I burdened myself with this belief of a “summer body” until I realised that my “summer body” is basically just my body in the sunshine. And I used to hate how heavy footed I felt until little by little I learnt to love the sound of my feet walking away from things never meant for me. Until one foot in front of the other lead to the thought that faded footprints was not what I wished for. That tip toeing those treacherous tracks on my to-dos would only mark mundanity whilst I wanted to make one of magic, to smear spontaneity with my soles. And what changed? What changed was that I decided I deserved better than my diagnosis. That I am worth more than my weight and worth more than second thoughts and maybes. That all we have is now. That nothing changes if nothing changes. That old ways won’t open new doors. All that jazz. All the cliche quotes. That circling around the same square of cornered concepts will only have you in a harangued headspace of hullabaloo and hating the world within and without you. I twigged that my type of body is basically myself. That what I aspired for in all this anorexia this and anorexia that and the riled rendezvous and mind races with it was really to be the best version of myself that I can possibly be. And that does not come from the ruination of the work of art that your beautiful body is. And nor does that unfold from what iffing your whims in place of why the eff notting. It came from the metamorphosis of my mind. Through unearthing that I am okay just as I am. Through the taking of two steps into how to make all this sh•• that I kept shutting off, shutting out and sh**ting all over actually happen:
* (1) BELIEVE
* {2} BEGIN
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This is a montage from a collection of work that we created for NAMI Utah’s (National Alliance on Mental Illness), Hope for Tomorrow Program. We collaborated and worked closely with them to create short films, that will be played in schools around the state focusing on mood disorders, substance abuse, eating disorders, and suicide prevention.
Mental illness affects one in four individuals across the U.S. and suicide is horribly, on the rise in our own state. Please share this montage with others. Begin the conversation on mental illness and suicide prevention. Together we can make a difference. As the NAMI program states, “there is Hope for Tomorrow.“
To know more about NAMI Utah and the Hope for Tomorrow program, please visit www.namiut.org.
Directed by: Amber Watkins-Olpin
Filmed by: Chris Olpin
Edited by: Chris Olpin and Amber Watkins-Olpin
Having a Skills Toolbox
Navigating a world that often feels cold, insensitive, and unaccepting of mental illness is lifelong work, a healing journey with ups and downs that has no end. As a highly sensitive person who has lived with anxiety/depression/OCD/ADHD since childhood, struggled with self-harm, substance abuse, and eating disorders, and is a rape and domestic abuse survivor, I have sought out many forms of therapy over my lifetime, both traditional and alternative.
One concept that I became familiar with in Dialectal Behavioral Therapy (DBT) is having a toolbox. Every individual’s toolbox looks different and will evolve over time. It is essentially a list of our skills and techniques for emotional regulation, distress tolerance, mindfulness, and interpersonal effectiveness. I would like to share some of my go-to tools for self-soothing and traversing times of heightened anxiety/the unknown:
My Parents Are Sick
One in five adults live with mental illness
You’ve spent your childhood watching your mother or father struggle with anxiety, depression or obsessive-compulsive disorder. You can’t remember if you put the cuts on your arms or if it was something they did. Everything may be going smoothly and suddenly, you find yourself furious, panicky or tearful and you don’t know why. They never noticed the cuts. Your life is often filled with anxiety, uncertainty, and vigilance. You don’t let your father see you cry when his anger breaks your jewelry box; the gift you cherished that he gave you only two months ago. You were plagued by loneliness, vulnerability, and helplessness. You felt unwanted, abandoned, and lost.
I was convinced no one would believe me, so I hid my chaotic home life from everyone. I was the family mediator, calming down a frightened father and comforting a sad, lonely mother. I convinced myself I was defective or different from other kids. When I was in school, instead of paying attention to my teachers, I’d spend all day worrying about how my mom was doing.
I lived in a permanent state of hyper-vigilance, constantly attuned to my father’s erratic moods and my mother’s helplessness. I chose to stay close to my emotionally unavailable, controlling partners and swallowed my needs to gain their approval. I wish I was beaten. I’d feel more legitimate. Who cares about me? Doesn’t anyone notice? I felt angry. I felt scared. The problem is no one can see my scars. I feel like if I told someone I was verbally abused, they’d think I was just complaining about being yelled at. If I’d been a better daughter my mother wouldn’t have been so sick. If I’d been a better son my mother wouldn’t have been so sick. All I knew was my grandparents were telling me that mum’s sick and dad was telling me that mum’s sick and I was confused, because she didn’t look sick to me.
