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As a culture we locate the problem of "mental illness" exclusively in the individual, make it their responsibility, and try to wash our hands of it. In part, this is stigma - people are frightened - and in part it's an over-reliance on the medical model. The notion that there is something wrong with you that must be "fixed".
Everything we know about what helps people in emotional turmoil is that people, connection, acceptance and relationships help. Other people help.
Self help is devoid of other people.
For some, that's necessary. If you're anxious, fearful of others, if forming meaningful relationships is the problem, then help that doesn't involve others might be the only help you can access at first.
But for others, it's possible to almost develop an addiction to the self help section.
It's natural to want to understand ourselves, but that desire for an answer can turn into a fruitless, almost obsessive, search for the silver bullet that will finally make us happy.
And of course the search is due to the idea that there is something "wrong with us". What if there's nothing wrong? What if this constant drive for "self improvement" some people have, is actually the problem?
Real change starts with acceptance, not that there is something broken, but acceptance of who we are and why. It also needs connection. Ultimately I don't think it's possible to mange our lives without connections to others, it's certainly not possible to be happy or content without them.
Someone suggested to me the other day we need to change "self-help" to "other help". Maybe if we all focussed on helping each other as much as we focus on trying to fix ourselves, we wouldn't need all those books.
So next time you find yourself standing in the self help section, buy a novel instead. Preferably with a happy ending.
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