Fighting mental illness stigmas (Part 4 of 4)

| Image: "Shine In Your Crazy Diamond," by Marco Antonio Gutierrez Hurtado | Source: Flickr | Rights: (CC BY-SA 2.0) |


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"The wound is the place where the Light enters you." - Jalaluddin Rumi


A Conclusion of Sorts

This is Part 4 of a four-part series about fighting mental health stigma.

You can read my initial Twitter response to depression skeptic Andrew Tate here, which includes links to a number of articles and scientific studies on American suicide statistics and the physical evidence of depression; my follow-up response on the mental health issues facing the 9/11 first responders here; and finally, my thread on the scientific literature researching the relationship between inflammation and depression here. Here are also some links to the Wikipedia articles on depression and mental illness.

In Part 3, I showed how Tate misleads his followers with fake evidence. By promoting magical thinking, he dismisses the very real medical problem of depression.

You don't have to be a victim. Healing is possible, and we know this because the scientific method works, not because someone on the Internet says so. And the method shows that depression is real, measurable, and attributable to much suffering around the globe.

As I said in Part 2, I'm not asking anyone to trust me, I'm not asking people to hate Tate, and I'm not advocating for certain mental health treatments. That is between the individual and their support network. In Part 1, I showed how mental illness stigma can keep people from getting the help they need.

My quarrel is not with Tate, but the digital rage machine that dehumanizes us all. I wrote about this idea in a previous Steemit post. I have no desire to be further drawn into the spectacle of its antics.

Thank you for reading,

Josh


For lists of international suicide prevention hotlines, you can click here, here, here, and here.

For guides on responsible media reporting about suicide, click here, here, and here.


Series Navigation: Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4**


Further Reading


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Josh Peterson is a 2016 Robert Novak Journalism Program Fellow and a writer living in Denver, CO.
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