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As 'mental health' issues gain more attention, sympathetic and
	otherwise, in a wide variety of contexts and countries around the world,
	the opportunity for inaccurate perceptions of what causes these issues,
	and how to treat them, are likewise expanded.
	
	So if you or someone you know is supposed to have a 'mental illness'
	such as anxiety, depression, schizophrenia, obsessive-compulsive
	disorder (OCD), bipolar disorder, anorexia nervosa or post-traumatic
	stress disorder (PTSD), I would like to give you the opportunity to
	consider an explanation and a way forward that you are unlikely to have
	come across.
	
	My first suggestion is that you ignore any label that you have been
	given. These labels are an inaccurate and unhelpful way of labeling the
	appropriate, diverse and complex emotional responses that a normal human
	being will have to emotionally disturbing events. It is inaccurate
	because words such as these imply a 'disorder' that a normal individual
	should not have in response to emotionally challenging events in their
	life and it is unhelpful because the term suggests that many different
	individuals are having the same (dysfunctional) response.
	
	Human beings have a brilliantly diverse and complex array of emotions
	and hence potential emotional responses as a result of the evolutionary
	pressures that shaped the emergence of hominids over millions of years.
	An extraordinary emotional capacity is one of the defining features of
	our humanity and, I would argue, far more important than any other
	feature such as our intellectual capacity.
	
	Our emotions or, more simply, our feelings play the central role in
	determining our behaviour in any given circumstance. Whatever we do, we
	are responding to our feelings. If we are doing what we want to do, we
	are doing what we feel like doing. If we are not doing what we feel like
	doing, it is because our fear has been triggered sufficiently to
	override feelings that would otherwise have us doing something more
	functional and enjoyable. Regrettably, human 'socialization' (that is,
	terrorization) plays heavily on our fear during childhood in order to
	turn us into obedient slaves in the forms of student, worker/soldier and
	citizen. And this happens irrespective of our level of intelligence. For
	a full explanation, see 'Why Violence?' http://tinyurl.com/whyviolence
	
	Unfortunately, once our fear has been utilized to suppress our awareness
	of how we genuinely feel and what we want to do – which is sometimes
	euphemistically referred to as 'emotional regulation' – we are no longer
	able to access these feelings readily and we live our lives
	unconsciously and powerlessly submitting to the will of those we fear
	and the institutions they control. But the price for doing so is that
	our lives are no longer our own.
	
	As a unique individual who has experienced the ongoing violent trauma
	virtually all of us experience during childhood you have found yourself
	experiencing a level of emotional response that is very appropriate
	given your experience but which is both exacerbated and complicated by
	the sudden release of feelings that you had been suppressing since
	childhood (and which you are probably being told are inappropriate now).
	
	The fear you feel (probably labeled 'anxiety', 'nervousness' or
	something else) in particular (and perhaps virtually all) contexts is
	also triggering the monumental fear (of your parents, teachers,
	religious figures and other adults) that you were scared into
	suppressing as a child.
	
	The anger you feel about how you were treated and/or what happened to
	others (perhaps siblings) you know is merely the peak of the volcano of
	anger that you have been keeping the lid on since childhood.
	
	The sadness you feel about what has happened to you and perhaps others
	you know is only the tip of the iceberg of sadness you have been
	suppressing all of your life.
	
	The guilt, shame, embarrassment... you feel, perhaps about those you let
	down or for some other reason, is only the latest addition to the guilt
	and other feelings you have been suppressing since childhood.
	
	Do you think I am wrong? Then consider this. Were you ever allowed to
	show your fear as a child (and to act on it)? Were you allowed to cry
	freely and openly? Were you allowed to get angry (at being 'done over'
	or in defense of yourself)? As often as you needed? Or were you
	endlessly admonished and, one way or another, terrorized into behaving
	blandly (with 'acceptable' feelings like love and happiness tolerated in
	particular doses and circumstances).
	
