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mental health: more coherent directions?
Some further thoughts along these lines, stemming from our discussion last week having to do with "normative reality," "the world is social," and we are a part of the environment people need (want?) to adapt to ...
Do people "need" to adapt to particular "social" worlds? Is it the business of mental health to help/encourage them to do so? There are lots of pretty horrendous examples of problems with this approach, not only in other countries (psychiatric institutionalization in the USSR, for example) but in the US as well (homosexuality, lobotomies, ambiguous sexuality, to mention a few). I, for one, am less comfortable with a mental health approach that uses the ability to deal with "normative" reality" (or "tea kettle" reality) as a goal and more comfortable with one that uses, instead, enhancing the ability of individuals to conceive and revise their own individual stories. This leaves room not only for acknowledging "neurodiversity and its value," but, more explicitly, for including within the mandate for mental health professionals changes not only in individuals but also in cultures. My guess is that more attention needs to be paid not ony to the role of stories in mental health issues but also, in particular, to the problem of conflicts between individual and social/cultural stories, and our tendency to automatically give priority to the latter.
And some further thoughts about more general patterns coming from thinking about depression and schioprenia, together with Tourette's and migraine. One sees, in all four cases