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Trouble17

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    Anarchists, anti-authoritarians and radicals
    of all stripes spend a disproportionate amount
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    of time and energy confronting the so-called
    ‘big picture’ challenges of the world.
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    In this all-consuming competition to change
    society, too often we overlook the personal
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    struggles that many of us face, including
    some of the most basic questions of how we
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    relate to ourselves, each other,
    and the world around us.
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    For some, the mundane tasks of day-to-day
    living can feel so meaningless,
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    or so hyper-important,
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    that even the simplest decisions
    become impossible to manage.
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    For others, ongoing or past experiences of
    physical danger, trauma, and instability,
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    can severely compound the difficulties that
    we already face surviving in a white supremacist,
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    hetero-patriarchal and capitalist society.
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    Yet despite the large number of us who face
    these struggles daily,
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    within our movements,
    mental health is often tokenized
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    or treated as an afterthought,
    and mental illness is often invisibilized.
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    Mainstream society polarises crazy people.
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    On the one hand it lifts a few of us up to
    celebrate our creative brilliance in the fields
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    of art, film, books and music.
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    When you hear about slavery for 400 years
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    For 400 years?
    That sounds like a choice!
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    On the other, it stigmatizes and fears us,
    controlling and locking us up.
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    Far from being a fast-track to creative stardom,
    mental illness leaves millions of people to
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    fall through the cracks of our neuro-typical
    society.
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    Most insanity does not get celebrated.
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    For many, it means losing your job or home
    because you can't get out of bed.
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    Not being able to socialize or organize due
    to anxiety, paranoia, or the inability to
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    maintain relationships.
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    Using risky coping mechanisms to try and manage
    your own symptoms, or relying on the toxic
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    mental health system for your very survival.
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    To the extent that they can be separated,
    the psychiatric and pharmaceutical industries
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    both extract incredible profits in their supposed
    pursuit of our ‘mental wellness’.
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    Yet for those who would seek to break free
    from the State and capital’s system of pathological
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    diagnoses and lucrative prescriptions... what
    exactly does that leave us with?
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    Over the next thirty minutes, we will speak
    with a range of individuals as they share
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    their insights on the causes and potential
    solutions to mental illness, and share their
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    experiences of fighting stigma, dealing with
    trauma and getting into the proper headspace
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    to make a whole lot of trouble.
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    Mental health means our own
    interior kind of wellness.
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    Our own personal equilibrium of
    how we respond to the ails of the world.
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    Mental health is your own way of feeling balanced
    and feeling that you're well.
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    And we need to take it in a very broad sense.
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    In different cultures around the world,
    well-being in itself is so different.
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    So I would see mental health as a very open
    way of: are you feeling balanced and able
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    to face life in the complexity that it is?
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    As indigenous people we've lived through an
    enormous amount of trauma, and trying
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    to find that balance living in the
    environment that you do is challenging.
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    Mental health is the term that I use to talk
    about sort of being unable to cope with reality,
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    and different forms of things that my brain
    does... and ways that I change the way that
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    I perceive the world that are usually pretty
    harmful to my life.
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    In the society that we live in, oftentimes
    mental health ends up actually eclipsing
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    the larger context.
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    That language that we use to talk about
    mental health is the the language
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    of the biomedical model.
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    But meanwhile it leaves
    out the social context.
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    And we're not talking at all about the
    living situation that you're in,
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    or the color of your skin,
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    or the kind of access
    you've had to housing,
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    or the access you've had to education,
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    and what you have to deal with
    on a daily basis.
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    So if you live on reserve you have all kinds
    of challenges there.
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    If you live off reserve if you have a whole
    new set of challenges.
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    And how do you work through them all?
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    How do you make it better for the next generation?
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    Since mental health is primarily
    influenced by social factors,
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    there's no real way to solve it
    without changing the social condition
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    that we're in.
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    What we see it as is being able to use your
    psychological abilities to help fight against
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    the repression that comes towards you.
