• Emi
    link
    fedilink
    41 year ago

    It’s okay to not be okay, no healthy person is happy all the time. Emotions have meaning and are human.

    What’s more, if you are living in a place where your human rights are under attack it is those that aren’t profoundly disturbed by that who are abnormal and unhealthy.

    • @nothingcorporateOP
      link
      31 year ago

      Agreed, shit’s outrageous. Normalize being outraged. 🤘

  • @nothingcorporateOP
    link
    41 year ago

    Quote by: Jiddu Krishnamurti

    Comic by: @revoltinstrips on Twitter/Insta

    • @JoeKrogan
      link
      31 year ago

      I have the awakening of intelligence on my bedside table. One of the best books I have ever read.

  • bermuda
    link
    fedilink
    21 year ago

    I feel bad for whoever made this comic. Clearly they haven’t been having a good time with therapy. I’ve been going for a few months now and I’ve gained a lot of insight into myself. Each to their own, though.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      21 year ago

      Yeah, I’m not fond of the anti-therapy/psychiatry bent a lot of leftists take. Therapy and psychiatry can be enormously helpful and would be necessary in any world. Capitalism contributes to mental health problems, but I personally would still be profoundly mentally ill even in a socialist utopia.

      • bermuda
        link
        fedilink
        21 year ago

        yeah therapy and psychiatry end up being what you make of it in the end. If you don’t find it helpful that doesn’t necessarily make it bad as a generalization, it’s just that it didn’t work for you.

    • @unfreeradical
      link
      1
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      Therapy may be helpful of course, but the criticisms are also broadly valid.

      Psychotherapy tends to address certain subjective experiences, mostly ones born largely of alienation under liberal society, including the demand to separate the personal from the public, and other structural problems, even while it remains powerless to change experience as comprehensively as would be possible only by resolving their structural antecedents.

      In addition often to shifting responsibility to the individual for social problems, therapy is often framed as a panacea, rather than being recognized merely as helping some individuals with certain problems under particular circumstances.

      Therapy works best for someone who is burdened minimally by genuine hardship, but still feeling distressed.

      Unfortunately, most living currently are burdened by various kinds of material and social hardship.