mindovermatterzine:

mindovermatterzine:

MIND OVER MATTER ZINE CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
Are there things that you feel you cannot say to your mental health provider? (doctor, psychologist, psychiatrist, therapist, counsellor etc).
If you don’t have a mental health provider, why not? What would you say to them if you did?
Get it off your chest by submitting a short (500 word max) account at mindovermatterzine.tumblr.com/submit
This can be done completely anonymously, or with your name and age to identify you.
Please reblog and help spread the word!
[Flyer kindly designed by Dom of V Revolution]

Thank you so much for the submissions I’ve had so far: they’re brilliant. Please keep them coming!

I’ve changed this to a rolling deadline as I don’t have enough submissions for a zine yet. Thank you again so much to the people who have already written in: you’re all so interesting and eloquent, and I can’t wait to publish your brilliant words.

mindovermatterzine:

mindovermatterzine:

MIND OVER MATTER ZINE CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

Are there things that you feel you cannot say to your mental health provider? (doctor, psychologist, psychiatrist, therapist, counsellor etc).

If you don’t have a mental health provider, why not? What would you say to them if you did?

Get it off your chest by submitting a short (500 word max) account at mindovermatterzine.tumblr.com/submit

This can be done completely anonymously, or with your name and age to identify you.

Please reblog and help spread the word!

[Flyer kindly designed by Dom of V Revolution]

Thank you so much for the submissions I’ve had so far: they’re brilliant. Please keep them coming!

I’ve changed this to a rolling deadline as I don’t have enough submissions for a zine yet. Thank you again so much to the people who have already written in: you’re all so interesting and eloquent, and I can’t wait to publish your brilliant words.

onlinecounsellingcollege:

Overcoming the Stigma of Mental Illness

Stigma is when someone judges you based on a personal trait. Unfortunately, this is a common experience for people who have a mental health condition. Stigma may be obvious and direct, such as someone making a negative remark about your mental illness or your treatment. Or it may be subtle, such as someone assuming you could be unstable, violent or dangerous because you have a mental health condition. You may even judge yourself. Some of the harmful effects of stigma can include:

·         Lack of understanding by family, friends, colleagues or others you know

·         Discrimination at work or school

·         Difficulty finding housing

·         Bullying, physical violence or harassment

·         Health insurance that doesn’t adequately cover your mental illness

·         The belief that you will never be able to succeed at certain challenges or that you can’t improve your situation

Steps to cope with stigma

Here are some ways you can deal with stigma:

·         Get treatment. You may be reluctant to admit you have a condition that needs treatment. Don’t let the fear of being “labeled” with a mental illness prevent you from seeking help. Treatment can provide relief by identifying what’s wrong in concrete terms and reducing symptoms that interfere with your work and personal life.

·         Don’t let stigma create self-doubt and shame. Stigma doesn’t just come from others. You may have the mistaken belief that your condition is a sign of personal weakness, or that you should be able to control it without help. Seeking psychological counseling, educating yourself about your condition and connecting with others with mental illness can help you gain self-esteem and overcome destructive self-judgment.

·         Don’t isolate yourself. If you have a mental illness, you may be reluctant to tell anyone about it. Have the courage to confide in your spouse, family members, friends, clergy or other members of your community. Reach out to people you trust for the compassion, support and understanding you need.

·         Don’t equate yourself with your illness. You are not an illness. So instead of saying “I’m bipolar,” say “I have bipolar disorder.” Instead of calling yourself “a schizophrenic,” call yourself “a person with schizophrenia.” Don’t say you “are depressed.” Say you “have clinical depression.”

·         Join a support group. Some local and national groups, such as the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) offer local programs and Internet resources that help reduce stigma by educating people with mental illness, their family members and the general public. A number of state and federal agencies and programs also offer support for people who have mental health conditions. Examples include agencies such as Vocational Rehabilitation and Veterans Affairs (VA).

·         Get help at school. If you or your child has a mental illness that affects learning, find out what plans and programs might help. Discrimination against students because of a mental health condition is against the law, and educators at primary, secondary and college levels are required to accommodate students as best they can. Talk to teachers, professors or administrators about the best approach and available resources. If a teacher doesn’t know about a student’s disability, it can lead to discrimination, barriers to learning and poor grades.

·         Speak out against stigma. Express your opinions at events, in letters to the editor or on the Internet. It can help instill courage in others facing similar challenges and educate the public about mental illness.