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    We need to figure out ways to increase our
    ability to fight against the forces that are
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    helping make us mentally ill, as it were.
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    So I see mental health not just as something
    that belongs to a person, or lives in a person.
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    But rather sort of a response to the
    condition that is around us that
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    causes us to hurt in this world.
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    Mental unwellness in broader society
    is an epidemic.
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    Whether it's just plain old capitalism that's,
    like, really selling the idea of
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    anything solvable through some exchange of
    money.
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    The terms of success - of a successful life
    - that have been passed down by the state,
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    by mass media, they're really unattainable
    for almost everyone.
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    And then even when people do achieve
    material success in these terms,
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    they struggle with finding meaning.
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    The conditions around us have other
    psychologically damaging effects.
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    The way that we relate to each other socially
    and the tendency towards seeking of, like,
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    social capital than seeking actual, like,
    close relationships with people.
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    When I think about mental health in my "immediate
    community", I see a community that is making
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    space for particular people who are living
    with mental health issues.
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    What I'm reminded of, is the ability for a
    Black man in my building to live mad while
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    Black, and walk around in this building in
    that way would probably not happen.
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    Because what I know is happening,
    not just in the city,
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    but in this province and in this country,
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    is police responses to Black people
    living with mental health issues,
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    or mad-identified, often,
    but not always, result in fatal shootings.
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    I would say generally in my community,
    a lot of people have struggles.
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    A lot of people see therapists.
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    Some people have diagnoses.
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    Some people are medicated.
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    So I would say, like, in the anarchist
    community a lot of people are struggling,
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    but there's, like, a lot more
    conversations about that.
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    A lot more informal peer support than in other
    communities that friends and family who are
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    not anarchists are a part of.
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    What I see happening in the mental health
    system is that there are an incredible number
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    of people who struggle with issues of trauma.
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    And what happens is when they come into the
    system and end up getting diagnosed with a
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    mental illness, what's happened to them
    in the past gets eclipsed by this culture,
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    which is very wrapped up in this whole
    model where there's a drug for
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    everything that you could
    possibly need.
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    A huge piece of what we can do is
    think outside the medical box
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    and use more transformative
    ways of thinking.
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    Human beings are social creatures, meaning
    that we simultaneously engage with
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    and are shaped by our surroundings.
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    This fact is often overlooked by those who
    see madness as nothing more
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    than a neurochemical imbalance.
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    In reality, social factors such as how
    broke you are, the color of your skin,
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    your gender and sexual orientation,
    and how well you pass
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    as a productive member
    of capitalist society,
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    all play huge roles in determining how you
    are treated, what health care
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    and social supports you have access to,
    and therefore greatly shape your
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    emotional and mental well being.
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    The hyper-individualization promoted by our
    current social media paradigm swaps human
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    contact for superficial interactions based
    on curated personas of likes and follows.
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    Did you lose your subscribers?!
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    The realm of spirituality has been so co opted
    and tainted by religious institutions that
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    many of us have no access to rituals and traditions
    that could help us feel a meaningful connection
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    to the world around us.
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    Profiting off this mess is the pharmaceutical
    industry, comprised of some of the world's
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    biggest corporate powerhouses, who spend billions
    each year lobbying doctors to push their newest
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    and most lucrative designer drugs, all with
    the goal of getting as many people medicated
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    as they can.
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    ♫♫ Crazy
    I'm crazy for feeling so lonely
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    I'm crazy
    Crazy for feeling so blue ♫♫
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    When one in four people
    suffer from mental illness,
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    I have to sort of question
    what that means.
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    Whatever the status of mental health is,
    it’s rapidly declining.
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    And I think that’s happening
    in an intentional manner.
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    It just seems to me that anything and everything
    is being described as a mental health problem
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    – in such a way that creates this, like,
    false idea that there is a mental health
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    solution for that.
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    Possibly in the name of a pill,
    but often in the name of
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    some other additional kind of control.
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    A lot of the factors that lead to what we
    tend to call mental illness are entirely out
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    of the control of the people who are
    experiencing them,
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    and aren’t really from a biological
    or chemical root.
