Mentally ill and ‘out' but not yet embraced
Mentally ill and ‘out' but not yet embraced
erin anderssen
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
Published Friday, Jan. 13, 2012 5:15PM EST
Last updated Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012 11:19AM EST
erin anderssen
From Saturday's Globe and Mail
Published Friday, Jan. 13, 2012 5:15PM EST
Last updated Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012 11:19AM EST
Michael Kimber's
blog began about two years ago, as a love letter to the girl who stuck with him
through his lowest days. In Colony of Losers, he writes how one morning in
November, 2009, at the age of 25, he woke up in his Halifax apartment stricken
by anxiety so severe he could hardly get out of bed, how his parents paid for a
therapist when he was put on a six-month waiting list, how in his wide-ranging
search for a cure he tried mood-boosting almonds, happy-themed YouTube videos,
mindful mediation and finally antidepressants.
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And at the end of all this, he started writing a blog. On
March 28, 2010, he lost his not-dream job as a “search engine optimizer,” and
nearly the girl as well, but the medication had started to work, and he was
sleeping again. This was the day, as he puts it, when he realized, “No one
could save me. I had to save myself.”
By June, he was writing openly about his experience with
anxiety and depression. Today, his irreverent, expletive-splattered blog is
verging on one million hits and, now living in Toronto and working for a
documentary film company, he has signed with a literary agent.
He also receives 3 a.m. e-mails from people hoping he will
talk them out of committing suicide. Strangers, learning of his blog, spill
their darkest secrets as carelessly as wine at a party – or throw unsolicited
advice in his face. He has even heard from a former teacher who kept her own
bout with mental illness secret for fear of losing her job. He knows others who
haven't told even their own families.
By “coming out,” as Mr. Kimber calls it, he is daring people
to judge, hoping to force understanding through confession – he is the modern
incarnation of the early mental-health advocates who began coming out
themselves in the 1980s, when the closet was crowded. Like those early voices,
storytellers such as Mr. Kimber may be the best hope of reducing the enduring
stigma that people with mental illness are afflicted with.
Not much else appears to be working. Stigma is a term bandied
around so often that it has taken on the quality of an incurable disease in its
own right.
In 1963, Canadian psychiatrist Erving Goffman wrote a classic
definition of stigma, calling it the “spoiled identity” that disqualifies an
individual from full social acceptance. There are undeniable issues that develop
from a diagnosis of mental illness, especially when symptoms are acute and
untreated: People suffering from depression and anxiety have, unsurprisingly,
higher rates of absenteeism from work, are more likely to self-medicate with
drugs and alcohol. In the manic stage, people with bipolar disorder often
behave erratically, experience delusions, or make reckless financial decisions.
When Vincent Li beheaded a stranger on a Greyhound bus in Manitoba in 2008, his
diagnosis of schizophrenia – and the media frenzy his gruesome act generated –
only heightened a public fear of people suffering with psychosis.
But part of the tragedy is that the stigma itself prevents
people from seeking out the treatment they need. Yet the longer treatment is
delayed – and the more isolated people feel – the harder recovery becomes, a
problem made worse by growing waiting lists and bed shortages for psychiatric
patients. In Vincent Li's case, for instance, his ex-wife reportedly refused to
get help for him, in part, out of concern about how he would be treated, and a
lack of understanding about his illness.
Studies in Canada and internationally have shown that
attitudes and behaviour toward people suffering from depression and bipolar
disorder, and, especially, schizophrenia, have barely budged in the past
decade.
In some cases, public awareness efforts may have even
entrenched certain misconceptions – stressing the genetic and biological causes
of mental illness has also shored up the false belief that that it cannot be
successfully treated, and that even patients in recovery cannot be competent
employees or reliable tenants. The term “mental illness” has become a
misleading catch-all for a range of complex and very different illnesses and
disorders. And the most pernicious misconception of all shows little sign of
retreat: that the majority of people with mental illness are prone to violence.
In fact, they are far more likely to be victims of violence,
or a danger to themselves. And while people with untreated schizophrenia have a
higher risk of violence than the population as a whole, these cases are
extremely rare, and crimes against strangers are even more so.
Facts aside, and even though one in five Canadians will
experience a mental illness, our phobias are firmly entrenched: In a 2008
national survey commissioned by the Canadian Medical Association, one in four
Canadians said they would be fearful about being around someone with a serious
mental illness. More than half said they would be unlikely to marry someone (or
hire a lawyer, child-care provider or financial planner, family doctor, or even
a landscaper) with a mental illness.
“There is really very little evidence that there has been a
change in the attitudes toward people with mental illness,” says Ross Norman, a
University of Western Ontario psychology professor who studies the nature of
stigma. Research on stigma, in general, has suggested that it originates from a
sense that the individual is personally responsible for his or her situation –
so in the past decade, for instance, anti-stigma campaigns have stressed the
biological and hereditary factors behind mental illness. Subsequent research
shows that while people believed the science, it didn't do much to change their
attitudes, and if anything it shored up the belief that mental illness was an
intractable and unpredictable condition, that, as Dr. Ross puts it, “there was
something wrong with their brains.”
That's where people like Mr. Kimber, and other well-spoken,
professional people come in, Dr. Ross suggests, by countering stereotypes and
creating positive role models. “It's probably one of the best ways of making a
difference,” he says.