Others’ judgments almost always stem from a lack of understanding rather than information based on the facts.

Source: http://health.msn.com/health-topics/mental-health/mental-health-overcoming-the-stigma-of-mental-illness?GT1=7850

This is great. I would like to emphasize though that the culpability for this in no way lies with you. Essentially, stigma is everyone else’s problem, it’s just a matter of finding ways to love yourself and drown out the bullshit.

Keep your head high and fuck the haters. xxx

mindovermatterzine:

MIND OVER MATTER ZINE CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
Are there things that you feel you cannot say to your mental health provider? (doctor, psychologist, psychiatrist, therapist, counsellor etc).
If you don’t have a mental health provider, why not? What would you say to them if you did?
Get it off your chest by submitting a short (500 word max) account at mindovermatterzine.tumblr.com/submit
This can be done completely anonymously, or with your name and age to identify you.
DEADLINE END OF APRIL.
Please reblog and help spread the word!
[Flyer kindly designed by Dom of V Revolution]

Thank you so much for the submissions I’ve had so far: they’re brilliant. Please keep them coming!

mindovermatterzine:

MIND OVER MATTER ZINE CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

Are there things that you feel you cannot say to your mental health provider? (doctor, psychologist, psychiatrist, therapist, counsellor etc).

If you don’t have a mental health provider, why not? What would you say to them if you did?

Get it off your chest by submitting a short (500 word max) account at mindovermatterzine.tumblr.com/submit

This can be done completely anonymously, or with your name and age to identify you.

DEADLINE END OF APRIL.

Please reblog and help spread the word!

[Flyer kindly designed by Dom of V Revolution]

Thank you so much for the submissions I’ve had so far: they’re brilliant. Please keep them coming!

[Image: A drawing of a person with big blue eyes and red lips, a black bob and a large yellow bow in their hair. Large tears are falling on their eyes onto several little umbrellas in pink and orange]

How to Look Like You Weren’t Just Crying in Less Than Five Minutes (Rookie Mag - click through)

“Sometimes you need it to be a secret that you were just bawling.”
(Illustration by  Marjainez)

[Image: A drawing of a person with big blue eyes and red lips, a black bob and a large yellow bow in their hair. Large tears are falling on their eyes onto several little umbrellas in pink and orange]


How to Look Like You Weren’t Just Crying in Less Than Five Minutes (Rookie Mag - click through)

“Sometimes you need it to be a secret that you were just bawling.”

(Illustration by  Marjainez)

dressesandyarn:

mindovermatterzine:

MIND OVER MATTER ZINE CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

 mindovermatterzine.tumblr.com/submit

I need to write about what it’s like to have mental health colleagues give you shit for working through mental illness.

That would be such an important contribution. I ran a mental health conference yesterday where the Chief Executive of Mind gave a really interesting talk about the Time to Change campaign’s work in reducing discriminatory attitudes in the general public. The director of the Mental Health Network at the NHS Confederation spoke afterwards and basically said that educating the public is great, but so much work needs to be done with healthcare staff themselves as they can be just as guilty of stigmatizing and discriminating against the mentally ill. (I was nodding my head frantically at that point.) 

How a bike shop demonstrates the cycle of improving mental health (Guardian online)

“Common Wheel is not an ordinary bike shop. It is a charity and cycling project for people with mental health problems in Glasgow. The organisation provides companionship, skills and constructive, meaningful activity for people with mental health problems. It takes donations of old bikes, strips, sorts and sells them.”

Patients Who Use Anti-Depressants Can Be More Likely to Suffer Relapse

“… anti-depressants interfere with the brain’s natural self-regulation of serotonin and other neurotransmitters, and the brain can overcorrect once medication is suspended, triggering new depression.”

Well, that’s a thought that’s going to fester.

Uh so… I work as a conference producer for the public sector, and I just spent my lunch break catching up on zine orders (stapling them together, writing address labels, packaging stuff up etc etc). One of my senior colleagues / kind of bosses came into the office and asked to read one. He was really impressed with it and said I should ask if I can put them in the delegate packages at a big mental health conference we’re putting on next month. This is kind of a huge deal, I think. The conference will be full of high powered UK mental health professionals, and I think it’s really important that they hear what people have to say. The question is, do I put out a call for submissions for a ‘Things I wish I could tell my doctor / therapist / psychiatrist’ issue?

Just floating this idea, chaps: who would be interested in submitting to an emergency issue? Please like / reply to this post so I can get an idea of uptake. Thanks!