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    They’re from the social condition
    that the people are in.
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    How can we live in the world
    that we’re in and be “well”?
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    We need to recognize that the society that
    we live in is actually very unhealthy.
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    If we’re starting from this place that what
    we’re trying to do is get people to be healthy
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    so that they can fit into society...
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    that to me is really scary.
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    Because I’m often sad, and I’m often hurt.
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    And I’m often anxious and paranoid
    ... and those are for very real reasons.
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    My spirit can’t be stable if the material
    world around me is absolutely scary.
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    The real visceral and true fear of deportation,
    bankruptcy, homelessness, incarceration...
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    these are things that contribute to someone’s
    individual experience of despair.
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    And rather than offering a solution,
    it’s always just some pill, or injection.
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    Or just... removal.
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    I work with refugee claimants.
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    The very first weeks they arrive here in Canada,
    they live a whole different range of challenges.
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    A lot comes from what they carry.
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    What they lived in their countries: war, rape,
    being jailed, being tortured.
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    But also a lot of things they lived
    trying to get to Canada.
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    So some of them might have travelled a whole
    year, crossing ten different countries without
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    documents, without papers,
    before they arrive here.
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    So it’s a very heavy weight
    they carry with them.
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    And also a lot of challenges they face is
    actually arriving here with nothing and having
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    to face what it is to be a refugee claimant
    in Canada.
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    One of the hardest things is being in a state
    where you don’t know what’s going to happen
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    to you, right?
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    So you might wait a year, two years, to know
    if you’re going to be able to stay here.
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    So this period of just... not knowing what
    you can build for yourself and your kids
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    as a life is very hard.
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    Very stressful.
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    I think it’s really important, if we’re
    gonna talk about mental health
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    and mental wellness,
    that we think about ourselves
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    related to a larger social context.
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    I think one of the things that really impacts
    our mental health is that we live in such
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    an individualistic society, where we think
    the things that are happening to us
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    are happening because
    of our brain chemistry.
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    Or they’re happening to us
    because of some fault of ours,
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    because we’re not strong
    enough to survive.
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    When really they’re these larger social
    issues that are impacting everyone.
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    On a personal level, I get into trouble
    when I get disconnected from things
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    that are meaningful to me in the world.
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    One of the things that I wanna do with my
    life is engage with all of the imbalances
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    of power with communities that are trying
    to counter those imbalances.
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    A lot of the factors are just like the standard
    foundations of society, which is anti-Blackness,
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    racism and capitalism.
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    And until those are destroyed,
    there’s no actual solution.
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    When I think about the conditions that
    contribute to unwellness for Black people,
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    the number one is generally
    the experience of
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    the transatlantic slave trade,
    first and foremost.
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    The experience of colonialism.
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    The ongoing experiences of colonialism.
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    The ongoing occupations of Black spaces.
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    I see the hyper-surveillance of those communities
    as a particular kind of occupations.
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    And I’m using that word sort of in soft
    quotes, while keeping in mind the context
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    of what the word ‘occupation’ means here.
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    500 years of colonialism has really taken
    its toll on Indigenous people.
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    And it’s taken it in so many different ways.
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    There’s been a lot of hurt.
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    There’s been a lot of pain.
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    There’s been a lot of trauma that’s been
    passed on from generation to generation.
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    It’s a real struggle to get better when
    you’re left to fend for yourself.
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    But it seems like in a lot of the communities,
    they purposefully take everything away
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    and then are—it feels like they’re just
    waiting to see everybody die.
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    I think that with the high rates of suicide
    in every single community—I know the Inuit
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    community is probably the highest, but you
    know, even in my community, y’know,
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    the suicide rate is pretty high.
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    I think that when you’re always surrounded
    by death, because people give up,
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    that having these ceremonies to turn to,
    where you can honor their memory
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    and be surrounded by healers
    is a good way.
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    And because the Indian Act forced us
    to give up all those ceremonies,
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    now is the time where
    we have to re-learn them.
