Mental Health Counseling
Mental Health > Mental Health Counseling
Mental health counseling saved my life. They (the three counselors over six years) saved my mentality, my sanity, which saved my physicality, my life. I’m telling you this because it is important to know that there is absolutely no shame in needing, contacting, using, and benefiting from mental health counseling and mental health service providers. In fact, if you can crawl through the fear or undeserved shame you might be experiencing, you will be relieved that the refrigerator of mental agony has been lifted.
Do not be daunted by the pamphlet or online descriptions. Some mental health counseling facilities might define their offerings as intended for “persons with serious mental illnesses”, and this might cause you to reflect back to when having a mental problem was unacceptable, untreatable without institutionalization, or unmanageable without heavy sedatives that made people even more unfit for social interaction than they were thought to be.
That was then. Then, the negative stigma attached to mental health counseling (found mostly in mental institutions) might have been earned, as the system defined counseling in terms that included drugs like Thorazine that were forced on patients (who were forcibly institutionalized for any number of problems—addictive, behavioral, and other non-psychotic states); that included shock therapy as a knee-jerk response to tears and cries for help, and that made homesteads with difficult or troubled teens heard to emit gross generalizations and threats of how if the offending person didn’t “behave”, he/she would be locked up (in a “nut house”).
“What are you, mental?” was a favorite in my household, and they didn’t mean I was mentally superior, was overusing my mental capaciousness, or was especially gifted—though with the mental health counseling I have had over the last six years I would wager they did mean I was mentally beyond what they could comprehend.
Before my time, in other homes, housewives were compelled to wash down their problems with cocktails of pink and yellow pills and green martinis, rather than suffer the recriminatory scoffs. Before their time, women who refused to be socially controlled by misogyny were not considered justified for their resistance measures, were not even given an opportunity for legitimate mental health counseling if they truly needed it, but were instead considered merely hysterical (thanks to Freud, who coined the word from the Latin word, hyster, womb) and tossed into looney bins.
But rest assured, the days of Francis Farmer and Susanna Kaysen (Girl, Interrupted) are behind us, and girl power (and boy power) are equalized and acknowledged, regardless of how deep our needs for mental health counseling—which are, by the way, available in online, listed in phone books under state services, and in counties and boroughs and townships worldwide. And they are saving lives, daily.