(via andheartisdaft)

[Image: A white surface with a selection of zines on (A Short Fanzine About Rocking, Mind Over Matter, Common Thread) and some cassette tapes in the distance]
As promised, there’s a new batch of zines printed and available in V Revolution on Oldham Street in Manchester (UK). If you’re in the area and fancy browsing some records / zines / vegan foods, then pop in!
P.S: Sorry that posts have been a little sparse here lately; I’m working two jobs. I have a bunch of things to share with you soon though, including a call for submissions for issue #2!
Keep safe, x

[Image: A white surface with a selection of zines on (A Short Fanzine About Rocking, Mind Over Matter, Common Thread) and some cassette tapes in the distance]

As promised, there’s a new batch of zines printed and available in V Revolution on Oldham Street in Manchester (UK). If you’re in the area and fancy browsing some records / zines / vegan foods, then pop in!

P.S: Sorry that posts have been a little sparse here lately; I’m working two jobs. I have a bunch of things to share with you soon though, including a call for submissions for issue #2!

Keep safe, x

[Image: A black and grey flyer featuring an eye with rays kind of coming out of it through a letter ‘V’. Text reads ‘V Revolution coming soon. Vegan lifestyle / vinyl records. Food, drink, clothing, punk, hardcore. 88 Oldham Street, Manchester M4 1LF. The Northern Quarter. www.facebook.com/vrevolutionuk]
As of next week, Mind Over Matter will be stocked in V Revolution in the Northern Quarter (Oldham Street) in Manchester (UK).  Currently this is the only shop apart from my own that you can get hold of the zine from.  If you’re round that way, go pick up a copy - It’ll save me a trip to the post office!
Thanks buds, x

[Image: A black and grey flyer featuring an eye with rays kind of coming out of it through a letter ‘V’. Text reads ‘V Revolution coming soon. Vegan lifestyle / vinyl records. Food, drink, clothing, punk, hardcore. 88 Oldham Street, Manchester M4 1LF. The Northern Quarter. www.facebook.com/vrevolutionuk]

As of next week, Mind Over Matter will be stocked in V Revolution in the Northern Quarter (Oldham Street) in Manchester (UK).  Currently this is the only shop apart from my own that you can get hold of the zine from.  If you’re round that way, go pick up a copy - It’ll save me a trip to the post office!

Thanks buds, x

[Trigger Warning: Discussion of sexual assault, ableism, violence, discrimination ]s.e. smith at xoJane: I Hide My Mental Illness

abstractosdreams:

Those stories in the news that I read every week remind me that outward expressions of mental illness can endanger me, and that having large numbers of people aware that I am mentally ill could also be dangerous to me.

Being mentally ill means that I am more likely to be shot by police. I am more likely to be raped or assaulted, and ignored when I file a report. I am more likely to be institutionalized, to be condemned as an unfit parent (if I wanted to parent), to be denied employment or fired because my workplace refuses to accommodate me. To be falsely convicted of a crime.

These are the things I think about when I tell myself I should stop fronting, the reminder that being mentally ill already means I have a target on my back. That the only thing saving me may be my ability to compartmentalize, to front like it’s going out of style, to convince everyone around me that everything is just fine.

Read More

Another part I’d like to quote:

We are rewarded for hiding ourselves. We become the poster children for “productive” mentally ill people, because we are so organized and together. The fact that we can function, at great cost to ourselves, is used to beat up the people who cannot function.

Because unlike the people who cannot front, or who fronted too hard and fell off the cliff, we are able to “keep it together,” whatever it takes.

(….)

It also means that in those rare venues where you feel like you can be yourself, you tend to become larger than life, more stagey, more exaggerated, because you spend so much time with your wings clipped.

I am tempestuous in emails to close friends, furious with the fire of my keyboard, letting out all my frustration and rage and pent emotions. It’s like turning on a fire hose at full pressure and expecting a toddler to hold it.

(Source: se-smith, via abstractosdreamos)

My dad is caring for a new young guy with psychosis. This chap lives alone and has had one Christmas card this year: from the healthcare company that employs my dad.

Lest we forget that the severely mentally ill are still often social pariahs. This festive season can often exacerbate feelings of loneliness in those on the fringes of society. Regardless of any religious beliefs you may or may not have, if someone you know is battling with mental illness, maybe take this time to reach out to them.

Keep safe and look after each other, x