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    Of all the modern sciences aimed at reproducing
    subservience and reinforcing State power...
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    psychiatry is particularly nasty.
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    Its history is fraught with the warehousing
    and torture of countless individuals in sanitariums
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    and asylums.
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    In their eternal quest to understand and destroy
    that which is different, states have performed
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    every conceivable type of experiment on human
    test subjects, from mass sterilizations
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    and LSD-induced comas
    to decades of routine lobotomies.
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    Psychiatrists’ enthusiastic embrace of eugenics
    during the early 20th century was a major
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    inspiration for Nazi scientists, providing
    them a convenient pseudo-scientific justification
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    for the Holocaust.
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    And while the term became taboo after WWII
    the inherent link between psychiatry
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    and eugenics continued long after,
    and some would argue, still exists today.
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    Although psychiatry poses amidst the hard
    science-based branches of medicine,
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    nowhere else is the creation of
    medical conditions and disorders
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    so socially manufactured as
    in psychiatry's bible,
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    the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
    or DSM.
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    While the process of deciding how to categorize
    the mentally unwell can involve aspects of
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    the scientific method, it is oftentimes no
    more than a room full of old white men promoting
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    their collected social biases
    and individual agendas.
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    Ralph was sick. A sickness
    that was not visible like smallpox,
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    but no less dangerous and contagious.
    A sickness of the mind.
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    You see... Ralph was a homosexual.
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    Within the sacred pages of the DSM, homosexuality
    was considered a mental disorder until 1987,
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    and to this day, many transgender people need
    to be diagnosed with a mental illness in order
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    to receive the treatments they need.
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    Women who may have once been labeled
    as nymphomaniacs or hysterics,
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    are today branded instead with BPD,
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    or borderline personality disorder,
    a catch-all diagnosis primarily inscribed
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    on women whose histories of trauma
    are not seen as real or legitimate.
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    Although there have been attempts to distance
    psychiatry from this legacy, its ongoing history
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    is one of padded cells, forced injections,
    electroshock, and indefinite institutionalization.
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    If you find yourself on the wrong side of
    the modern mental healthcare system,
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    you can easily fall into a vicious
    feedback loop of mental health crises,
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    often caused by trauma, leading to
    further violence and re-traumatization.
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    This may take the form of forced
    hospitalization, incarceration,
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    hurting yourself
    or people that you love,
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    or ultimately
    ... being murdered by the police.
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    The state engages with mental unwellness by
    being the identifier of those of us that are
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    well and those of us that are unwell.
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    So the state and psychiatry define being well
    in terms of how well you conform to a normal
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    and in this society that normal
    encompasses all of the problematic
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    natures of mainstream society.
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    If you went back and asked your guidance counselor
    what their version of success would be for
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    you moving forward,
    well, it’s like how well you conform.
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    They started the residential schools
    to assimilate the children.
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    It was the law that if you didn’t give up
    your children you were sent to jail.
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    They call the foster care system
    the next residential school.
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    The kids that are in care aren’t
    brought up in a good way
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    and they fall through the cracks.
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    The state usually criminalizes mental unwellness.
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    Generally if you look at the ways
    that psych wards operate,
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    it’s not significantly different
    than prison.
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    And if you look at the way prisons operate
    they’re usually used as psych wards.
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    There’s no real distinction between the
    carcerality of american society in general
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    and the way that we treat the mentally ill.
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    Including the way that police
    shoot mentally ill people.
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    News 1: A police officer shoots and kills
    a teenager with schizophrenia.
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    News 2: A mentally ill man being shot four
    times by a police officer despite the fact
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    that the victim showed no threat of force.
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    News 3: And a mentally ill man shot dead
    by two Dallas officers.
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    I’ve spent four and a half months in state
    jails, about a month and a half in psych wards,
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    and there are some, like,
    really noticeable similarities.
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    There’s coercive violence, isolation
    - but the difference is that
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    like, when I’m in jail,
    I’m well and I’m myself,
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    I’m in a battle against the state
    and they're my enemy
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    and they’ve locked me in a cage.
