đŻÂ Mental health stigma refers to the bad things that are associated with a mental health struggles.
For example, if you prefer to say you had a migraine or that you had thrown your back out, then mental health stigma affects you in some way.
Even if you do not personally judge someone for their mental health struggles, you are aware of the negative assumptions that can come along with it.
Emma Mamo, Head of Workplace Wellbeing at Mind, says that managers need to be proactive as well as reactive when it comes to mental health. So, donât just wait to see signs. Destigmatise from today with these simple attitudes and conversation starters.
Easy: Ask, âWhat makes you feel heard?â
Author and internet personality http://gsharma.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/JLR-1.png Hart grew up with a mother with psychosis. As an adult, she makes a habit of asking the people sheâs cares about â however their mental health appears â âWhat makes you feel heard?â.
Ask this question to each member of your team (and even people in your personal life). This question doesnât just provide you with insight. It sends the message that we could all have a difficult day one day where we need to be heard.
You wanna say something to me? by Su via Dribbble.
Intermediate: Make âmental healthâ a mainstay in your teamâs vocabulary
Mental health as a phrase can make people feel uncomfortable. Make sure you talk about how everyone has mental health and that it can change across short and long timescales.
The best way to do this is to model it. Talk about how your holiday was restorative for your mental health. Inspire others by talking about your vulnerabilities or where you felt a dip in your mental health. This is easier to do once a bad patch has passed, but you are pro level if you can talk about it while itâs happening!
Alternatively, ask people âwhat are you bottling up?â. This phrase is useful because, even though itâs a metaphor, we can physically identify with the feeling of keeping things inside ourselves and under pressure. Itâs a more comfortable question than, âhowâs your mental health?â and validates âeverydayâ pressures.
We have different answers to this question week-on-week, making it a great question to ask periodically.
Bottle up by Alexandru Purcarea via Dribbble.
Intermediate: Challenge negative comments or assumptions
Itâs evident that to reduce the stigma around mental health, we need to call out gossip, challenge phrases like, âsheâs crazy!â and stamp out comments that trivialize distress or a team member taking time out for their mental health.
â But we know that appealing to âpolitical correctnessâ rarely works.
â Instead, we need to intervene in a way that stokes empathy, opens dialogue and reminds everyone weâre all involved in mental health and taking care of one another.
Top things to say to challenge stigmatizing comments
- Compare the mental health issue to a physical health issue to point out dissonance
- Say, âI feelâŚâ. E.g. âI feel hurt that you made that association.â
- State facts that contradict what they are saying and paint a clearer view of an individual issue or mental health in general.
- Say, âYouâre talking about someone I care about/me right now.â
- Say, âYou say he is not normal. What is normal anyway?â
Pro: Grant permission to struggle
Coach, public speaker and founder of Breaking the Silence, David Beeney kept his mental health struggles secret for 30 years after his first panic attack aged 24.
After worrying about having panic attacks for three decades, he found something that improved his life exponentially. He now says to tell himself, before an interview or going on stage or a social event, âwell have one. Have a panic attackâ. He has accepted they are a possibility he can live with. Plus, the cost of not doing things out of fear is greater than the risk that something âbadâ might happen.
Give yourself and others permission to have a bad day, to feel down or anxious, without concealment. Youâll decrease the burden of keeping things a secret and worrying about possible outcomes while destigmatizing in the process.
The tricky part? You and your team have to believe it. And you have to accept being ambassadors for whatever you are going through!
đŹ What do you think?
What steps do you believe we need to take to remove the stigma around mental health?
đď¸ Your key takeaway
Most of us buy into the stigma around mental health even if we donât personally judge. Easily manageable steps to destigmatize mental health in your team include asking what makes people feel heard, challenging negative associations and putting mental health in your teamâs vocabulary.
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