image: health informer
'Depression, Bipolar Disorder, Schizophrenia, Body Dismorphic Disorder, Borderline Personality Disorder'
We all hear about this all the time and must know or at least heard of someone who suffers from one of these illnesses. The Channel Five presenter Trisha Goddard, who once suffered from depression explained in an interview “My depression wasn’t recognised and I was given no treatment. That was to cause me tremendous problems later... my depression hasn’t gone away, but I’ve learned to live with it,” she says. “I’m no longer a victim of the illness, instead I’m a survivor.”
Mental illness is still given some sort of bad reputation in society, perhaps because it is misunderstood and seen as a very negative thing. It is also something which is rarely talked about in society, often ignored or the fact of it being considered as something that should not be spoken about in public because it is meant to be 'a private thing' so to speak. What should be known is that sufferers of mental illness have emotions too like other 'normal' human beings and are helpless in terms of these conditions that may have befallen them. They should not be treated like monsters or some sort of aliens that need to be ignored because after all, they are humans too.
What are people saying about mental illness?
'I do take medication for depression and when i tell people this, they usually distant themselves from me a little bit and it is not like i am trying to get pity for saying this. it's just that i am too open with people which comes at a cost.' Keziah, 25, aspiring musician
'I think it is something that should not be discussed too often, its too private and too controversial like religion and homosexuality.' Preethi, 20, student
'It is so complicated, and is viewed with so much taboo by people and victims of it, usually end up turning into outcasts.' Matthew, 24, poet
image: google 