  • 20:30 - 20:33
    And when I’m in a psych ward,
    it’s like a whole different world.
  • 20:33 - 20:37
    I don’t understand what’s going on.
    I have no connection to myself.
  • 20:37 - 20:39
    If I refuse medication,
    I’ll be tackled to the ground
  • 20:39 - 20:41
    and have it injected into me.
  • 20:41 - 20:47
    The trauma that I feel in my life from having
    been in jail is so much less profound than
  • 20:47 - 20:49
    the trauma that comes from a psych ward.
  • 20:49 - 20:53
    Generally mental illness is treated as
    something to push under the rug and hide
  • 20:53 - 20:56
    and either like fix with, you know,
    dumbing you down enough that you can
  • 20:56 - 20:59
    actually deal with whatever
    bullshit society is giving you.
  • 20:59 - 21:02
    Or, with putting you away if you’re
    unable to actually get back
  • 21:02 - 21:05
    into the capitalist flow of things.
  • 21:06 - 21:11
    Generally, the state engages with unwellness
    on a complete individual basis.
  • 21:11 - 21:16
    The problem is individualized and the solution
    is also individualized.
  • 21:16 - 21:20
    Self-care is usually a stand-in
    for a lot of neoliberal approaches
  • 21:20 - 21:22
    to dealing with mental health problems.
  • 21:22 - 21:26
    I worry that sometimes this expectation
    that people practice self-care
  • 21:26 - 21:29
    kind of misses the target in many ways.
  • 21:29 - 21:35
    Generally it focuses on a very individualized
    approach of like, taking care of your personal
  • 21:35 - 21:40
    needs as far as like attention or how people
    interact with you or things like that.
  • 21:40 - 21:45
    My wellness is maintained by taking
    pharmaceutical drugs
  • 21:45 - 21:48
    that are made by some of the
    worst corporations in the world.
  • 21:48 - 21:52
    People that are capitalizing
    off of hyper medication,
  • 21:52 - 21:56
    they’re advertising to doctors
    to try and get, you know,
  • 21:56 - 22:00
    as big of a quarterly
    fucking profit as they can.
  • 22:00 - 22:06
    You have to simultaneously be able to hold
    the understanding that the pharmaceutical
  • 22:06 - 22:10
    industry, like, really what they’re interested
    in is profit and they’re gonna try to get
  • 22:10 - 22:14
    as many people as they possibly can
    addicted to their drugs
  • 22:14 - 22:18
    … with the reality that like, there’s
    actually a lot of people for whom
  • 22:18 - 22:21
    the drugs are really helpful, you know?
  • 22:21 - 22:23
    Not nearly as many people
    as who are on them...
  • 22:23 - 22:28
    but I think it’s really important
    to be able to have that analysis
  • 22:28 - 22:32
    where you don’t just get shut down
    and think in a black and white framework.
  • 22:32 - 22:36
    And I think that just because a system exists
    doesn’t mean that we can’t critique it
  • 22:36 - 22:40
    while understanding that there are some
    people that might benefit from that.
  • 22:40 - 22:43
    And that there’s no shame in being able
    to be a person that decides
  • 22:43 - 22:46
    what your care might look like.
    That doesn’t make you less critical,
  • 22:46 - 22:49
    that doesn’t make you less of
    a mental health advocate.
  • 22:49 - 22:55
    As a psychiatrist, I basically have to
    work with a lot of people who have,
  • 22:55 - 23:02
    at least historically if not currently,
    found psych drugs and hospitalizations
  • 23:02 - 23:05
    helpful at least to some extent.
    And I think that’s fine.
  • 23:05 - 23:12
    What I do like to focus on with people is
    maybe a return to true informed consent.
  • 23:12 - 23:20
    I like to focus, when possible, on supporting
    people who maybe can’t find somebody who
  • 23:20 - 23:26
    is able and willing to help them taper or
    withdraw from the medications that they’ve
  • 23:26 - 23:32
    been taking or live in a less coercive
    environment during a crisis.
