Stigma is when a person views another individual in a subjective manner because that individual has a distinguishing mark, physical disfigurement, or peculiarity that's assumed to be negative.
Discrimination is when that negative perception is used against the individual to deny him/her an equal opportunity in daily life, denying access to goods and services or the possibility of employment, and/or the prospect for local/national service.
A Huffington Post article says, "Stigma is a product of ignorance–it's when people know nothing about mental illness that they tend to judge, ridicule, and ostracise people affected by it."
The US National Institute of Health says, "Discrimination may be obvious and direct, such as someone making a negative remark about your mental illness or your treatment. Or it may be unintentional or subtle, such as someone avoiding you because the person assumes you could be unstable, violent, or dangerous." (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)."On the other hand," says the Huff Post, "when people understand that mental illnesses are just illnesses–treatable just like physical illnesses are–and they understand the symptoms of mental illnesses and the truths and myths surrounding them, they stop being prejudiced."
Negative attitudes and beliefs toward people with mental health issues are at a disheartening level in T&T, causing many not to reach out for help owing to fear of prejudice. Many people write to me week after week telling me of their issues and the fear with which they carry them, especially the fear of others finding out and their being judged and treated unfairly.Others write asking how to help a recently diagnosed friend who has shut out everyone, refusing to interact even within her household, possibly feeling that she's received a life sentence to hell.
People are fearful that others in their family will find out, frightened about workplace discrimination, afraid of social exclusion, discrimination and prejudice, that people with mental health problems experience.Those of us who live with a mental health issue are among the most marginalised of groups within society. In T&T, there is no voice that speaks up for the mentally ill, so that discrimination remains dominant and prejudice remains unconstrained.
Most often stigma against people with a mental illness involves inaccurate and hurtful representations of them as violent, comical, or incompetent–dehumanising and making people an object of fear or ridicule (Sane, Australia).I know. I've been there. I have sat among some who occupy and others who wish to occupy the highest seats of influence and have been the subject of ridicule with nary a word of defence or objection to suggest that anyone thinks, knows or understands that to single out a person's mental health is bigotry.
This column was born out of the concern for education and (perhaps) the stymieing of unabated stigma and discrimination. On the day I accepted the opportunity I decided to be a voice for the voiceless with mental illnesses and, more so, an advocate for those who fear the consequences of speaking out.Two and a half years later, all I've been able to do is convince some people that I'm mad, so unwilling are we to learn and change and so deeply entrenched is stigma.
In the latest insult, I was asked, "Are you aware of what the Constitution says and whether according to the provisions of the Constitution, you have any health issue that would make you unfit to hold office in T&T?"(I know what the Constitution says, but the questioner evidently never read it, does not understand it, or was given bad advice about it in order to discredit me.)
That came after a protracted outburst that seem to doubt my integrity but more so my sanity, when I shared that I took a 90 per cent cut in my earnings to relocate to Moruga, which went like this: "That is madness! That has to be madness! Who does that? That is pure madness!"Who does or says that kind of thing in 2014, except a Friday after-work inebriated limer or an ill-informed T&T?
Today, I've quoted writings/opinions from a UK-based publication, an Australian advocacy group, and a US Government Web site to identify that first-class citizenry and correct governance in the developed world stand on the side of the mentally ill, against stigma, and discrimination.
Hopefully T&T will first read, then understand, and finally, take a lesson in good leadership and positive development that may discourage the brutish thrill of cheap points.