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Jan
3rd
2012

Link
mental illness - a tangent on context in the motherland »

Thanks to Bipolar Bear for sharing these words, and these parts of your story: 

thestoryofabipolarbear:

Brown people and their ignorance towards mental illnesses.

This also goes for Muslims Desis.

I will never understand why it’s a shame to be mentally ill.

I don’t get why they feel depression isn’t real and it’s a jinn or something devil-like.

I don’t get why they can’t accept their depression and mental illness and get fucking treatment.

Most of them…(http://thestoryofabipolarbear.tumblr.com/post/13528514672/brown-people-and-their-ignorance-towards-mental)

Thanks for this. read it twice. made me reflect. I’m listening, thinkging.

In addition, it made me reflect just a bit on one tangent (recognizing that I totally can’t speak to your specific experience, and am reflecting more broadly on mental health in all its various incarnations and expressions);

I think brown people’s reactions and dealings with mental illness in the diaspora, denial is certainly an element.

I’d also like to integrate my own witnessing of using this (ultimately unhelpful) approach of downplaying mental illness as tied in some ways to the brown person hustle; “back home” those of us from places of daily violence/civil war, etc, etc, and actively underdeveloped/privatized health systems, integrating mental illness into daily life, into banal retellings of family history (“oh, that’s just unpredictable uncle Pappu who talks to trees”) is, in part, a (limited problematic) way of coping amidst overwhelming poverty of resources. Its not okay, its not helpful, and it can/will/is changing. 

  • Reblogged 4 months ago from thestoryofabipolarbear
  • 14 notes
Tagged: desi, diaspora, mental illness, my words, .
  1. keslie-stone reblogged this from thestoryofabipolarbear
  2. bipolartreatmentcenters reblogged this from thestoryofabipolarbear
  3. mycrazytruth reblogged this from thestoryofabipolarbear and added:
    see this in my extended family, and...hate it. My parents are thankfully not like this —...
  4. savantesyndrome reblogged this from thestoryofabipolarbear and added:
    Man, the fucking truth right here. Probably...back in counseling.
  5. brownpeople reblogged this from thestoryofabipolarbear and added:
    Bipolar Bear for sharing these words,...these parts of your story:...
  6. teddymonster08 liked this
  7. wanderndwonder liked this
  8. nerdyandshameless liked this
  9. bip0larparade said: My dad’s side of the family are hardened Catholics who believe in hard work, never complaining, and going to Church. To them, emotions don’t exist. My dad and his mum are most likely bipolar but have hidden it. And I’m seen as weak, a failure. xxx
  10. dreamsoftheosakasun liked this
  11. nouveauarabe liked this
  12. doyouevenknowwhoyouare420 reblogged this from thestoryofabipolarbear and added:
    as ignorant, no difference.
  13. toooties reblogged this from thestoryofabipolarbear
  14. c4rpe--diem liked this
  15. antesdachuva liked this
  16. thestoryofabipolarbear posted this
desi people
[BROWN. WE ARE ALL THINGS. WE ARE MANY THINGS.]

i am a desi diaspora chick interested in people and their browness in various forms (especially those that might deviate in different ways from the slick bollywood images that i/we regularly consume)

browness is a fluid term used by many in many different ways. i generally use it as we did growing up; desi peeps
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