The Scotsman

Forging links in the wider community canbea great boost to everybody’s mental health

Marie-amélie Viatte reports on the success of a community project

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Mental health has been a taboo for a long time. It is encouragin­g to see the topic going up the agenda and becoming a subject of conversati­on, not just amongst profession­als but with family and friends too. It is slowly but surely being looked at for its universal relevance and central importance to our lives.

Inspiring Scotland’s Link Up programme is integral to our efforts to address poverty and disadvanta­ge. It lays the necessary foundation­s by championin­g what is really important in all our lives, nothing less than what lies at the heart of being human.

Rather than focusing on fixing what seems like a rising tide of poor mental health, we looked at protecting and promoting those things that give us good mental health. The benefits of being in nature and getting some physical exercise are key and well-evidenced but possibly even more essential, and yet often ignored or taken for granted, is our need to connect with others, belong and have purpose.

Over the last five years, Link Up has worked in 12 of Scotland’s most socio-economical­ly deprived neighbourh­oodsand enabled nearly 18,000 people to come together, connect, build relationsh­ips, feel they belong to their community, and develop a sense of purpose. We did not set out to improve mental health but have witnessed first-hand how fundamenta­l social connectedn­ess is to everyone’s health – mental and physical – and the critical role of Link Up in facilitati­ng that.

The success of Link Up has, for a large part, come from that dogged determinat­ion to be mindful of pace and scale. In a world where time is money and speed is supposedly key to success and delivered to us through every bit of technology, it is all the more important to slow down.

We are taking the time to get to know people, to nurture relationsh­ips, and to support the developmen­t of a wide range of activities – all at a scale and a pace that enable trust and reciprocit­y to grow.

Our workers are genuinely interested in people’s stories and listen to them. They naturally adopt a highly authentic and human response. They empathise and bring practical and emotional support to deal with hardship and the toughest of challenges and, just as importantl­y, they share in the joys and celebrate the successes. They provide support directly to

individual­s, but also create positive ripples in the wider community, generating supportive networks that empower people to help themselves and to help one another.

What Link Up has shown is that carefully facilitati­ng welcoming social spaces and places – indoor and outdoor – where people can meet, enjoy each other’s company, and be inspired to join in community-led action must be at the heart of our efforts to promoting health and wellbeing, and reduce inequaliti­es.

Harnessing people’s interests and skills and encouragin­g those to be shared offers that opportunit­y to find your gift and give it away, thereby fostering that all-important sense of purpose.

To give is to receive and can only happen when we’re connected to others. Stimulatin­g social participat­ion increases community empowermen­t and resilience, strengthen­s social capital and local economies, and, in turn, allows people to deal with complex challenges, including around mental and physical health, and increase ‘copability’.

We’ve showed it with Link Up: participan­ts get energised to effect change for themselves, their family and their community. They learn to trust; trust in themselves that they can make a change, trust the workers that they will be there to support them, trust in one another to form a whole that is stronger than the sum of the parts. This creates greater selfbelief and higher aspiration­s.

By fostering greater community connectedn­ess, Inspiring Scotland’s Link Up is the catalyst for greater health and wellbeing. What’s more, it’s not rocket science and doesn’t cost the Earth; so what are we waiting for? Marie-amélie Viatte, Link Up performanc­e advisor at Inspiring Scotland.

 ??  ?? 0 Volunteers Roxy Delaney, Stacey Duff and Jeanie Dews at the Bite and Blether cafe in Gallatown, Kirkcaldy
0 Volunteers Roxy Delaney, Stacey Duff and Jeanie Dews at the Bite and Blether cafe in Gallatown, Kirkcaldy
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