World Mental Health Day 2015

Published on

World Mental Health Day is on 10 October. The theme this year is Dignity; dignity around how we treat people with mental health problems and ensuring that they can live with dignity.

Mental health problems are invisible which make them more difficult for others to appreciate and understand. At the same time, because we find our sense of self in our thoughts, our state of mental health goes to the very heart of who/what we are – it is much easier to distance oneself from a damaged leg than it is from a damaged state of mental health. This makes the issue of dignity so very important.

We can all play our part. There is the language we use and is used around us – “mad”, “nutter”, “psycho” and many more. I always find it ironic that “psycho” is a term of abuse when you think about its derivation – would we call someone “cancer” or “diabetic” as a term of abuse? But as important as our language is our willingness and ability to talk to someone about how they are. It is just a conversation. Showing someone suffering from mental health problems that you understand they are suffering and that you are OK with talking about it will be so helpful to them.

Related Articles

Have you asked your employees what they want?

One of the pleasures of the last few weeks has been finding the time to speak to clients about what is happening with their businesses. I don’t know exa...

Lockdown must do #5: resolving problems well - We Can Work It Out (The Beatles)

The final part of the series on what my Cov 19 playlist has to say about thriving in tough times, I’m going to focus on making sure our key relationship...

Connection: it's the quality that counts

The situation that we find ourselves in right now has taught me a thing or two about isolation and about connection. Since these restrictive measures ha...

Forbes: Tackling loneliness in remote working

Our expert Amanda Okill tells Forbes what actions organisations and individuals can take.