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Carrie Fisher normalized mental illness. These 13 tweets show why that matters. (upworthy.com)

 

The "Star Wars" legend, who died at age 60 less than one week after suffering a heart attack, was more than an actor. She fought for animal welfare. She railed against sexism, body-shaming, and ageism in Hollywood. And she often spoke candidly about living with addiction and bipolar disorder.

To many fans, Fisher's openness about living with mental illness made a big difference.

Helping to stomp out the stigma against mental illness quickly became one way that fans honored Fisher's legacy.

To read more of Robbie Couch's article, please click here.

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13 Public comments that show the other side of the story:

pulpamor

I’ve been beside myself regarding all of the blatantly false information whirling around, so thank for shedding a bit of light and justice to the cause here!

In my own journey, I find the allure for a biological narrative, which offers powerful validation, to have been seductive. Falling for this narrative has prevented healing and kept me sick (and many times sicker) longer with psychotropic drugs.

registeredforthissite

I had a psychopathically abusive father. Caused me a lot of depression. I also had mania caused due to SSRI antidepressants (which subsequently led to a bipolar diagnosis).

How can a chaotic childhood not be a risk factor for experiencing depression, something that is part of the label of β€œbipolar disorder” (which just says that a person experienced depression and mania and not why they happened).

β€œSaying that bipolar disorder is itself the problem is akin to saying that one’s head hurts because one has a headache, and it is the headache that is causing the head to hurt. This logic, quite literally, gives me a headache.”

Matt Stevenson

It is strange how time and again, the notion that β€œyour borderline disorder” or β€œyour bipolar illness” is causing distress keeps popping up. I have repeatedly stated this to people – a psychiatric label is not a direct cause of anything (distress is usually a derivative of other complex causes). A psych label is simply a label for an experience. Exactly what you said.

Etc... I could come up with 10 more random comments. I will eventually. Not everyone is helped by the type of disease label identification promoted by Carrier Fisher (and this site all too often). 

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