Every year in May, without fail, individuals and organisations contact me for speaking engagements and many others add information to their social media platforms telling us we are celebrating Mental Health Awareness Month. People are usually excited to do something meaningful to mark the occasion and then it becomes very difficult for me to tell them the other news: Mental health awareness month is not marked locally in May or any other month.
Most times I would not comment on people’s social media feeds or celebratory events, but in the earlier years, it was quite an irritant to see these flyers and invitations or to hear the radio announcers say it is mental health awareness month without stating it is being observed in the US or UK or wherever else.
In T&T we have a mental health awareness week which is in October. It is whichever week in which World Mental Health Day, October 10, falls. It is a relatively new observance and, with three years in a pandemic, it may not as yet have taken root in the landscape.
Now, however, the month of June is employee wellness month in the US. And, since I am biased towards workplace well-being, I wish T&T would see the value of this one. It is a wonderful opportunity to address the neglect of mental health as a workplace concern for every employee. It is an occasion to teach how health, including and especially, mental health as a workplace intervention, can benefit the progress, productivity and bottom line of organisations.
My deep convictions on this one have to do with the fact that, to my mind, the workplace never afforded me opportunities to balance my mental health concerns and conditions with the high levels of creativity and productivity that I brought. Rather, steeped in the prejudice and stigma that is so culturally entrenched, there were surreptitious occasions of trying to oust me and my mad self from the workplace.
When you are an employee with a disclosed mental health status people can easily find a constituency of like-minded bigots to make you seem misplaced. Your every word, action, and decision is judged through the lens of madness and a case can easily be made about your unfitness. In fact, in T&T you do not even have to disclose, just act strange once a month and see what happens.
And if you do not believe me then ask the psychiatrists who are always in court to give testimony for their clients’ fitness to function in the workplace.
Or just recall the Cheryl Miller incident of the last decade where she was incarcerated because she was “behaving strange” in the workplace and someone wanted “to help.”
With the working age being 18-65, people spend most of their life at work. The workplace is a prime place to teach every aspect of well-being from adolescent challenges to ageing issues. So, if we really want to celebrate something that is not quite ours, I recommend National Employee Wellness Month or Professional Wellness Month.
Those involved in this observance say that paying attention to some of these elements of wellness and well-being ensures better teamwork, higher productivity and healthier lifestyles of employees. Creating a thriving environment where employees are happy to return every work day is the benchmark of successful organisations globally.
According to nationaltoday.com, “Professional Wellness Month was created with the very idea to showcase the importance of maintaining a satisfying work culture and the direct correlation between professional wellness and a happy and stress-free individual.”
The idea is, at the organisation level, to be proactive in implementing programmes and activities to promote wellness, and at the employees’ level, to “incentivise individuals to take charge of their lives and adopt healthy habits that are imperative for their personal and professional development.” https://nationaltoday.com/professional-wellness-month/
There are online resources to help companies, their human resource professionals or other staff organisations to implement simple start-ups geared towards improved employee health and well-being.
The WellRight Blog is one of the references that I will plug here for their holistic outlook on broad areas on how employers can focus on employees’ well-being in June.
Emotional well-being: Teach mindfulness–this builds emotional resilience and helps employees to be present in the moment and to suspend judgment while working through difficulties.
Financial well-being: Provide resources to employees including financial counselling to manage life expenses, savings, and retirement.
Physical well-being: Introduce a wellness challenge. (In one organisation where I have implemented a workplace well-being programme, we provided step counting watches and grouped employees for a step challenge with prizes and bragging rights.)
Social well-being: Host an event.
Occupational well-being: Use coaching to help employees focus on the future by assisting them in seeing their own future within the organisation or in life in general.
Purpose: Make mission statements practical not just by setting goals but by revisiting goals and renewing commitments so employees can remember their workplace purpose (www.wellright.com/blog).