CoffeeCantata
I completely agree with your posts. Completely.
I was first diagnosed with MH issues at 17. I've had hypnotherapy, seen numerous counsellors, a psychologist, psychotherapist, briefly had DBT etc.
I was diagnosed with GAD and depression when younger, nowadays through my own reading, self reflection and understanding, it looks more likely that its cPTSD through childhood and adolescent abuse trauma.
I've gained some strategies that get me through daily life but I'm not 'well'. I'm better than I have been in the past right now but it fluctuates. Sometimes, I'm worse.
Sometimes, I feel I can't get out of bed, sometimes I feel I can't leave the house and sometimes I cocoon myself away for months and have very little contact with anyone outside work. I often feel despair, suicidal, have a desire to implode my life, and escape it all.
But I don't have the 'luxury' of being overwhelmed and ducking out of life.
I have a full time demanding career (that I struggle with and feel the fear from every day as much as I also love it). I have a relationship that I'm running into the ground because I can't cope with it.
And every day, I just put those blinkers on, put one foot in front of the other and get on with it.
I have no family support. I don't have contact with the parent who abused me, and the other is dead. Both were only children. I'm early 50s. So there are no aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents. I have one sibling who is also affected by the same trauma and our relationship is difficult as a result. I don't have any friends because I find it difficult to maintain and sustain friendships as a result of my MH.
I also have two adult children and have spent my.life focused on making sure the cycle of abuse was broken. I've protected them from my MH as much as I've been able to.
I was a single parent. I had to work and I had to provide for them. I had to make sure that they were protected as much as possible. And I have.
And i will be perfectly honest that things have been better in the last 10 years since I realised that there wasn't really a lot that the NHS could do in real terms because of the reasons *CoffeeCantata and others have given. *
There really is an extent to which you have to take responsibility for making positive changes. They're not a cure but they do help.
Removing people from your life who make it work, getting outside into the fresh air, exercise, eating well, drinking water. All the 'soft touch' approaches that are recommended do help. They're not a cure but they mainly give you a sense of agency in your own life. But, as others have said, so many people reject them.
Some people's.MH will be so severe that this makes no difference. It only makes some difference to mine. It's certainly not a cure.
I think there is very little understanding of what people.can actually do to help themselves. Because most people can even if it only helps a little.