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anonymouswebuser

anonymouswebuser

edgy attention seeker
Feb 27, 2025
45
am I the only one who gets incredibly pissed at people who refuse to acknowledge mental illnesses?

I just had an argument with someone who insists that depression can be cured simply by traveling, socializing, or praying—without taking any real action—because they don't believe it's a real condition or something people genuinely SUFFER from
if it was that easy to recover, pretty much no one would've had to suffer from depression for years
they also claimed that seeing a psychiatrist is unnecessary since "they'll just give you medication that makes you fatigued" and that psychiatrists only make things worse

sure that last part is their opinion of psychiatrists, but they were responding to someone specifically ASKING for recommendations for a good psychiatrist meaning that person had ALREADY made the decision to seek help
why just completely crush the idea that maybe just maybe that person will genuinely get better if they seek someone?
I personally went to 4 different psychiatrists and overall I haven't improved but if someone asks me I won't just tell them to never ask for help just because I haven't seen any progress with myself
everyone has different experiences
but that person just kept insisting they don't and dismissed the entire existence of mental illnesses altogether
 
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Member
Aug 25, 2018
633
Enlightenment takes effort. It's a lot easier to double down on snap judgements and preconceived notions than it is to challenge them, especially if it's a third party doing the challenging.

For someone to deny the existence of mental illness is a sure sign that your mental energy will be wasted in arguing with them.

Try to maintain distance from people like this. If this isn't possible, then try to keep interactions on a superficial level. Only if this person is someone you love (and someone who loves you back) would it be worth trying to break through to them. But even then, it's going to take a long time -- denying mental illness altogether is a pretty low threshold to be starting from.

If you're a bystander to somebody being fed misinformation and you'd rather avoid arguing with the other person in the moment, just make a point to talk to them in private at a later time instead.
 
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citrusrope

citrusrope

Member
Feb 13, 2025
79
I feel like that goes for a lot of things not just mental health (Although mental health issues are a lot easier to dismiss because to a lot of people, the phrase "It's all in your head," is a pretty easy way to think about it. Kind of like a, if you don't see it physically in a visible to the eye way, then it must not be real, deal.)

But honestly, I used to have eczema and the amount of people who genuinely believed that if I were to just try putting on some lotion it would go away or whatever, was majority of everyone around me. Unless they in some very ironic turn of events also develop eczema (or in this case, get hit with a treatment-resistant mental health crisis), they just won't ever fuckin' get it cause they think that their experience is some sort of golden standard of this world.

Not to mention, I think a lot of people have the wrong idea as to what mental illness even is. A lot of non mentally ill people will conflate their experience of 'that one time I felt REALLY sad,' to equal the same thing as something like clinical depression. So it ends up being something like: Well I was able to get out of my depression and pull myself up out of being sad, why can't you? When in reality, what they probably experienced was just a one-off isolated experience of feeling depressed; not having depression.

I don't know if I articulated myself very clearly but yeah.
 
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Yonlux

Student
Jul 19, 2024
165
The culture of a society in overall, for example in Asia usually mental diseases is just ignored because they treat that as a weakness and their culture don't tolerate that, that in consequently results in more "tolerance" to not talk about this.
Other aspect especially in the occidental culture with predominance of Christian nations is natural treat mental diseases as "demons attacking" or "lack of God" and this not help to cure the disease scientifically and rationality what disturb to solve.
Summary, the ignorance caused by the culture that blind the value to combat against the problems that is the mental diseases.
 
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anonymouswebuser

anonymouswebuser

edgy attention seeker
Feb 27, 2025
45
Enlightenment takes effort. It's a lot easier to double down on snap judgements and preconceived notions than it is to challenge them, especially if it's a third party doing the challenging.

For someone to deny the existence of mental illness is a sure sign that your mental energy will be wasted in arguing with them.

Try to maintain distance from people like this. If this isn't possible, then try to keep interactions on a superficial level. Only if this person is someone you love (and someone who loves you back) would it be worth trying to break through to them. But even then, it's going to take a long time -- denying mental illness altogether is a pretty low threshold to be starting from.

If you're a bystander to somebody being fed misinformation and you'd rather avoid arguing with the other person in the moment, just make a point to talk to them in private at a later time instead.
I had to realize that after calming down since I wasn't really gentle with my speech while talking to that person and I was just purely angry.
Thankfully, No that's not a person I have to interact with every day and it's not a person I love or who loves me either so I'll just have to stay away.
 
Lost Magic

Lost Magic

Illuminated
May 5, 2020
3,194
Yeah, they call it the invisible illness. Society is also losing empathy for people with any kind of illness, especially people with mental illnesses. It's so sad.
 
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