Instead of denying mental illness at the individual level (for some good reasons like lack of lab work indicating any sort of markers of any actual disease) it’s time to recognize that everyone is mentally ill…and some of those most impacted are psychiatrists and other officials of the state who harm those of us who are more conscious…not less. Our society and world is sick…the individuals who are most sensitive are canaries in the coal mine. We all need help and we all need healing. Everyone on the planet needs to come to consciousness should we wish to save our species along with a whole lot of other ones as well.
“It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.” – Jiddu KrishnamurtiLet me be clear. Psychiatry and psychopharmaceuticals are not the answer to this issue that impacts the entire human species and the planet and all the life on it.
Stepping back and rethinking what mental health might really look like in a society that is actually healthy. That doesn’t exist now. Where do we begin?
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I’m reposting the Mental Illness System page from the archives that can be found among the drop down menus above:
The Mental (Illness) system and thoughts on alternatives: a collection
I can’t call the current system of care a “mental health system” when it’s so clearly one that generates, encourages and sustains mental illness. And so I’ve often referred to it as a mental illness system. Here I’m underscoring that as it’s important that we make big changes if we want to help not only the most vulnerable people in our society, but also society itself. We create one another. None of this happens in a vacuum.
Below is a list of posts from Beyond Meds that look at the system from many different perspectives. It will become one of the main drop-down navigation menu tabs at the top of the page. It will replace the Professional/Patient Divide tab and will be called Mental Illness System. The contents of it will include those posts that were included in the Professional/Patient Divide Tab.
This post will be updated as appropriate. Check the drop-down navigation menus often for updates and additional access to the archives. I’m always working on them.
New: History in the system and my vision for mental health on Nonduality Talk — Beyond Meds (audio)
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Community Mental Health in Times of Crisis
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State of mental health care
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From Self Care to Collective Caring
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Standard psychiatric care: torture (yes, the United Nations, too, calls forced treatment torture)
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Harms of over-treatment in medical care — this is true throughout all of medicine but especially true in psychiatry
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Where Do Messages of Hopelessness in Mental Health Care Come From?
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Health care is a human right
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Exposing the Mental Health system – Only Smarties exhibition
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Mental health professionals along with police, teachers and the corporate press are the guards of the system
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Coming Off Psych Drugs: A Meeting of the Minds — new documentary and info
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Can Our Medical Model of Care Be Remade? — By Robert Whitaker
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Why I’m pro-information and pro-choice when it comes to drugs and medications in mental health care
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Shrinks get patients hooked on drugs and then cut the cord
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Open Dialogue: Alternative Care for Psychosis
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Coercion, subtle or otherwise, is the rule in psychiatric care…
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Medically induced illness: iatrogenic injury
The below are pieces written specifically about the divide between the professionals in the system and those who are subject to their care and/or abuse.
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Bridging Patient-Professional Divide
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Professional denial is a form of retraumatization (new)
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Being the empowered patient
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The divide between client/patient/consumer and professionals (with list of links)
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healing journey — part 1 and 2 (brief thoughts from this morning to a friend)
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A doctor who talks sense about the all too frequent use of coercion in medicine
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Informed Choice: Pro-information and pro-choice when it comes to drugs and medications
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Words for all in the “helping” professions (and for any human who wants to benefit others)
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Medical compliance? Adherence? No. My MDs are my PARTNERS
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Letters to my shrink
Other significant pieces:
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Mad Rad Crisis Intervention Team Training: psych survivors train sheriff deputies
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Providing sanctuary (alternative to hospitalization in community)
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Breaking down in the service of breaking through: can madness save us?
Having well-being in general is simply about learning to live well. It really doesn’t need to called therapy or need medical intervention most of the time. What a concept! Here is a collection of self-empowering ways to view our health and well-being from a holistic standpoint. This list does not begin to be exhaustive. There are as many ways to wellness as there are human beings. The below list of links all include additional collections of links on the topic they cover.
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learning to deeply love and attend to the body
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Nutrition and gut health — Mental health and diet
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Everything matters
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Meditation is the PRACTICE of learning to PAY ATTENTION. That is all.
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Yoga
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Help for Insomnia
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Fear and anxiety: coping, reframing, transforming…
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Rethinking bipolar disorder
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Grief collection
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Trauma and PTSD collection
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Conversations about suicidal feelings
People are recovering and thriving in spite of what psychiatry tells them everyday. Sadly many of us had to disengage ourselves from a system of “care” that harmed us gravely in order to do it. Non-compliance saves people everyday. This needs to change. It’s dangerous and tragic both.
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Drug free recovery from depression, anxiety, bipolar, schizophrenia, etc…
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Psychosis recovery: stories, information and resources
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Peer support? This is the real thing. Free of institutionalization. (psych drug withdrawal)
If you would like to know more about coming off meds as safely as possible start here:
*it is potentially dangerous to come off medications without careful planning. Please be sure to be well educated before undertaking any sort of discontinuation of medications. If your MD agrees to help you do so, do not assume they know how to do it well even if they claim to have experience. They are generally not trained in discontinuation and may not know how to recognize withdrawal issues. A lot of withdrawal issues are misdiagnosed to be psychiatric problems. This is why it’s good to educate oneself and find a doctor who is willing to learn with you as your partner in care. See: Psychiatric drug withdrawal and protracted withdrawal syndrome round-up
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