I need positive feedback
Trauma and betrayal.
Staying out of the way, and staying safe.
Growing myself up.
I found myself in a paralyzing depression. I was suffering from complex posttraumatic stress disorder. There’s nobody in this world who loves me … I don’t have a mother’s love or a father’s love, or, family love… so it wouldn’t matter if I disappeared off the face of the earth.
My mother stopped sleeping when I went to college. Maybe it was my father’s heart attacks, maybe it was me. She’s been withering since. My familial environment was terrifying, and the chronic nature of this negativity exacerbated the effects of the neglect and abuse I endured. I found myself constantly trying to fix him. When I’m asleep and my roommate burns her grilled cheese at two in the morning my heart races as the smoke detector beeps. It takes everything in me to stop the panic building. The tears escape anyway. Growing up with dad, I never felt secure… and I know that I have always been anxious, my whole life. I feared to pass on the illness to a future generation. I’m scared to have kids. What if I treat them the same way my parents treated me? What if I don’t get well enough to care for them?
These were necessary behaviors when I was young, but they aren’t vital for my survival anymore. You can identify and stop participating in abusive relationship dynamics. Try to engage with people who make you feel safe and respected, who listen well and are emotionally available. I can be my own person. Thank your shame for protecting you and ask it to please step back. Your childhood was not your fault. It was ok to put some distance between me and my mother, even though I loved her. I named, validated and felt the sadness in my body as I gave myself compassion. I took a walk through the park and looked at nature. I felt better. It fostered empathy, compassion, and resilience. You had terrible role modeling from your mother. You had terrible role modeling from your father.
I will not inherit my mother’s pain. I will not inherit my father’s fear. She never showed you that we can learn to control our impulses. So I’m worth saving? I’m not irredeemably bad? I will always have ups and downs and have to manage fears and the damage that will always be there, but now I accept it and work with it. I can thank my parents for everything they have done for me. But I no longer owe them anything. I will grow strong. I will get better. I will be happy. And I will remember:
I cannot heal my parents.
This is a Found Essay, meaning that I pulled lines from different essays on NAMI and incorperated them with my own experience wot create a creative Non- Fiction piece.
The mental health industry NEEDS to improve. I heard about NAMI after 3 incidents with the mental health industry, and the struggle that it put me through. I hope that by using art and writing from a first hand account, change can happen.
It seems to be a taboo to talk about anxiety, depression, and what is a normal way to act. I assert that speaking out about it is critical to putting a human face on a broad term and ultimately saving each other.
There must be a healthier middle ground between suicide and quieting revolutionary brilliance. I am driven to spread awareness and to bring about that middle ground.
Those who experience a change in their mindset need to be encouraged to explore these thoughts in a peaceful place surrounded by nature. Patients can NOT be locked in a white room and threatened to be removed from their family for a longer time IF they speak their minds about a new world they envision for themselves and the nation.
It is not easy to speak out about this issue, so possibly at least one person may see that those who have been caught up in this system have something extremely valuable to say and express, and they are NOT just crazy.
This drawing is a relic from that time of my life, shortly before being locked up. DO NOT FOLLOW the path designed by an elite group that discourages critical thinking, and speaking out about a world that benefits a few, and hinders the true expression of the many.
I hope to never go there [MENTAL HOSPITALS] again because of the lack of communication and the serious under-funding of the mental health industry. The hospitals give everyone who is misunderstood a huge risk of slipping in beneath the cracks, and being over-medicated, especially those who wish to communicate humanity’s wonders.
-Andrew Kaminski, 2016
Mental Health and Me
Eating disorders have been affecting me since the age of 15. It started out as anorexic type behaviors and rituals, but within a year it turned into bulimia nervosa. I tried group counseling in college but found that I was just learning new ways to do the same thing. By the age of 22 I was diagnosed with severe depression and prescribed medication which I was told I would probably have to remain on for the rest of my life. Occasionally I went through periods of going to counseling services.
After the birth of my child at the age of 30, I did decide that I really needed to get some help with my bulimia, depression and many others problems that are associated with eating disorders. Since then, I have been in two partial inpatient programs, two outpatient programs and voluntarily committed myself on four separate occasions. Upon release from my inpatient facilities I would be referred to doctors and therapists to continue treatment.
