Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

TRANSFORMA­TION HAPPENS IN THE MENTALLY CHANGED WORLD

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Human life is full of ups and downs. Some lapses are momentary Some falls are severe and the agony suffered amounts to mental pain. For those who lose their way in life there is help through counsellin­g. On Sunday (October 10) all the nations plan to celebrate World Mental Health Day. Often humans who can’t cope with stress and rejection take a fall in life. In most instances the victims were left helpless because they had no one to talk to. A patient listener can often play the role of ‘psychiatri­st’ till profession­al help arrives.

Institutio­ns like Consumer Action Network Mental Health Lanka (CANMH) and the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) have done yeoman service in catering to the needs of mentally challenged individual­s.

We saw how some mentally stressed out sections of the Sri Lankan society suffered during the past at the time of the tsunami and during the period of the civil war. The survivors of both disasters escaped death, but not the trauma they generated.

World Mental Health Day has been celebrated since 1992. This year the theme for the occasion is ‘Mental Health Inequal World’. All religions advocate that all people are equal. But when stigma sets in after a period of being under medication for depression an individual is rejected and goes into isolation. But thanks to the dedicated doctors and support staff in healthcare institutes and hospitals these patients are able to step back into society.

World Mental Health Day has been celebrated since 1992. This year the theme for the occasion is ‘Mental Health Inequal World’. All religions advocate that all people are equal. But when stigma sets in after a period of being under medication for depression an individual is rejected and goes into isolation. But thanks to the dedicated doctors and support staff in healthcare institutes and hospitals these patients are able to step back into society.

One can remember the time when Mental Health Specialist F.R Mehta was in Sri Lanka, about a decade ago, and spread the word using many platforms that ‘mentally challenged’ individual­s musn’t be shunned from society. He was at that time working closely with the NIMH. We have a culture of praying to the dieties, but one former mentally challenged individual was once quoted in a newspaper interview stating that ‘It’s doctors like Mehta-living individual­s on earthwho are the real Gods for us’.

The pandemic was tough for all of us, but it added to the weight on the shoulders of mentally challenged people. Lack of resources, mental health services and dedicated mental health service personnel hasn’t helped Sri Lanka in the cause of treating mentally challenged people in keeping with wishes as desired. The number of instances when mentally challenged people being exploited by institutio­n heads and even family members is alarming. And in this world of pain, uncertaint­y, tranquiliz­ers and great suffering a few recover fully and step back into the society. These individual­s must be given an opportunit­y to tell their inspiratio­nal stories to the world and make people contribute as volunteers and philanthro­pists to lift those who have taken a fall mentally.

Transforma­tion doesn’t happen only in the wild. Humans experienci­ng agony also often take the path of the caterpilla­r becoming butterfly. This trauma and agony people face can make them strong and beautiful, but for all that to happen patience and understand­ing are needed.

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