  • 23:33 - 23:41
    You have to walk in the white man’s world
    to get the accreditation that they find believable
  • 23:41 - 23:44
    in order for you to help your own people.
  • 23:44 - 23:49
    For instance, I can get a psychologist
    from Health Canada. They’ll pay for that.
  • 23:49 - 23:54
    But I can’t get funding from Health Canada
    to pay for my spiritual elder
  • 23:54 - 23:56
    cause he doesn’t have
    a degree in spirituality.
  • 24:10 - 24:14
    Rather than unquestioningly accepting the
    State's authority on the causes and nature
  • 24:14 - 24:18
    of mental unwellness and official dictates
    on what our interventions can and should
  • 24:18 - 24:23
    look like, today many crazy people are
    asserting our power to choose the right mix
  • 24:23 - 24:26
    of institutional and informal supports
    for the problems we face.
  • 24:26 - 24:31
    This growing movement seeks to counter
    stigmatizing conceptions of mental illness
  • 24:31 - 24:34
    that paint it as an isolated
    and individualized phenomenon,
  • 24:34 - 24:38
    positing instead the need for
    dynamic peer-based solutions
  • 24:38 - 24:41
    rooted in interconnectedness
    and community support.
  • 24:42 - 24:46
    Social media, with all its flaws,
    can play an important role in building
  • 24:46 - 24:49
    peer to peer networks, by offering us
    the ability to connect with others
  • 24:49 - 24:54
    who have faced similar experiences. This
    can be particularly helpful for individuals
  • 24:54 - 24:58
    that face geographic or emotional barriers
    to community and mental health support.
  • 24:59 - 25:02
    Because at the end of the day…
    the best person to take care of someone in
  • 25:02 - 25:07
    mental health crisis is often someone
    who’s already been through it themselves.
  • 25:25 - 25:30
    When we try to support or be allied with people
    that face this type of mental health issue
  • 25:30 - 25:33
    or trauma, we should be, in a way, curious.
  • 25:33 - 25:36
    Not be afraid to ask questions.
  • 25:36 - 25:37
    To learn.
  • 25:37 - 25:40
    And to try to connect with those people
    we try to help.
  • 25:40 - 25:47
    And really try to understand on a human
    and deeper level what these people faced
  • 25:47 - 25:49
    in the past,
    and what they are feeling right now.
  • 25:50 - 25:55
    The government did everything that they could
    to destroy us... and yet we’re still here.
  • 25:55 - 25:58
    We all carry a different kind of trauma.
  • 25:58 - 26:04
    And sometimes those traumas
    eat away at us until there’s nothing left.
  • 26:04 - 26:11
    And sometimes those traumas, we’re able
    to work through them and they become our
  • 26:11 - 26:13
    —almost energy source.
  • 26:13 - 26:19
    To keep moving forward so that we can
    help the next generation.
  • 26:19 - 26:23
    I have hope that, y’know, this generation
    is addressing these issues in a good way.
  • 26:23 - 26:26
    So that we don’t continue the trauma.
  • 26:26 - 26:29
    And try to reverse it if possible.
  • 26:29 - 26:33
    Situations and humans are so complex.
  • 26:33 - 26:36
    And we need to really be open to that complexity.
  • 26:36 - 26:40
    Never try to simplify or put labels on people.
  • 26:40 - 26:44
    This person is ‘traumatized’, or this
    person is ‘gonna be okay’.
  • 26:44 - 26:46
    She’s ‘strong’, she’s ‘resilient’,
    right?
  • 26:46 - 26:50
    We simplify situations that are very complex.
  • 26:51 - 26:55
    People tend to have a lot of personal and
    community ways of dealing with
  • 26:55 - 26:59
    mental health problems,
    but societally we tend to fail entirely.
  • 26:59 - 27:01
    Generally what I’ve noticed in
    communities is a desire to help
  • 27:01 - 27:03
    and a lack of ability to.