The problem that I have experienced is the fact that my diagnosis seems to be different from doctor to doctor. I don’t understand how this can be that way since I have consistently told each and every doctor. I have seen that I have eating disorders. If one would look through my medical records, it would appear that I am telling them different things which I am not. How can I get effective treatment when doctors have a different diagnosis for me?
From a Dark Hole to My Redemption and Light
Hello, I have always thought that sharing my story with the mental health community is important to bring hope to others that are just like me.
I’m a 37 year old divorced mother of two boys. I have been in therapy of some kind or another since I was 7 years old. Mental illness runs in my family as well as substance abuse addiction. I believe I was born with my many disorders that progressed and worsened as I got older, abused illegal drugs, prescribed medication and had my children. In my early childhood I showed all the many signs of OCD. I also grew up in an extremely chaotic family where my mother suffered terribly with her own mental illness that was never acknowledged or treated and an emotionally absent father. My two older siblings coped with this by using and abusing drugs and my older sister was put into rehab when I was seven. My older brother simply moved away and is still an addict today covering up his own mental health issues. My younger sister was extremely emotionally disturbed and would act out violently towards my parents but especially towards me. She would later become a drug addict for many years and thankfully entered recovery 4 ½ years ago.
Acceptance
I thought that I had accepted my mental illness long ago. After all, I was taking medication and attending counseling after being hospitalized for months in a state psychiatric hospital. Here I was an “advocate” for mental health but refused to disclose to anyone that I was suffering. It wasn’t until I moved back to my hometown and got involved as a mental health advocate for NAMI that I realized what exactly accepting a mental health diagnosis meant.
Accepting meant that I was going to no longer stigmatize myself for being ill. A condition, is a condition, is a condition. I wouldn’t treat someone with diabetes any differently for being ill so why was I holding myself up to such a ridiculous standard? Accepting meant that I was not afraid to stand in front of a group of 20 strangers and disclose what I thought was my biggest secret in order to educate the community. For so long I wanted change to the system, change to mental health care. The only way that change is going to happen is if we all accept our conditions and reduce the stigmatization. Through acceptance and education comes change.
That change is exactly what I am seeing in myself and my community now. After going through facilitator training for the NAMI Connection Recovery Support Group program I started a support group for adults with mental illness in my community. I now sit on the advisory board for my mental health agency and my local NAMI affiliate as a mental health consumer. I am no longer afraid to say that I have a mental illness and advocate for those who have not yet reached that stage in their recovery or are unable to advocate for themselves. There is help and there is hope.
Mental Health Awareness Month
This year has been the year I’ve really worked on my recovery and my overall mental health. From a very young age I was depressed, fascinated with death and constantly anxious. I developed major body image issues as a child that turned into an eating disorder. I grew up with a biological father who was an addict, alcoholic, abusive and mentally ill with Bipolar Disorder.
Not Alone
Hi my name is Stacey and I’m 13 years old now. My experiences with mental illness has helped me grow and learn more. I slowly figured that I wasn’t alone during the processes of depression. You aren’t alone either.
Middle School & Mental Health
TO ANYONE WITH ANY MENTAL ILLNESS OF ANY AGE:
(you don’t have to be in middle school)
Middle School’s known to be some of the hardest years of our lives, between hormones and homework it’s tough enough to make it through without mental health and the stigma it so often carries. As it’s impossible to make it through a class without someone making a joke about a mental illness either a friend of mine or I have, I’ve come to a certain conclusion. Teenagers will be teenagers, it shouldn’t be that way, it shouldn’t be an excuse to kidding about things that people truly struggle with on a daily basis, but it is. Sometimes things in life are just stupid, but we can’t let that get to us.
I’m a 13 (almost 14) year old in the ignorant year of 8th grade, towards the end of last year a few things in life went really, really wrong, and it resulted in a series of unfortunate events (no pun intended). Basically, by the time 8th grade started, I had not only experienced my fair share of panic attacks, gone to a therapist several times, but I had also been diagnosed with depression and an anxiety disorder. I had basically hidden from my entire grade during the summer, so as school started up again and I was struck by a mass of indirect insults towards my mental illnesses, let’s just say there was a lot of tears at the beginning of the year.

