A Horseradish
Tuesday 6th October 2015 8:52pm [Edited]
8,475 posts
Quote: TheBlueNun @ 4th October 2015, 9:13 PM BST
I've been involved in the organisation of a Mental Health seminar at work and comedian Juliette Burton is appearing to discuss her experiences. It got me thinking, Stephen Fry has spoken publicly about his bipolar disorder; Paul Merton was in The Maudsley and Ruby Wax checked herself into The Priory. Past stars have experienced MH issues too, examples of which are Spike Milligan, Kenneth Williams and Tony Hancock, the latter two ended up committing suicide. Countless other comedians have sought solace in drink and drugs.
I must admit that I'm truly fascinated by the link. Does creativity always equal MH issues, or is it just a skewed way of viewing the world?
This is a significant thread for which thanks.
Society's norms change from decade to decade. The gap between an individual and an ability to accept those norms is essentially where ill health resides. For many, there is a big gap in the first place and it gets wider.
I don't think that adaptation is the answer because it is expecting too much. Far better, I think, to encourage an individual to regard most of society as basically unwell to the point of mad - which isn't difficult given the evidence - and to slot in to people or small groups of people who make some sort of sense. The problem is that society itself insists that it is ultra well - politics, economics, psychology, media - and that can be an overwhelming sort of power for people just trying to get by. But it is the system that is always in denial.
Cheers!
Footnote - Comedy works because it is an oblique or distorted view on all of the above so it can be a shield. I will give you just one example of what I am talking about here. I've spoken to two taxi drivers recently. Both were Kurds and one had been studying linguistics in Bangor. Society rates this sort of thing very highly. I'm sorry but there is no way on earth that I could ever have left my family and friends and gone and worked in Kurdistan or even Kettering for the long haul. But that does mean having to make sacrifices too sometimes.