By Amy Wallace Sitting at my Gran’s house last Sunday, as we do on so many Sundays after taking her shopping or dropping various items off, and she comes out with: “Do you know my friend Janice? She’s got depression. Depressed people are SO selfish!” After that I stopped listening; Continue Reading
Keeping to Myself
By Anonymous A common fear I face is talking about almost anything to others, especially when it’s a sensitive topic. Even just asking where something is, or admitting that I actually don’t know what I’m doing. It’s so scary to me because I mentally run through situations and how they Continue Reading
All Emotions are Important
By Amysboarderlineworld All emotions are important. The good the bad and the ugly. Whether it’s joy and excitement or anger and frustration. All are important to feel and acknowledge. Having BPD this has always been tough for me. Really tough. BPD has meant that I have only ever wanted to show Continue Reading
My Story
By Ashley Phillips I spent 14 weeks in total in three different psychiatric hospitals from December 2016 after almost killing myself. I wanted to try and explain what was going on for me to my boys, aged six and ten. I wrote them this poem: The critical voice has a Continue Reading
I’m fine, help me.
By Anonymous I’ve been battling with mental health problems for six years now. Problems?? Why do they label us the ones with problems? We are just like everyone else just a little more fragile. No problem. I was diagnosed with PTSD, depression, anxiety, anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa when I Continue Reading
What’s the real cost to the NHS and society?
By Ashley Phillips With NICE currently recommending Clozapine and Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) for persisting (positive and negative) symptoms of psychosis and specifically art therapy for negative symptoms (NICE, 2014), why is there no access to proper art therapy or any real therapy in the NHS psychiatric hospitals apart from Continue Reading
20 Celebrities Talking About Their Mental Health (Part 2)
Part 1 can be found here Many people from all walks of life can suffer from mental illness. Stigma tells us a certain type of person is afflicted with it – this is simply not true If you enjoyed this article please share it using the buttons below…
Mental-health outreach, spiritual communities can work together
By Kimya N. Dennis It is estimated that one in four individuals and, therefore, one in four families are influenced by mental health conditions and experiences. There is a wide array of more temporary and more lasting mental health conditions. As is the case with physical health, mental health is Continue Reading
Running for my life
By Claire Coulthard Mental health has been part of my life since I was a little girl. To be honest, probably since the day I was born. My father was an addict. Alcohol being his drug of choice, forcing my family to break up when I was only three years Continue Reading
Back in the Saddle
By Karen Edwards I have already shared a little about my Postnatal Depression but it occurred to me that there was a point last year where I felt as though the cloud had lifted. This realisation has inspired me to share a different aspect of my own mental health battles, Continue Reading
What can we learn from the death of Chris Cornell?
By Alexis Morton In a newly-release statement released via attorney Kirk Pasich, Cornell’s family says they believe that “if Chris took his life, he did not know what he was doing, and that drugs or other substances may have affected his actions.” The statement adds: “Without the results of toxicology Continue Reading
A letter to my son about my mental health
By Amysboarderlineworld This is a letter to you my son. A letter about my mental health and our relationship. Dear Son, I have written down many things for you over the years, poems, notes, updates on your life but never a letter. I am writing to you today with a Continue Reading