看看

我们个人挑战的更深层次的背景,我们还

需要看看

现在在大流行酒精中毒下的社会挑战

虐待儿童家庭暴力

全面增加,但它们被

视为个人趋势,而不是

集体创伤的非常明显的迹象

社会失败 在处理

精神伤害方面

,当然,有色人种和

性别认同边缘化的人

在精神卫生系统中面临更多歧视

你从多次前往阿富汗的军事旅行中获得的创伤性压力是

在电视上观看乔治·弗洛伊德被谋杀引发的

ision 和那些告诉

你拿走那块石头并打破那扇

窗户的声音,事实上,当警察

发现你时,

你被关进了监狱,而不是

得到你显然需要和应得的精神保健支持,

所以问题来了

那么,钱在哪里,这是第三名

跟着钱,

这太神奇了,因为平均而言,

各国仅

将其卫生预算的 2% 用于心理健康

,这并不是什么疯狂的事情,

例如在美国

,一个有心理健康挑战的人是

10

最终入狱或入狱的可能性要大得多,而不是

在他们接受护理的设施中,

但与此同时,当然,在大流行期间,

由于我们的社会服务被

削减,亿万富翁变得更加富有,因此很难保持个人

平衡 一个如此不平衡的世界,

但我们必须这样做,这

导致了现在

社会服务减少了工作岗位

减少了大流行

酗酒 家庭暴力有所

增加 可以预料,虐待儿童的情况

也有所增加

,所有这些

完全没有必要的痛苦显然

会持续下去,并对几代人产生影响

但是个人经常

受到指责,

而不是将其视为系统性

问题

但是,如果我们不承认这一点,那么我们

就无法修复

在我母亲的案例中造成它们的结构,经过这么多年

的恶毒虐待,她被称为疯子,

她被排斥,被

制度化,过度用药

,当然你知道她又开始

自杀了 再一次,

我真的很快长大了,但这些

伤害的回声现在不必继续

了,我们可以改变这条

道路的一种方法是重新定义专家,

有生活经验的

人,实际上是

服务用户的人应该参与

设计

程序 为了以这种身份进行治疗,

世界卫生组织

显然做了很多伟大的工作

,其质量权利计划是

以同样的方式将

人权与心理健康结合

起来非常棒 在

更广泛的社会背景下,整个人

引出了下一点,那就是

扩大叙事,在这场大流行期间,

任何需要

扩大叙事的人都是

一线工人,他们显然

首当其冲地承受

了这场大流行的冲击。

躲在医院的浴室

里,因为她颤抖得

厉害,因为现在她得了焦虑

症,如果有人看到她,

她可能会失业

是她非常害怕感染新冠病毒

,然后把它送给她

年迈的父母和她的孩子。

xt 当然她会有焦虑,我们

应该处理这个问题

,扩展我们叙述的另一个要素

是重新定义目标群体,

联合国

秘书长古特雷斯做得

很好

,他说我们必须关注例如

我们的老年人 必须更多地关注

青年

,在这种情况下,青年特使 vikramana yaki 女士

在这次大流行期间也做得很好,

当叙述被

扩展

时,心理健康的整体方法也

随之而来

,这导致了下一点,

即寻找

协同作用 例如在津巴布韦

有一个很棒的东西叫做

友谊长椅

,祖母坐在一边,

患有焦虑症的人坐在那里,然后他们

只是说话,

这个人感觉好多了 在意大利

有嗯

心理治疗师提出了一个

在线平台

为有需要的人提供免费咨询,

并且有各种非常棒的

举措专注于 教育

系统

,例如,以这种方式出生的基金会

Lady

Gaga 和 Cynthia Germanotta 创立了这个,

他们

在公立学校做着惊人的工作。

现在走向全球 心理健康以

我们甚至无法

理解的方式连接社会 我们

跨越国界跨越世代 跨越

信念

这些挑战是全球性、

国际性

和交叉性的,因此在这方面的解决方案

现在必须也是

如此,例如

世代无限

旨在带来认知 为全球

服务不足的青年提供行为疗法

并为全球心理健康而团结起来正在

做着惊人的工作,

但这也导致了一个非常

重要的一点,那

就是制造噪音,每个人都需要

尽我们所能打破耻辱,我

总是真的真的 当

名人出来说嘿我遇到

一些挑战时很高兴

谢谢你 ou adele,谢谢你,beyonce,谢谢

你认识的奇怪的眼睛

,每次有

知名人士站出来说嘿

我有这个时,它只会让谈论变得更

容易,

并特别向 bts 大声疾呼

告知和激励它 军队在

联合国大会上支持联合国儿童基金会及其爱我自己的运动

这些东西

真的很重要

,当然同时

非常感谢拉尼阿里

宽容与心理健康联系起来

感谢每

一位讨论生活经历的人

耻辱一次一个声音

,这导致了最后一点,

就是现在正在采取行动 '

不要羞耻

我有骄傲 我有信念 我有

决心我会有所作为 我

尽我所能保护

其他人的精神 健康现在

这意味着在个人基础上

我需要最终照顾我的

倦怠

,我会这样做我

现在将在积极分子的基础上打破这种创伤链我将继续

倡导心理健康,这

意味着解决社会

失败这意味着

作为一名心理治疗师

和虚拟学习专家

,我提倡在工作基础上获得资助 我现在真正想做的事情是

世界各地服务不足的青年带来认知行为疗法

,重点是难民背景的人,

并以真正的创新 方式,我

目前正在开发

这方面的项目,我

受到

比利时马蒂尔德女王(Queen matild of the belgians

intergenerational)的工作的启发,并专注

于非常重要的可持续发展目标(sdgs),当然

约旦女王拉尼娅(Queen Rania of Jordan)

将教育和健康

基本上都联系在一起 这些事情中的一些很

关键,但它导致

了最重要的一点

,那就是你怎么

样,你在这个平底锅里做得怎么样 demic

你有任何精神伤害 你

得到了你需要的支持

你的社区是否有

可用的服务

如果没有 你

想做些什么来尝试创造它们,

因为请记住,你并不

孤单 世界各地的许多人

都经历着同样的事情,

思考着同样的事情,

当整个

世界在你的脚下崩溃燃烧

分裂成千块时

,我们真的更强大了

意识到你有机会(

如果没有责任)拾起

这些碎片

并以一种更好的方式将它们重新组合在一起,

这种方式更公正、更人性化

、更具包容性,最终更

可持续

谢谢你