Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Douglas LaBier - What Psychological Health Looks Like


Cool article from Doug LaBier over at Huffington Post - some definitions of psychology health are pretty simple: the absence of symptoms that impact daily life in a negative way. Others are more complex, and if you read the DSM-IV-TR (the Diagnostic and Statistic Manual of the American Psychological Association) everyone is mentally ill in some way.

In my opinion, good affect regulation and resiliency are part of psychological health - but it must also include a healthy body, good relationships, an openness to experience and information, and even a healthy society (we're all effed on this one). Douglas LaBier has slightly different definitions.

What Psychological Health Looks Like

Douglas LaBier, Business psychologist and psychotherapist

Posted: January 21, 2011

My previous post, "The Changing Face of Psychological Health," provoked a number of comments about serious mental illness. That was understandable, especially in the light of the Tucson shootings. But they also missed the point of my post: That we lack a clear, relevant description of what psychological health is, in today's world; and, how you can build it. So in this post I describe more about what a psychologically healthy life looks like, today -- in your relationships, your work, and in your role as a "future ancestor."

First, keep in mind that psychological health isn't the same as the absence of mental or emotional disorders. For example, you can't say that a happy person is someone who's not depressed. Many people have consulted me who aren't depressed by clinical criteria, but they aren't happy with their work, relationships or their overall lives, either.

Moreover, self-awareness isn't equivalent to health. It's a necessary underpinning, but it's not enough. Therapists often help their patients deepen self-awareness about the roots of their conflicts, only to wonder why they remain the same. Psychiatrist Richard Friedman described that dilemma in a recent New York Times article in which he illustrated the puzzlement practitioners experience when they are confronted with the limitation of awareness, alone.

To the extent there's a conventional view of psychological health at all, it's mostly equated with good life-management and coping skills. That is, managing stress in your work and personal life, and coping with -- if not resolving -- whatever emotional conflicts you brought with you into adulthood.

A less visible view of psychological health also exists: Successful adaptation to and embracing of the dominant values, behavior and attitudes of the society or milieu you're a part of. The problem here is that such socially-conditioned norms have also embodied greed, self-absorption, domination, destructiveness and divisiveness. They've been equated with "success" in adult life.

The upshot is that you can be well-adapted to dominant attitudes and behavior that are, themselves, psychologically unhealthy. So you may be "well-adjusted" to an unhealthy life.

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