Health
Related: About this forumHow neoliberalism is damaging your mental health
I read this years ago, but I think it is as relevant today as it was in 2018 when it first came out. It is one of the most personally relevant articles I have seen on mental health.
I think many of us who have no other mental health issues are still not immune from this type of challenge to our health. I have been fortunate in never having had innate depression or other mental health issues, but certainly the world many of us live and work in makes us more sick.
I have never felt there is any stigma associated with any form of illness..if you are ill you are ill. It would be dated to feel shame over ignorant stereotypes.
But I do think the worst employers out there want to pass off as an employees health issue, issues they specifically create. It is a tortuous dilemma. Most employers are only concerned with pr or lawsuits when they stress employees to the point of a breakdown.
I like this article because it explores the politics of workplace mental health issues.
Anyway I thought I would post this here. I found it comforting and thought it might help other people as well:
https://theconversation.com/how-neoliberalism-is-damaging-your-mental-health-90565
In particular, there is growing concern that the conditions and effects of neoliberalism the enervating whirl of relentless privatisation, spiralling inequality, withdrawal of basic state support and benefits, ever-increasing and pointless work demands, fake news, unemployment and precarious work is partly to blame. Perhaps most wearying are the invasive yet distant commands from media, state institutions, advertisements, friends or employers to self-maximise, persevere, grab your slice of the diminishing pie, because you are worth it although you must constantly prove it, every day.
In our work and leisure we are urged to feign permanent enthusiasm amid radically lowered expectations. Neoliberal newspeak hollows out the terminology of achievement, mandating boasts about personal excellence and dedication as actual possibilities for achievement diminish and work becomes stripped of meaning. At my institution, the cleaners uniforms are emblazoned with inscriptions announcing that they deliver their work with passion, professionalism and pride as if it were reasonable to demand passion from a cleaner on minimum wage whose workload has doubled since 2012.
More at the link.
I think the worst modern workplaces also can program a sense of learned helplessness into employees. A concept I first read about years ago in another good New Yorker article:
https://www.newyorker.com/science/maria-konnikova/theory-psychology-justified-torture
But heres the more relevant question: Does the condition, in turn, make someone more likely to tell the truth and give up important information that had previously remained hidden? Here we have no direct dataafter all, there have never been controlled torture trials that we know ofbut we do have some theoretical basis in the study of severe depression to suggest that it will do no such thing. People whove given up lack all incentive. Once they are in that state of hopelessness, there is no longer a way to motivate them. Absent any possible inducement or motivation, most people just want to quit. The threat of pain or even death no longer makes much of a difference: Nothing I do or say matters, so why bother? A person in a state of learned helplessness is someone who is passive, someone who has abandoned all active will and desire. He can tell the truth, yes, but why? Lying or saying whatever it is that the torturer wants to hear is just as likely to attain the same result. A person without motivation is not a person who can be induced to tell deep truths: the incentive simply isnt there.
I think learned helplessness would make someone less defiant and more likely to compliantly tell the interrogator what he wants to hear, Seligman said. It would also likely undermine the belief that telling the truth will lead to good treatment. In other words, it would do the opposite of what its users in this particular context intended.
The article ends on a slightly more hopeful note:
These are both interesting articles and I thought I would share them with DU.
eppur_se_muova
(37,366 posts)I would have likely encountered in my own random attempts to keep up with the deluge of information available today.
jfz9580m
(15,459 posts)I save good articles like these for years. I have a stockpile of them. I keep pdfs in case the links break (which sometimes they do).
A more recent article on related topics:
https://www.zmescience.com/science/study-shows-doing-a-phd-is-really-bad-for-your-mental-health-and-absolutely-no-one-is-surprised/