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There's no shame in taking care of your mental health

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    Last year ...
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    was hell.
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    (Laughter)
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    It was my first time eating
    Nigerian [jollof].
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    (Laughter)
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    Actually,
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    in all seriousness,
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    I was going through a lot
    of personal turmoil.
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    Faced with enormous stress,
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    I suffered an anxiety attack.
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    On some days I could do no work.
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    On other days,
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    I just wanted to lay in my bed and cry.
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    My doctor asked if I'd like to speak
    with a mental health professional
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    about my stress and anxiety.
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    Mental health?
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    I clammed up and violently
    shook my head in protest.
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    I felt a profound sense of a shame ...
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    I felt the weight of stigma.
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    I have a loving, supportive family
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    and incredibly loyal friends,
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    yet I could not entertain the idea
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    of speaking to anyone
    about my feeling of pain.
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    I felt suffocated
    by the rigid architecture
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    of our African masculinity.
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    "People have real problems, Sangu.
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    Get over yourself."
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    The first time I heard "mental health,"
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    I was a boarding school student,
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    fresh off the boat from Ghana
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    at the Peddie School in New Jersey.
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    I had just gone through
    the brutal experience
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    of losing seven loved ones
    in the same month.
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    The school nurse,
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    concerned about what I'd gone through --
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    God bless her soul --
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    she inquired about my mental health.
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    "Is she mental?" I thought.
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    Does she not know I'm an African man?
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    Like Okonkwo in "Things Fall Apart,"
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    we African men neither process
    nor express our emotions.
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    We deal with our problems --
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    (Applause)
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    We deal with our problems.
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    I called my brother and laughed
    about [oyinbo] people --
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    white people --
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    and their strange diseases --
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    depression, ADD and those "weird things."
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    Growing up in West Africa,
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    when people used the term "mental,"
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    what came to mind was a madman
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    with dirty, dread-locked hair,
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    bumbling around half-naked on the streets.
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    We all know this man.
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    Our parents warned us about him.
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    "Mommy, mommy, why is he mad?"
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    "Drugs!
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    If you even look at drugs,
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    you end up like him."
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    (Laughter)
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    Come down with pneumonia,
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    and your mother will rush you
    to the nearest hospital
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    for medical treatment.
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    But dare to declare depression,
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    and your local pastor
    will be driving out demons
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    and blaming witches in your village.
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    I called into the World
    Health Organization.
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    Mental health is about being able
    to cope with the normal stresses of life.
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    To work productively and fruitfully,
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    and to be able to make
    a contribution to your community.
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    Mental health includes our emotional,
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    psychological
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    and our social well-being.
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    Globally, 75 percent
    of all mental illness cases
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    can be found in low-income countries.
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    Yet most African governments
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    invest less than one percent of their
    health care budget on mental health.
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    Even [West,]
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    we have a severe shortage
    of psychiatrists in Africa.
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    Nigeria, for example,
    is estimated to have 200
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    in a country of almost 200 million.
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    In all of Africa,
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    90 percent of our people
    lack access to treatment.
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    As a result,
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    we suffer in solitude,
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    silenced by stigma.
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    We as Africans often respond
    to mental health with distance,
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    ignorance,
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    guilt,
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    fear
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    and anger.
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    In a study conducted by Arboleda Flórez,
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    directly asking what
    is the cause of mental illness,
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    34 percent of Nigerian respondents
    cited drug misuse.
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    19 percent said divine wrath
    and the will of God.
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    (Laughter)
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    12 percent --
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    witchcraft and spiritual posession.
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    But few cited other known
    causes of mental illness ...
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    like genetics,
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    socio-economic status,
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    war,
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    conflict,
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    or the loss of a loved one.
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    The stigmatization against mental illness
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    often results in the ostracizing
    and demonizing of sufferers.
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    Photojournalist Robin Hammond
    has documented some of these abuses.
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    In Uganda,
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    in Somalia,
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    and here in Nigeria.
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    For me,
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    the stigma is personal.
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    In 2009,
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    I received a frantic call
    in the middle of the night.
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    My best friend in the world --
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    a brilliant, philosophical,
    charming, hip, young man --
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    was diagnosed with schizophrenia.
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    I witnessed some of the friends
    we'd grown up with recoil.
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    I heard the snickers,
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    I heard the whispers.
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    "Did you hear he has gone mad?"
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    He [suffered through] derogatory,
    demeaning commentary
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    about his condition --
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    words we would never say
    about someone with cancer,
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    or someone with malaria.
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    Somehow when it comes to mental illness,
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    our ignorance eviscerates all empathy.
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    I stood by his side as his
    community isolated him,
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    but our love never wavered.
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    Tacitly, I became passionate
    about mental health.
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    Inspired by his plight,
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    I helped found the Mental Health
    Special Interest Alumni Group
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    at my college.
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    And during my tenure as a resident
    tutor in graduate school,
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    I supported many undergraduates
    with their mental health challenges.
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    I saw African students struggle,
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    and unable to speak to anyone.
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    Even with this knowledge,
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    and with their stories in tow,
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    I in turn struggled,
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    and could not speak to anyone
    when I faced my own anxiety,
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    so deep is our fear of being the mad man.
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    All of us --
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    but we Africans especially --
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    need to realize that our mental struggles
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    do not detract from our virility,
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    nor does our trauma taint our strength.
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    We need to see mental health
    as important as physical health.
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    We need to stop suffering in silence.
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    We must stop stigmatizing disease,
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    and traumatizing the afflicted.
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    Talk to your friends.
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    Talk to you loved ones.
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    Talk to health professionals.
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    Be vulnerable.
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    Do so with the confidence
    that you are not alone.
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    Speak up if you're struggling.
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    Being honest about how we feel
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    does not make us weak;
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    it makes us human.
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    It is time to end the stigma
    associated with mental illness.
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    So the next time your hear "mental,"
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    do not just think of the madman ...
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    Think of me.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
There's no shame in taking care of your mental health
Speaker:
Sangu Delle
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
08:53

English subtitles

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