	So if you want to deal powerfully with all of the emotional responses
	that are causing your so-called 'mental illness', here is my suggestion.
	Focus on feeling each and all of your feelings. If you wake from a
	nightmare, deliberately and consciously focus on the imagery in the
	nightmare while you feel just how terrified you are. Focus on this
	feeling for as long as you can. It will be horrendous and will take
	enormous courage. But, after a time, it will start to fade and you will
	feel some relief. When your fear arises again, in any context, pay
	conscious attention to it. You have been suppressing it all of your
	life; it just wants to be heard and felt so that you can let it go
	forever.
	
	If you feel angry, instead of trying to suppress it, harming yourself or
	harming someone else (perhaps, even, someone you love), express your
	anger fully and completely but in a safe way. How? Here are some
	suggestions but you will need to decide what will work best for you. Get
	an axe and chop wood (thinking about utterly destroying who/what is
	making you angry: parents, teachers, religious figures, politicians,
	military officers…) until your anger has been vented. Or smash a bat or
	racquet into a mattress or cushion. Or scream (into a pillow if noise is
	an issue). Or punch a punching bag. If you feel angry you need to exert
	enormous physical effort to adequately express it. This might require
	several hours for any one session and you might need to do a great many
	sessions. Remember, you need to work off a lifetime of anger! If you can
	set up a safe space for your regular anger sessions, do so. Whatever you
	do, however, don't waste your time saying or writing 'I feel angry…'.
	And don't waste a moment of your life in an 'anger management' course.
	Anger, like all emotions, needs to be expressed, not 'managed' (that is,
	suppressed).
	
	Another reason why it is important that you express your anger as I have
	just suggested is because you will often discover afterwards that you
	are projecting your anger. Projection is another of the creative ways
	that your mind can use to give you a lead back to some of your
	suppressed feelings. Projection occurs, for example, when it feels like
	you are angry with your spouse for something she/he has done but, once
	you fully express the feelings, you realize that, in fact, while your
	spouse did something that unintentionally triggered your anger, most of
	the anger is actually about someone or something from your childhood.
	You cannot discover the source of the projection without fully
	expressing the feelings first. Many people who routinely abuse their
	spouse and/or children are trapped in a projection which is why their
	anger cannot lead to greater self-awareness. People often project their
	fear and sadness too: phobias are the result of projected fear, for
	example, while sad films enable some people to access their suppressed
	sadness.
	
	If you feel sad or anxious or ashamed or guilty or in pain or despairing
	or obsessive or depressed or hopeless or compulsive or self-hating or
	humiliated or anything else, just let yourself feel it, deeply. And let
	it manifest in its own way: cry (if that is what happens when you feel
	sad), shake (if that is what happens when you feel scared), feel guilty
	or hopeless, feel horrible or …. Deliberately. Consciously. For as long
	as it lasts or for as long as you are able to do at the time.
	
	If you feel a sensation in your body, such as muscle tension or a pain
	or a sense of contamination, focus on where you feel it and how it
	feels. Eventually, after feeling the feelings from this sensation (which
	might take very many sessions), you will discover why the sensation
	originated and learn what it is trying to teach you.
	
	If you feel suicidal it will often be because you are unconsciously
	suppressing another shocking feeling that feels beyond your courage to
	feel consciously, such as the feeling of self-hatred for something
	shameful you have done, and suicide will seem the best way out. The
	suicidal feeling might also arise out a sense of hopelessness or a
	desire for release from enormous emotional and/or physical pain. Suicide
	is an option that no-one should ever take from you, and I would never do
	so, but I gently encourage you to focus on any suicidal feeling in the
	belief that the underlying feeling – self-hatred, pain or something else
	– will eventually be relieved and the urge to destroy yourself will pass
	allowing you to keep traveling the journey of healing.
	
