Do it afraid
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Reminders and other things that make me feel better or mean something to me in some way. Some are harsher than others, and some may contradict each other. Not everything will apply to everyone and what may apply can change. Not every message is meant for every single person. Different things can be true at the same time and nuance matters. I use a variety of tags for my own convenience.

I’m about to save you thousands of dollars in therapy by teaching you what I learned paying thousands of dollars for therapy:

It may sound woo woo but it’s an important skill capitalism and hyper individualism have robbed us of as human beings.

Learn to process your emotions. It will improve your mental health and quality of life. Emotions serve a biological purpose, they aren’t just things that happen for no reason.

1. Pause and notice you’re having a big feeling or reaching for a distraction to maybe avoid a feeling. Notice what triggered the feeling or need for a distraction without judgement. Just note that it’s there. Don’t label it as good or bad.

2. Find it in your body. Where do you feel it? Your chest? Your head? Your stomach? Does it feel like a weight everywhere? Does it feel like you’re vibrating? Does it feel like you’re numb all over?

3. Name the feeling. Look up an emotion chart if you need to. Find the feeling that resonates the most with what you’re feeling. Is it disappointment? Heartbreak? Anxiety? Anger? Humiliation?

4. Validate the feeling. Sometimes feelings misfire or are disproportionately big, but they’re still valid. You don’t have to justify what you’re feeling, it’s just valid. Tell yourself “yeah it makes sense that you feel that right now.” Or something as simple as “I hear you.” For example: If I get really big feelings of humiliation when I lose at a game of chess, the feeling may not be necessary, but it is valid and makes sense if I grew up with parents who berated me every time I did something wrong. So I could say “Yeah I understand why we are feeling that way given how we were treated growing up. That’s valid.”

5. Do something with your body that’s not a mental distraction from the feeling. Something where you can still think. Go on a walk. Do something with your hands like art or crochet or baking. Journal. Clean a room. Figure out what works best for you.

6. Repeat, it takes practice but is a skill you can learn :)

I have been in EMDR therapy recently to help with past trauma and like 90% of the appointments are just this post. Which I thought was silly at first bcs I was like "well I know how I'm feeling, I feel bad" but man you have no idea. Literally JUST talking through whatever stressful thing I have going on at the moment and whenever I feel a Big Emotion stopping and acknowledging, naming, and sitting with it makes a huge difference. I've made more progress with my trauma and mental illnesses just doing this in a single year than I have in like 10+ years of therapy.

It might feel silly or pointless at first but stick with it, it really helps.

Anonymous asked

Everything you post abt psyche meds makes sense and I know it to be true but it scares me So bad because . Like, if I can’t take meds or therapy my way into feeling better then I may as well just kill myself? Like I really… I cannot handle just feeling like this forever; I don’t want to just put up with life. So far no meds have been working with me and I keep trying and trying different antidepressant / antipsychotic cocktails in hopes something will make being alive Tolerable to me. And nothing is; and I’m kinda just starting to think this is just how Life Is? Like it’s just always this stupid and miserable and other people just don’t care as much as me or something?? I don’t know. I wish there was a way to just fix mental health that didn’t take so much work for me, because I don’t want to fucking do it. I don’t want to work to be happy when so many others don’t have to, it’s just not worth it imo and I’d rather just die and get it over with.

Idk sorry for the vent I’m just feeling kind of hopeless regarding my meds and how little anything is ever fixing me.

I do not think it’s impossible to get better. I don’t even think it’s impossible for a good therapist or a med to contribute to it. I do think reducing “getting better” to getting on the right psychiatric medication is dangerous and unlikely to be effective. For most people neither getting better or getting ill happens in a vacuum, and things like access to needed resources, proper support systems, healthy connections, community, relevant opportunities, increased self-awareness, better coping skills and personal growth will often play a bigger role in whether you get better or not than which psych med they put you on

i think when people talk about dsm diagnoses being 'destigmatised' it's usually the case that what they mean is the public perception of the diagnosis name (depression, anxiety, etc) has become associated with minor, temporary, or resolvable forms of distress. the experience of being so depressed you cannot get out of bed, or brush your teeth, or work -- that experience and those behaviours have never been 'destigmatised,' only associated with other diagnostic labels in certain discourses seeking to present 'depression' as treatable or minor. it's basically a semantic nosological shift, rather than any actual 'destigmatisation' of the behaviours psychiatry exists to pathologise -- widening (minimising) the diagnosis, then just moving any leftover 'scary' symptoms to a different diagnostic bucket. it's a rhetorical shell game that does not challenge, but exists symbiotically with, the ableism that causes behaviours like "not being able to get out of bed" to be stigmatised in the first place.

…psychiatry assumes that society does not cause distress in biologically normal people, who are considered biologically normal at least in part because they are economically productive. This assumption permits the conclusion that if a person is distressed to the point of unproductivity, it is because that person—not society—is abnormal. Thus, psychiatry’s commitment to biological essentialism not only masks the role of the constructed sociopolitical environment in creating distress but depoliticizes it by characterizing that allegedly irrational distress as induced by biological abnormality.

– Kiera Lyons, “The Neurodiversity Paradigm and Abolition of Psychiatric Incarceration” (2023)

Anonymous asked

people are so overdramatic. My 5 plus year bf is schizophrenic (or at the very least schizoaffective) and had a terrible experience with psychiatric hospitals and forced antipsychotics. He doesn’t take meds, has auditory hallucinations, but can functionally do all he needs to (not that ability matters when it comes to the choice to be medicated!) and has a good life with me and the cats. My depression and (?? Autism? Maybe not, adhd, for sure) whatever else I have going on will literally have me sleeping 23 hours a day; the SSRI I’m on has changed my adult life and given me the ability to work and be creative. These are not two contradictory ideas- it’s simply the result of letting adult people make an informed choice of what they want to do with their bodies!

Yeah defending people’s bodily autonomy means BOTH “it’s okay to take psych meds” AND “it’s okay to not take psych meds.” It’s not about idealizing one or the other as the objectively right answer, it’s about actually trusting people to know their own bodies and make their own decision, whether they have schizophrenia or depression

daily reminder that diagnoses are clinical tools not ontological categories ❤️

"pt presents with ABC symptoms that are theorized to have XYZ cause" is a diagnosis.

"pt is fundamentally an XYZ-haver" is a horoscope.

also. generally, and in psychology in particular, modern best practices are not just framed around the symptoms but the patient's complaints. if the patient says "yeah, I hear voices sometimes, but they're my friends and they help me do things," and the patient is able to meet their needs/goals in life (career, relationships, physical health, etc) that actually does not meet the criteria for a disorder because there is no complaint there. nothing is wrong and the patient is fine, they're just a bit odd. people can be odd.

some of y’all need to learn more compassion for adults who are severely mentally ill or disabled… like schizophrenics who still depend on their family members and probably always will have to, autistic people who live in group homes, people with bipolar disorder who attend partial inpatient programs, etc…. people who couldn’t get college degrees, who can’t work. not everyone is like you.

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