When internal resources are as limited as external resources, the chances of further advancement become even smaller for those who miss the birth lottery. For them, the challenges faced by the current mental health crisis represent not only a stagnation in their socio-economic situation, but may even lead to a setback in relation to the status achieved by their own parents.
And what do you do when you run out of energy? And what about when getting out of bed becomes a burden? We know that we live in a world that constantly creates a whirlpool of emotion and uncertainty. A world characterized by a profound break with the social norms of the past. The speed of change, economic instability, and information overload create an environment ripe for burnout. And in this daily frenzy, not everyone has enough resources to ask for help. For most Brazilians, a simple conversation with a therapist is very far away.
And what do you do when you run out of energy? And what about when getting out of bed becomes a burden? While many of those with resources numb themselves with psychiatric drugs and therapies in order to face the dilemmas of our time, maintain the constant rhythm of productivity, and participate in the mad wheel of materialism, those born with few resources face increasing difficulties in maintaining mental health or simply try to live with pain. In such unfavorable situations, suffering is unevenly distributed. Some people have the means to numb the pain, while others face the pain without anesthesia.
And what do you do when you run out of energy? And what about when getting out of bed becomes a burden? There is also another kind of inequality when it comes to disease. Those in the most advantaged classes can stop, receive treatment, and withdraw. People living on the margins have to keep going even if they are sick. And pain turns into loneliness when no shelter is found. And isolation turns into even more suffering.
And what do you do when you run out of energy? And what about when getting out of bed becomes a burden? Is trying to numb the middle class and the poorest with psychiatric drugs an alternative? An expensive alternative, but an alternative nonetheless, or should we start rethinking our collective way of life?
Perhaps this is one of the main blindnesses of our time, because often we tend to insist on chemical reactions and cures, especially for social problems. And in this way, we end up shifting the weight of our collective illness onto individual shoulders. But mental health cannot be achieved in a society that worships endless performance and superficial materialism, while at the same time despising care. please take care of yourself. and caring for others.
So, as it turns out, the invitation still remains… What if we started treating modern malaise as a symptom rather than just a temporary aberration? Not as a momentary inconsistency, but as a warning that something deeper is out of place?
What happens if we start redefining what wealth actually is? And what does success really mean?
This text is a homage to Gnarls Barkley’s song “Crazy”.
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