	At this point, I should add that consciously focusing on feeling
	physical pain (as a result of injuries or otherwise) is an important
	element of any comprehensive healing strategy too.
	
	As you have realized by now, this process of feeling isn't necessarily
	fun and my suggestion runs directly counter to our 'feel good' culture
	which emphasizes 'positive' feelings while teaching you to suppress
	'negative' ones. However, feeling your suppressed feelings will be,
	ultimately, liberating and will progressively restore you to a life of
	authenticity: a superior version of the life of dignity, honour and
	courage that you once had (or should have had).
	
	If new symptoms arise as you travel your healing journey and even if
	these involve difficult feelings, it will usually be a sign that you are
	making solid progress in uncovering the original sources of your
	emotional 'ill-health'. These symptoms, if any, simply provide another
	opportunity for you to focus on how you feel. Take advantage of them
	until they fade so that you learn what they are teaching you.
	
	Another suggestion I have is to alter your diet to the consumption of
	organically-grown, vegetarian whole (unprocessed) food so that your
	brain gets the nutrition it needs to heal and function well. This also
	means that you should discontinue using any drugs that are supposed to
	suppress your awareness of your anxiety, depression, OCD, PTSD…
	particularly given that psychiatric drugs might generate new symptoms,
	worsen your existing symptoms and/or even cause brain damage. If you are
	addicted (whether to psychiatric drugs, alcohol or illicit drugs), you
	might consider consulting a natural health practitioner (such as a
	homeopath or naturopath) who is familiar with assisting people to
	withdraw from drugs and to detoxify their bodies, or consider buying the
	Charlotte Gerson book 'Healing the Gerson Way: Defeating Cancer and
	other Chronic Diseases' so that you can undertake Gerson Therapy
	http://www.gerson.org at home to eliminate all of your physical drug
	addictions. Alternatively, you might consult the 'Mad in America'
	http://www.madinamerica.com/resources/ website for other methods on how
	to safely and easily break your addictions.
	
	In addition, I strongly encourage you to discontinue seeing all of those
	psychiatrists, psychologists, psychotherapists, counsellors and doctors
	(unless they qualify as specified below) who are more terrified of the
	natural expression of your feelings than are you (and probably only
	offer time-limited sessions). See 'Defeating the Violence of
	Psychiatry'.
	http://warisacrime.org/content/defeating-violence-psychiatry
 You need to
		feel all of your feelings which have been an appropriate emotional
		response to the terror of your childhood. It is feeling our feelings
		that allows us to move on from violence and trauma to lead a meaningful
		life. Evolution is not stupid even if many of its human products have,
		indeed, been stupefied.
		
		If you are lucky enough to know someone (relative, friend or
		professional) who feels capable of listening to you while you talk about
		violent/traumatic experiences (and thus enable your feelings to surface
		more readily) and you trust them to do so, I encourage you to take
		advantage of the listening. Ideally, this should happen on a daily basis
		with each session lasting for as long as you need it.
		
		Talk about your experiences (or don't talk if you find this difficult)
		but spend time focusing on how you feel about these experiences. Choose
		an unpleasant memory from your past and focus on the feelings – sadness,
		fear, anger, shame, guilt… – that arise as you talk and then think about
		that memory. Keep replaying the memory as often as it feels productive
		to do so, until the feelings attached to that memory have all been
		felt/expressed and the memory is no longer difficult to contemplate. If
		the feelings attached to a particular memory feel too horrible for you
		to feel now, choose a memory with feelings that feel manageable and
		tackle them first. The more horrible memories will wait until you feel
		capable of feeling them because the courage you need to feel your worst
		fears will gradually accumulate.
		
