sunshineNrainbows wrote:Riccola, maybe you can answer a big question I have about psychiatry. Before I ask, lets first put psychiatry in historical context. Given how barbarically people with mental health problems have tended to be treated in the past, such as by performing lobotomies and electrical shock therapy, today's psychiatry is probably the best equipped human kind has ever been for working with mental health successfully.
Psychiatry has improved tremendously by leaps and bounds worlds over- along with laws and rights regarding consent- however IMHO it still has a long way to go.
Secondly, as you know, today's psychiatry is also only a fraction of what therapy is capable of doing, such as by welcoming criticism rather than demonizing it. You're rightfully criticizing a field which currently still has numerous problems and limitations. Additionally, you're also criticizing a large group of people who, as a whole, are currently attempting to address mental health better than any large group has in the history of mankind.
I can assure you this is not my intention.

I have nothing against people who are working to better and reform psychiatry, nor do I have anything against those who have been helped by psychiatry.
Ultimately, I'm not sure how to balance my own grievances and admiration for psychiatry. Should the focus on on psychiatry be negative? Psychiatry can certainly do much better. Should it be positive? Today's use of psychiatry is doing so much more for mental health than others have before. Some anti-psych is needed but when does this criticism start being unfair to make?
Well, I'd personally focus on the positive, and where psychiatry has ultimately helped you. Focus on healing and moving forward. Do what works for you. If something is-or has helped you-certainly do not reject it. Now, if you have any grievances, it never hurts to share them. Express them in a constructive manner and avoid dwelling or obsessing over them. Personally I think it starts to be unfair when others are punished; have treatments that work for them taken away from them; or having any particular dogma forced upon them. Ie, I personally believe that psychotropics should not be outlawed, just that people have the right to informed consent with the right to reject them.
However, there are those who have not been helped by psychiatry. There are still others who have been traumatized by psychiatry or even feel raped by it. In those cases being able to talk about it in a safe haven is a huge relief and helps with letting go of that trauma. Much like those traumatized by other situations. Being able to vent and share experiences with one another is very therapeutic helping those move forward. Getting the word out while fighting to improve broken parts of the system so others do not go through the same is the goal of many psychiatric survivors and the goal of most wanting to reform or improve psychiatry.
I hope I have answered your question.