  • 27:03 - 27:07
    The actual, like, social conditions
    that cause these kinds of problems are
  • 27:07 - 27:08
    more what needs to be addressed.
  • 27:08 - 27:10
    And no one really seems to do that very well.
  • 27:15 - 27:18
    The best community support that
    I’m a part of is very informal.
  • 27:18 - 27:23
    It’s just talking with friends about how
    we’re doing, and what we’re thinking about.
  • 27:23 - 27:26
    A lot of it is about building those
    relationships beforehand.
  • 27:26 - 27:30
    Because whatever you do when a crisis occurs
    is going to be affected by and influenced
  • 27:30 - 27:33
    by the actual relationships
    you have with people.
  • 27:33 - 27:37
    Y’know, just making sure that our interactions
    with people are consensual.
  • 27:37 - 27:41
    Understanding what it may feel like
    for someone to feel really scared
  • 27:41 - 27:43
    and be sharing something with you.
  • 27:43 - 27:46
    Not only what do they need,
    but what can I offer?
  • 27:46 - 27:49
    And I think for me, actually that’s one
    of the first questions.
  • 27:49 - 27:53
    There’s this opportunity in the crisis,
    and in the breakdown,
  • 27:53 - 27:55
    for it to be a breakthrough.
  • 27:55 - 27:58
    If you stick around, y’know, if you
    go through the hard times
  • 27:58 - 28:01
    and get through the other side
    there’s a damn good chance
  • 28:01 - 28:04
    you’re gonna come out with some wisdom
    that you never would have had.
  • 28:04 - 28:09
    As a community of people who like, actually,
    care about making change in the world,
  • 28:09 - 28:14
    we need to lay the foundations for a
    more understanding relationship to crisis.
  • 28:15 - 28:18
    The best community support doesn’t have
    to look like an intervention.
  • 28:18 - 28:23
    And ideally, when our communities are in a
    good place, and when individuals have
  • 28:23 - 28:27
    really good, caring relationships
    and support networks set up,
  • 28:27 - 28:31
    then the crisis doesn’t happen.
    Or it can be alleviated.
  • 28:31 - 28:37
    I think that what we really have to begin
    to take seriously is that emotions surface
  • 28:37 - 28:39
    at a different range for different people.
  • 28:39 - 28:42
    And I think that some times there’s a way
    that we think listening is enough.
  • 28:42 - 28:46
    And it may be sometimes people
    might require something of us.
  • 28:46 - 28:57
    The authority that a psychiatrist is granted
    can be subverted to lift the voice of the
  • 28:57 - 29:00
    participant in the therapeutic relationship.
  • 29:01 - 29:08
    The role of the therapist, psychiatrist,
    social worker, mental health worker
  • 29:08 - 29:14
    ... should be to step the fuck back
    and model a non-hierarchical,
  • 29:14 - 29:18
    non-secretive way
    of being with one another.
  • 29:18 - 29:24
    I hope that all of the work that our communities
    are doing around healing from trauma,
  • 29:24 - 29:27
    around transformative justice
    and community accountability
  • 29:27 - 29:30
    – that these can coalesce into some
    peer support models
  • 29:30 - 29:33
    and some models for,
    like, intervening in crisis.
  • 29:33 - 29:38
    And as much as I hope, and am excited
    about this work, I’m also skeptical
  • 29:38 - 29:42
    because of the magnitude
    of mental health crises.
  • 29:42 - 29:47
    There are so many different issues that face
    us that sometimes it can be overwhelming.
  • 29:47 - 29:53
    But if you keep moving forward, and you keep
    addressing these issues and keep trying to
  • 29:53 - 29:57
    find those solutions
    ... it brings hope to others.
  • 30:05 - 30:09
    From the epidemics of suicides
    and overdoses, to the shock and rage
  • 30:09 - 30:11
    sparked by the never-ending
    wave of police killings,
  • 30:11 - 30:14
    it’s painful to think about
    all those who’ve died as a
  • 30:14 - 30:17
    result of complications with mental
    health and their inability to receive
  • 30:17 - 30:19
    the support that they needed.
