Yes, Sometimes We Need HELP!
I'll be the first one to admit that I am NOT good [at all] at asking for HELP. Looking back, even during my childhood, I was fairly independent. Probably, I was brought about that way by our family's day-to-day circumstances WHERE my parents were constantly attempting to 'let both ends meet' [more often, to NO avail]. So, probably, that perfectionist attitude got stuck with me since then. Either way, I wanted to do everything 'RIGHT' and on a different plane, I wanted to do things all by myself. BUT Yes, Sometimes We Need HELP! WHY? WHILE this mindset of self-sufficiency can be beneficial on some fronts, it can very easily swing to the harmful side of things from a HELP-HURT scale perspective. And I'd like to admit my mea culpa during those times when I refused to seek HELP, find HELPπππ
To a fault, we can partly blame our respective cultures, especially the western culture WHO teaches us all to be fiercely individualistic. We are taught to pull ourselves by the bootstraps and keep going even in the most difficult situations. BUT that mindset leaves people suffering all by themselves, without a support system to turn in their most difficult times. WHEN Covid-19 pandemic hit us all straight from the cold, there was widespread consensus that people were experiencing an epidemic of loneliness and the amount of people with no close friends kept multiplying, year on year, and the numbers hit alarming levelsπππ
In the 90s, the popular and fan-favorite show was 'FRIENDS' but today, that would quite unrealistic because generally, people simply DON'T have that many friends anymore [especially in western countries]. Sadly, this is a stark and sad contrast to the way things have been in the past. Just last weekend, I had a 'mini reunion' with classmates from my elementary and high school days because we did cherish friendships that muchπ¦π¦π¦
Post-pandemic, mental health issues hit way beyond the ceilings. And for us with NO mental health issues, let's think about those enduring their mental health issues. Imagine if even simple tasks like getting out of bed OR washing the dishes seem like too much. Pitifully, due to shame and stigma, many mentally ill people DON'T even speak up about their needs, either OR ask for the help they need. Even in a professional setting, WHAT we often hear is the advice that we should be able to get better on our own and that medications are a crutch. Unfortunately, even for many WHO live a better life these days, many of them still struggle to find happiness in their daily lifeπ§π§π§
Our takeaway: If things are NOT going awry and YET we are in that pitiful predicament of unhappiness, let us figure things out. HOW can we be content in life and YET WHAT explains if things are still so bad and so hard? This is WHERE reaching out for HELP matters especially if making simple mindful alterations in your daily routine DOESN'T help at all. Taking antidepressants is NOT the final fix if indeed we need HELP. We just need to adjust to the idea of needing a little extra HELP to give our brain the opportunity to feel a little more emotion and as we begin to accept this, life might just throw a new curve ball right back in your face. And indeed, SOMETIMES WE NEED HELPπ₯π₯π₯