I spent a good part of the March break in Quebec City this year, and while I was there, I met a girl l have not been able to forget. While dancing with her one night, I glanced down, and I couldn’t fail to notice the raised pink scars lining the inside of her arm. Later I saw that her hips were also marked with the very same parallel ridges. I didn’t mention it, and neither did she. One look in her eyes, and I could tell she knew.
Only a few days later, I learned that one of my closest friends has been suffering with anorexia for months.
With all of these things happening at once, mental health (depression, eating disorders, schizophrenia) has definitely been on my mind. In this blog post, I’d like to take a look back into the history of mental health, and maybe even try to guess what lies ahead.
1800s Asylum |
From problems with the gods, to Prozac, the way society sees mental health has shifted drastically over the course of our history. Ancient peoples usually thought that mental illness came from the gods or demons. Charms, hexes, and ointments were seen as the best way to treat these problems. The only light in this dark age was the Greek Hippocrates who classified paranoia, epilepsy, mania and melancholia. In the middle ages, people who were mentally ill were believed to have demons inside them, and they were killed. Joan of Arc, the warrior maiden who liberated France from British occupation, heard voices inside her head that she believed were holy. The church inquisitors believed her to be possessed by a demon and she was burned at the stake.
From the Renaissance through to the late nineteenth century, confinement, institutionalization and torture were seen as the best treatment for deviants from society. Insane asylums were very profitable businesses at the time. Some owners would even let people pay a penny to see the patients being abused. Harsh treatments and restraints were seen as therapeutic. It was not until very recently that we started to try digging into the root cause and possible solutions to the widespread mental illness in our world.
Ashley Smith |
Psychoanalysis and prescription antidepressants now dominate the mental health landscape. The mental health facilities now are much different from the ones of the past, and far more effective. However, we still know little about these illnesses of the mind. Our treatments are far from perfect, as proved by the sad case of Ashley Smith who was in solitary confinement 23 hours a day at the Kitchener prison for women, and repeatedly choked herself with cloth strips. It seems clear that prison authorities had no idea how to help her. I hope that, in the future, we will have a good enough understanding of the brain to be able to identify and treat these diseases.
In the words of Cardinal Roger Mahoney, "Any society, any nation, is judged on the basis of how it treats its weakest members -- the last, the least, the littlest." Maybe one day, we will be able to say with pride that even those who are so ill that they can’t function in society are receiving the treatment they need. I hope that day is not too far off.
That's a sweet quote at the end, makes me think about the expression. A chain is only as strong as its weakest link, which has always been a very cool idea to me. You can eliminate the weak, or you can help the weak... in this day and age it is ridiculous to believe that we can just eliminate the weak and I am a strong advocate of equal rights and the study of mental health
ReplyDeleteI love, love, love this post. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteTo me, a mental illness is the worst disease a person can have. Unlike cancer which deteriorates your body, mental illnesses such as schizophrenia or depression deteriorate your mind. It angers me deeply when ignorant people can't fathom how serious mental health is. No people can't get over it, no people can't be cured from it, no it is not just to seek attention. People who are plagued with such a horrific disease are confined to it for the rest of their lives. It is truly unfortunate how some of society still treat patients like this as though they were of the renaissance era. Joan of Arc was 16 when she helped fend off the British. Yet what did the french do? Exactly as you said, claimed her to be a witch and burned her at the stake.
I just wish we can learn to progress with mental health and truly make it important in the lives of those who suffer.
I'm really glad you made a post about this! I think that people really need to start educating themselves on mental illnesses, and that society as a whole really needs to change it's attitude towards it. I find it to be one extreme or the other. Either people believe that your making it all up and you just need to get over it, or that you're absolutely insane and that you shouldn't be allowed to exist with "normal" people.
ReplyDeleteI think it's difficult too because every mental illness is unique to the person. Just because one person acts a certain way, doesn't mean that another person will just because they're diagnosed with the same thing.
ReplyDeleteWe definitely don't understand mental illness enough yet, even professionals. We're drugging people up so that they're happier, or can sit still, but these drugs tend to fog up people's thoughts, and sometimes people are a completely different person. Is the drug smothering who someone really is, or allowing someone's true personality to show? Plus we don't know about the long term effects of most of these drugs yet, either.
Yeah, I totally agree with you there. I don't know where I stand on drugs like that. On the one hand, I have seen them do so much good for people who would have difficulty functioning normally without them. Unfortunately, I have also seem them abused. It seems like no matter what your problem is, there's a pill you can take to make it go away.
DeleteIt also raises the question, are you still you if you're heavily medicated?