		The listener should listen in silence (even if you are not speaking)
		and, if capable of doing so, occasionally reflect any of your feelings
		they can hear 'beneath' the words you are speaking; for example, 'You
		sound scared of your mother/father' or 'You sound angry that your
		teacher forced you to do something against your will'. If the reflection
		is accurate, keep focusing on how you feel by imagining what is bringing
		up the feeling. If you feel like crying, then cry. If you need to get
		angry, do so in the way that works for you (as mentioned above). And so
		on. You are the only one who can interpret your feelings, nightmares,
		dreams and other emotional experiences and you should ask any listener
		to let you do so. Discourage any listener from reassuring or advising
		you; deal with the reality of how you feel, finally, and discover your
		own way forward. For more detail, see 'Nisteling: The Art of Deep
		Listening'.
		https://nonviolentstrategy.wordpress.com/strategywheel/constructive-program/nisteling/
		 
		If you don't know anyone who can listen without being triggered into
		feelings of their own (because they are scared by what happened to
		you/them) then you are better off listening to yourself. That means
		having regular sessions, preferably on a daily basis, in a safe space
		you have created when you allow yourself to deliberately focus on
		traumatic experiences and to feel each and all of the feelings,
		sometimes in combination, that arise when you do. It will sometimes mean
		that you need to abandon what you are doing because something triggers a
		sudden rush of feelings that demand your attention immediately. Not very
		convenient I know, but neither were your traumatic experiences as a
		child.
		
		If you want more information about the process I have described above,
		see Anita McKone 'Fearless Psychology and Fearful Psychology: Principles
		and Practice'.
		http://anitamckone.wordpress.com/articles-2/fearless-and-fearful-psychology/
		 
		How long will it take? For many of you it will take a very long time,
		perhaps several years of regular sessions. I would like to tell you
		otherwise but you have been lied to far too often already – there are no
		quick fixes to the emotional trauma you are suffering – and I won't
		insult you by doing so again. Having said 'it will take a very long
		time', I will add that every individual has a unique healing journey
		and, whatever the difficult feelings involved, each session of feeling
		is a session of healing – which might reveal an important insight about
		your life – and will take you one step closer to gaining a life free of
		mental ill-health and full of emotional power.
		
		In essence, it is vastly superior strategy to provide yourself with a
		safe space in which your feelings can arise naturally so that you can
		feel and express them, safely and completely, rather than endlessly try
		to suppress them (but have them manifest 'out of control' anyway).
		
		If you have a spouse or child who has been traumatized by your
		behaviour, the information in this article is equally valid for them
		too. In fact, it is useful information for any person because,
		tragically, we were all terrorized during childhood.
		
		Obviously, I haven't dealt with every issue – like 'How do I recover
		from my emotional devastation when I need to work?' or 'How do I recover
		emotionally if I have difficult physical injuries too?' – so I am going
		to have to trust you to work out answers to any unanswered questions. I
		am just explaining how you can emotionally restore yourself.
		
		Finally, if your life experience generally leaves you inclined to
		believe that humans can do better than inflict mass violence on each
		other in attempts to 'resolve' their conflicts, then you might consider
		signing online 'The People’s Charter to Create a Nonviolent World'.
		http://thepeoplesnonviolencecharter.wordpress.com
		 
		In conclusion, I want to summarize your options, which are the options
		open to any human. You stand at the fork of two paths. The first path is
		the one that takes you further along the journey that you are traveling,
		offering you more of what you have now.
		
		The second path, outlined above, offers you a long journey of difficult,
		frightening and painful emotional healing – with regular periods of
		relief and rewarding insights about your life – which will, if traveled,
		lead you to a vastly superior version of your old life.
		
		The third path, which will only open to you once you have traveled the
		second path for a considerable time, will provide an encounter with ever
		deeper layers of suppressed fear, sadness, pain, anger, shame, guilt,
		anxiety, dread, humiliation, self-hatred … terror, fury … until its end
		many years later (although your capacity to cope with such horror will
		be steadily growing all of the time). At the end of this third path,
		should you choose to travel it and once your final layer of suppressed
		terror has been felt, you will become the person that evolution intended
		you to be on the day you were born.