Destigmatizing Mental Health Conditions We Don't Talk about
Conversations and awareness efforts for mental health and mental illness do talk about certain disorders, but there are still many mental illnesses we generally don't talk about that we need to destigmatize. Because there is this narrowness of conversation and the heavy stigma around many mental illnesses, there's some work to do when it comes to even approaching how we can tackle the stigma they face.
What Does Destigmatizing Lesser-Discussed Mental Illnesses Look Like?
Destigmatizing mental health disorders as a concept is great, but when it actually comes to doing it, what does it look like? To some extent, I like to think that normalizing discussing mental health conditions that aren't often spoken about is going to be a lot like when we were beginning to talk about mental illnesses at all. There's going to be resistance; people are going to not understand. But just think, people are fairly comfortable with talking about depression and anxiety now and they're not seen through that same scary, volatile, or foreign lens to the same degree as they once were.
However, the disorders that aren't often a part of the anti-stigma conversations still are viewed through those lenses. It can be difficult to broach conversations about them because they're so foreign to many people and elicit a wide range of reactions. Speaking personally, having excoriation (skin-picking) disorder and deciding years ago whether I was going to talk about it or not was daunting because of the stigma I knew I could face. I had faced stigma when I didn't talk about it and when I did try to hide the behavior anyway. And now to openly admit to it? Yeah, I was more than a little nervous.
Disgust and extreme lack of understanding that led to negative reactions are high on the list of stigma I faced for this lesser-known disorder. I know others with disorders under the body-focused repetitive behavior spectrum feel the same. It sucks, for sure, but I can't imagine what it's like to have an illness where someone will automatically think you're violent or dangerous as soon as you say you have it. Sadly, those ideas still exist for too many mental health conditions. ("Mental Illness Myths and the Damage They Cause")
Tips to Destigmatize Mental Health Conditions That Aren't Often Talked About
So what can we do to destigmatize the mental health conditions we don't talk about at all or don't talk about often? And why is it that they're not paraded around in the same way anxiety and depression are during mental health conversations to begin with? I touch on both of those things in my video.
APA Reference
Barton, L.
(2021, March 22). Destigmatizing Mental Health Conditions We Don't Talk about, HealthyPlace. Retrieved
on 2024, November 5 from https://www.healthyplace.com/blogs/survivingmentalhealthstigma/2021/3/destigmatizing-mental-health-conditions-we-dont-talk-about
Author: Laura A. Barton
This is a beautifully written share and one that is so helpful for so many. The more that we can have these types of conversations for lesser-known mental health conditions the more we can pave the way for so many other important conversations surrounding these topics as well. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you so much, Lizanne! I hope that we can have more conversations about lesser-discussed conditions as well, and you're totally right. Once we have these conversations that broach the subject, we can really dive in and make a big difference. Cheers! :)