Mental health has always been my passion. Not just in theory, not just in textbooks—but in the trenches. In the quiet moments. In the chaos. In the love.
My mom struggled with severe anxiety and depression, shaped by years of trauma in her childhood and early adulthood. I watched her fight invisible battles with strength and silence. I learned early that mental health isn’t just about coping—it’s about surviving.
My first spouse lived with borderline schizophrenia, antisocial personality disorder (formerly called narcissistic personality disorder), depression, and addiction. Loving them meant navigating a maze of instability, fear, and heartbreak. It taught me how to hold space for someone else’s pain while trying not to drown in my own.
My wife—my lovely, brilliant wife—lives with borderline personality disorder, autism, anxiety, PTSD, and depression. Loving her is a gift. It’s also a mirror. Because for as long as I can remember, I’ve been the “therapist friend.” Sometimes the “mom friend.” The one who always seems prepared to handle every flavor of neuro-spicy chaos with patience and love.
And it’s true—I am good at it. But it’s been a blessing and a curse.
Because now, looking back with what I know now… I realize something important:
Great minds think alike.
And I, too, struggle.
I just never had time to notice.
I’ve spent so much of my life caring for others, holding their stories, soothing their storms, that I forgot to check the weather inside myself. I forgot that I deserve care, too. That my trauma matters. That my healing matters.
World Mental Health Day isn’t just about awareness—it’s about honesty. It’s about saying, “I’m not okay,” and knowing that’s a valid place to start. It’s about acknowledging our trauma. Owning it. Feeling it. Because that’s the only way to heal from it, learn from it, and grow.
So today, I honor every version of myself—the caregiver, the advocate, the “therapist friend,” and the person who finally realized she needed therapy, too.
Mental health is not weakness. It’s wisdom.
It’s not a flaw. It’s a fingerprint.
And it’s not just theirs. It’s mine, too.

Resources
Call or Text HOME or START to 741741
National Alliance on Mental Illness


