Quick Thought #14 – When it’s Someone You Know, You Know.Pin

Quick Thought #14 – When it’s Someone You Know, You Know.

Two thoughts converged in my pandemic-rattled head today.

  1. I’ve seen lots of people responding to the question of if they personally know anyone who has died, or even tested positive and gotten sick from COVID-19, with comments like “My coworker’s cousin tested positive”, or something similar. Which makes me wonder about people. A disease that seems to inflict more intense illness to older people, people with other conditions, and the poor, and there are a lot of people who don’t know anyone who’s died.. Hmm. Have you seen these “polls” going around social media?
  2. This story about Sean Astin and his reasons for being a mental health advocate. Namely, his Mom, Patty Duke, and her struggle with bipolar disorder.

Why do I see these two things as related? Well. let’s start with Sean Astin. It’s hard not to think that he has lived an amazingly privileged life. He’s been famous since he was a little kid, after growing up part of Hollywood royalty. If anyone has the means to shelter himself away from the harder topics of life, he’s one of those people. But he chooses not to, because he’s seen first hand what it is like to life with, and love someone with, mental health issues. That experience drives him to advocacy. He wants to share what it was like, and help others watching a mental health condition tear apart their own family.

In short, he gets it because he knows.

The same seems to be true when it comes to how serious COVID-19 really is. It seems to me there are a lot of people thinking it’s not very serious because well, no one they know has died or anything serious. 130,000 “other people” have died in the US. On the other hand, there are those of us who do know people who’ve died, or spent time hospitalized, and tend to take it very seriously. Because we know. We’ve seen it. We’ve grieved because of it.

The trick, whether you want to talk about public health issues like Covid-19 or mental health issues, is getting people to understand that it happens to anyone, anywhere. People like them, people they know. Because something about our brain changes when it’s someone we know, and we can see it, experience it, live with it.

So, as scary as it may be, if you’re in a place where you can tell your story to the people you know, you’ll be doing a great service. You will be letting them know that it isn’t just “other people”, it’s people they know and care about. People they may even want to advocate for. People who may help them understand mental health issues better, and inspire them to educate themselves.

That would be awesome.

Or, they could still decide they don’t care, because some people just refuse to come out of their little worldview. But that’s another problem, and maybe we can just ignore those folks. 😉

Similar Posts

  • Sorry

    Sorry for the couple of spam comments yesterday. The server this site is on had a Perl problem that made my installation of both Movable Type and MT-Blacklist stop working correctly even though the comments functions kept working. So my anti-spam tool wasn’t working and I couldn’t get into MT to delete the spam comments,…

  • Quick Thought #18 – Sports as an Example of The Lens We See Life Through

    Just like in sports though, sometimes it’s not about how the world works, or what mistakes we made, it’s about the other team. In our case, it’s the abuser. They did this. Healing is understanding that, and coming to grips with the fact that our lens is wrong. We’re looking at someone else’s actions and choices through a lens that only sees ourselves. We were abused, maybe when we told someone, we weren’t believed, or maybe even as adults, when we share our experiences we make others uncomfortable. But it’s not us. Other people get to make their own choices, have their own reactions, and choose who, and what, to believe.

    What we need to do, is start untying other people actions and reactions, from ourselves. The abuser chose to abuse. The people who refused to help, made that choice, and the people who still don’t believe us, have their own reasons for doing that. None of it has anything to do with us, those are other people making their own choices, playing their own game. We can do everything right, live our life to the best of our abilities and still “lose” in these interactions. It happens. It doesn’t lessen us, it shows us who these other people are, and tells us about their agendas.

    We learn from that, and move on. We do not blame ourselves for their agendas.

    It does take developing a more mature lens to view life through, and that takes time, and work. Are you up for it? Or maybe the better question, are you tired of blaming yourself?

  • Excellent Article

    I was looking around this morning and stumbled upon this article written by a young women suffering from, trying to overcome, and learning everything she can about depression. I thought it was a pretty good look inside the mind of someone who suffers from depression. I especially idenitifed with this quote: “Diabetes is manageable, you…

  • More messing around

    OK, so I changed my mind on the comments. Mostly, spammers changed my mind for me. Making the comments on all entries over 30 days old moderated kept the junk from hitting the live site, which I’m happy about, and it seemed like a good idea at the time. But 350 moderated comments later, I’m…

One Comment

  1. What an awesome post and so very much the truth I believe and write about. I mean why aren’t we more concerned about the increase in child abuse because left alome with parents and family friends there us more time and frustration in pandemic conditions for it?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)