People within Canada's mental-health community, including
patients themselves and family members who had watched loved ones become lost
in the system, began speaking out in the 1980s. Many went on to play key roles
in the organizations that now advocate for better treatment and funding. Among
those early spokespeople was June Conway Beeby, in Kingston, Ont., who began
telling the tragic story of her son who committed suicide in 1981 after a long
history with schizophrenia.
“I wasn't going to hide what happened to Matthew,” she says.
“I wanted people to know that he had a terrible illness, and how we received
very poor treatment, very little treatment at all, in fact.” Friends and family
assumed that her son had been on drugs, that he was the victim of a deal gone
wrong. People stopped talking when she passed by at work, or they avoided her
completely. “I can make sure the world knows what happened to my precious boy,”
she thought, and she began giving speeches and speaking out in the media. She
didn't spare the details: She found her son in his apartment, lying in a pool
of blood with dinner knives plunged through his eyes where he had pounded them
into his brain. “Now you know where my efforts come from,” she says.
For her, the stigma is slow in changing – the education
campaigns often miss the point.
“Prevention is a mug's game,” she says. By her reasoning, the
surest way to fight stigma is to improve access to treatment and hospital beds,
especially for more severe cases of mental illness. Every act of violence
highlighted in the media, she points out, sets back any effort to educate the
public. “Why wouldn't they feel stigma and fear?”
Political correctness can teach the right language, but how
deeply does it change attitudes?
For a decades, Andrea Schluter, now a 47-year-old natural
history painter in Vancouver, tried to keep her depression quiet. A graduate
student in wildlife biology, she knew all too well what her peers in the field
thought: “They equated depression with cowardice, particularly if you were
suicidal.”
In the 1990s, she was admitted to hospital in a manic state,
and felt she had to write about it publicly: “I recall the realization that I
had been thrown, violently, into another world,” she explains. “And I knew,
with every cell in my body carrying the genetic set-up for this sickness of the
mind, that I would need to find a way to live in that world.”
She wrote a then-rare article for The Globe and Mail's Facts
and Arguments page, boldly describing the reactions, both insulting and
carelessly hurtful, of the people around her. “I just thought, ‘Hang the
consequences,' ” she says. “I couldn't believe how unenlightened people were.”
Her outspoken approach led to a job speaking about workplace
accommodation from a first-person perspective.
She feels any stigma about her disease less today. Her fierce
openness forces people either to accept her or slip out of her life, she says.
But once in a while, she realizes her friends may not be as enlightened as she
hopes. She recalls a conversation at a dinner party, in which a friend was
critical about a new transition house for psychiatric patients being built
nearby: What kind of “mentals” would this bring to the neighbourhood? Ms.
Schluter pointed out that she herself had stayed in this kind of housing in the
past, and, when the woman refused to back down, she left the party.
“I guess she was so irate, she wasn't picking up on what I
was saying,” she recalls “There were at least eight other friends in this group
sitting around that table. And nobody spoke up.”
Meanwhile, as Mr. Kimber's blog continues to draw attention,
he is using it as a vehicle to urge other people to share their stories. As he
writes, “You have to make the effort to make the world understand. We don't
need any more inspiring stories about instant cures and celebrities defeating
all the obstacles. We need to redefine what a happy ending is.”
Erin Anderssen is a Globe and Mail feature writer.
Related Links:
Michael Kimber's blog, Colony of Losers
A video telling Michael Kimber's story: The Cure Visual Poem
Another Michael Kimber video: Come Out, Come Out, Wherever
You Are
From ‘evil' to ‘mentally ill' in the media
Newspaper stories don't toss around the word “evil” any more
to describe people who commit crimes. Instead, as a McGill researcher has found
in analyzing five years of Canadian media coverage, readers are more likely to
see the phrase “mentally ill” linked to a crime story, especially the most
sensational ones.
“In the old days, we would have said an evil person was on
the loose, and now people just say a mentally ill person is on the loose,” says
Robert Whitley, a psychiatrist at the Douglas Mental Health University
Institute. “The moral language has been replaced with this medical language.
Now [people with a mental illness] seem to be a shorthand way to describe any
person or event that is shocking or depraved.”
Dr. Whitley led a team of researchers who analyzed nearly
9,000 articles from Canadian newspapers, as well as television news. He says
the research, which is yet to be published, found that only 12 per cent of the
stories took an optimistic or positive tone about mental health. Another 29 per
cent used derogatory language to refer to people with a mental illness; Dr.
Whitley cites an editorial on courthouse security, for instance, that referred
to “the mentally ill” as “nasty characters.” Nearly 40 per cent of the print
stories related to violence and criminality, and treatment or recovery was
discussed in less than 20 per cent.
But Dr. Whitley says the most surprising finding was the lack
of voices in the stories – both in print and TV. Three-quarters of the articles
did not quote a mental-health expert, and 84 per cent didn't include a comment
from a person with a mental illness. “You wouldn't write an article about
hockey without interviewing a player or manager or Don Cherry,” he observed.
If the media are the main source of information about mental
illness, Dr. Whitley suggests, then current coverage feeds into many persistent
misconceptions.
“There is still a skepticism that people with mental illness
can be rational and good at their jobs and be a good parent.”
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