in a world where we are glorifying and glamorizing our psychological suffering, are we losing the ability to overcome it? [preview]

Have you ever felt like your mental health struggles are being dismissed as just part of a 'mental health crisis' without anyone addressing the root causes? Do you sense there's a deeper story behind the psychological suffering of Millennials and Gen Z than what pharmaceutical ads and social media influencers are telling you? In this episode, I dive deep into these questions, exploring whether we're glorifying, glamorizing, and commercializing our psychological suffering to the point where we've lost our ability to overcome it.In the first part of our discussion, I trace the evolution of mental health perceptions and treatments over the past century. We highlight key cultural and historical shifts that have shaped our current understanding, examine the impact of significant events like economic recessions, technological booms, and cultural revolutions, and discuss how economic pressures, academic demands, and the rise of social media have created a perfect storm of mental health challenges for younger generations.The second part of the episode delves into the dynamics of resilience and parental influence. We explore how modern parenting styles, such as helicopter parenting, have influenced the perceived fragility of today’s youth. I unpack the irony of older generations labeling Millennials and Gen Z as 'snowflakes,' while their overprotective approaches may have contributed to this perceived lack of resilience. Additionally, we analyze how educational systems and the extension of adolescence impact maturity and mental health. We then turn a critical eye to the industrial-complex of mental health, examining the complicity of psychiatric institutions, pharmaceutical companies, and insurance providers. I highlight how these entities have commercialized mental distress and how recent criticisms of the serotonin hypothesis and other accepted 'scientific' bases reveal a crumbling legitimacy in our current mental health practices.Finally, I encourage you to have a 'Neo' moment—awakening from the matrix of misleading labels and rediscovering your personal and collective power. I show you how to see beyond labels as fixed identities, using them instead as tools for navigating your mental health. With actionable insights, you’ll learn how to dismantle these limiting narratives and advocate for systemic changes, creating a path to genuine resilience and well-being.TIME STAMPS:00:00 – 43:57.57: Part 1 (Explores the cultural, historical, and socioeconomic factors impacting mental health among Millennials and Gen Z.)44:02:96 – 01:29:48.75: Part 2 (Examines the dynamics of resilience, parental influence, and critiques the industrial-complex of mental health.) Craving more? Become a Premium Submarine. Join an exclusive community and unlock hundreds of hours of members-only content: full-length episodes, deep-dive series, guided meditations, and more—all for the cost of a couple of coffees a month. Start exploring at backfromtheborderline.com.The information contained in this podcast episode is for educational and entertainment purposes only and is not intended as a substitute for treatment or consultation with a licensed mental health professional. acast+ https://plus.acast.com/s/back-from-the-borderline. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Om Podcasten

I don’t want to talk to your personality; I want to talk to your soul. Imagine if your most painful and debilitating mental health symptoms and self-sabotaging behaviors aren’t evidence of 'disorder' or 'dysfunction', but adaptive strategies that once kept you safe. My goal is to help you shift from asking ‘What’s wrong with me?’ to ‘What happened to me?’The word ‘borderline’ in this podcast isn’t about psychiatric labels. It’s about coming back from the inner psychological brink we all experience. Everyone has found themselves on the edge, in that liminal space where the old self falls apart and the new Self emerges. Here, we explore what it means to undergo true emotional alchemy: that ancient and primordial process of falling apart, confronting the underworld of our psyche, and falling back together into someone stronger, wiser, and more whole.Many highly sensitive people who identify with the seemingly never-ending list of diagnostic mental health labels contained within ‘the bible of psychiatry’ (the DSM) share the same underlying sense of being irreparably broken, disconnected from their intuition, and paralyzed by life’s existential questions. I believe the resulting—and perfectly understandable—chronic feelings of emptiness and spiritual starvation are the TRUE causes of our current collective ‘mental health crisis.’ Together, we’ll dive into depth psychology, mythology, human consciousness, critical psychiatry, and the impact of trauma to help you begin the process of emotional alchemy. This exploration will help you get to the root cause of your suffering and free yourself from the toxic shame, limiting beliefs, and mental programming that have kept you locked in the chains of your past.In an era where mental health and spirituality are too often commercialized, I’m not here as a guru with a quick fix to sell you. I don’t believe anyone is ever truly ‘healed’ or ‘cured.’ There is no return to some mythical state of pre-trauma purity, but rather a continuous spiral of unbecoming, unlearning, and transformation. As a fellow seeker, I will be there in your ear, walking alongside you on your path toward wholeness as a sort of parasocial big sister. That, I can promise. By integrating the concepts we explore together, you’ll begin to see that anyone—even you—can come back from the borderline.CRAVING MORE? Visit backfromtheborderline.com to dive into my universe, connect with me, access my Patreon, and discover more about my journey and work. Don’t forget to follow Back from the Borderline so new episodes on Tuesdays and Thursdays automatically drop into your podcast feed. acast+ https://plus.acast.com/s/back-from-the-borderline. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.