  • 30:19 - 30:22
    But their stories and lives aren’t forgotten.
  • 30:22 - 30:25
    Even as we continue to struggle
    within and against a world
  • 30:25 - 30:27
    that is growing increasingly scary,
  • 30:27 - 30:31
    we must take steps to collectively
    prepare ourselves for the battles to come.
  • 30:32 - 30:37
    Finding new ways to manage mental unwellness,
    with all the beauty and conflict that entails,
  • 30:37 - 30:42
    is a fundamental component of building stronger,
    healthier communities of resistance.
  • 30:42 - 30:47
    If we are able to do this, our movements will
    not only become more sustained and resilient,
  • 30:47 - 30:53
    but will gain new layers of possibility as
    we travel into the uncertain future together.
  • 30:53 - 30:57
    So at this point, we’d like to remind you
    that Trouble is intended to be watched
  • 30:57 - 31:00
    in groups, and to be used as
    a resource to promote discussion
  • 31:00 - 31:01
    and collective organizing.
  • 31:02 - 31:06
    Are you interested in starting a local peer
    support group, or just wanna better integrate
  • 31:06 - 31:09
    mental health awareness into your
    existing organizing projects?
  • 31:09 - 31:13
    Consider getting together with some comrades,
    organizing a screening of this film,
  • 31:13 - 31:15
    and discussing where to get started.
  • 31:15 - 31:19
    Interested in running regular screenings of
    Trouble at your campus, infoshop,
  • 31:19 - 31:21
    community center,
    or even just at home with friends?
  • 31:21 - 31:23
    Become a Trouble-Maker!
  • 31:23 - 31:26
    For 10 bucks a month, we’ll hook you up
    with an advanced copy of the show,
  • 31:26 - 31:30
    and a screening kit featuring additional
    resources and some questions you can use
  • 31:30 - 31:32
    to get a discussion going.
  • 31:32 - 31:35
    If you can’t afford to support us financially,
    no worries!
  • 31:35 - 31:41
    You can stream and/or download all our content
    for free off our website: sub.media/trouble.
  • 31:42 - 31:47
    If you’ve got any suggestions for show topics,
    or just want to get in touch, drop us a line
  • 31:47 - 31:49
    at trouble@sub.media.
  • 31:49 - 31:54
    A reminder that our online store is fully
    stocked with fresh swag for any subMedia fans
  • 31:54 - 31:56
    on your holiday shopping list.
  • 31:56 - 32:00
    We’re a broke collective funded entirely
    by donations, and all proceeds from these
  • 32:00 - 32:05
    sales go towards making it possible for us
    to make more films like this one.
  • 32:05 - 32:09
    We’ll be doing our last shipment of the
    year on December 16th, so be sure and get
  • 32:09 - 32:13
    your orders in before then at sub.media/gear.
  • 32:13 - 32:18
    This episode would not have been possible
    without the generous support of John Hamilton.
  • 32:18 - 32:22
    This is the last episode of the year… and
    after this we’ll be taking a month off.
  • 32:22 - 32:26
    But stay tuned early next year for Trouble
    #18, as we take a closer look at policing,
  • 32:26 - 32:29
    and community resistance to state violence.
  • 32:29 - 32:33
    So we see, in the context of
    the War on Terror,
  • 32:33 - 32:36
    within the last, y'know
    10, 12, 15 years,
  • 32:36 - 32:41
    an attempt to fuse policing resources
    to better respond to what are perceived
  • 32:41 - 32:42
    as domestic threats.
  • 32:43 - 32:45
    FUCK. THE. POLICE!
  • 32:45 - 32:47
    Now get out there…. and make some trouble!
Title:
Trouble17
Video Language:
English
Duration:
33:15
submedia edited English subtitles for Trouble17
submedia edited English subtitles for Trouble17
submedia edited English subtitles for Trouble17

English subtitles

Revisions