Mental health difficulties bring us face to face with our vulnerability
as human beings, and after two years of struggling with Covid-19
concerns about mental health worldwide have never been higher.
What is often missing from these discussions is the most valuable
resource of all - the personal accounts of those with lived experience
of mental health difficulties. Making Sense of Mental Health is
centered on hours of in-depth interviews with adults coping with mental
health issues. The author follows their journeys from the origin of
their distress to their lowest moments to eventual recovery and a sense
of moving on. These lived experiences show how in times of crisis people
can move forward amidst the chaos, vulnerability and uncertainty of
mental health problems.
There are no quick fixes or miracle cures to serious mental health
issues. This book shows that 'what works' is whatever helps an
individual make sense of what is happening to them. Mental health
difficulties can best be treated by listening carefully to the stories
of those who have lived through them, and then as a society finding a
way to ascribe meaning to the complex reality of mental health.