I’ve seen it vary widely from place to place (America is pretty big, after all).
I would say the prime candidate to be open to talking about mental health in America is a young (~15-25), wealthy, city-living person. As you move away from those traits, the less likely the person is to being candid about their mental health (i.e. older, poorer, and rural-living people are less likely to talk about it).
There’s definitely some taboos about speaking about it among blue-collar workers. It seems like there was a push a decade or so ago to start doing psyche evals for people who worked in heavy machinery. I knew one guy who (as a wave of psyche evals ame through) was dropped from his machinist job (that he’d done for 20+ years without injuring hisself or others) after telling the doc he had 1-3 beers almost every night. Cause for firing was that “he is a hazard to himself and the people he worked with”. I know everyone else in that shop clamped their mouths shut about any depression, anxiety, and sleep issues after that.
Word is they’ve gotten a lot better about how they conduct them, but the point is that among blue collar workers, it feels like talking about mental health issues has (historically) been a fast track to losing the ability to put bread on the table.
I do white collar work now, and on this side of the wall, its definitely a lot less taboo. There’s still a stigma about it, but that could just be my own anecdotal experience.
All that is to say, there’s a history of mental health being used to harm people, so its not yet an open subject, but that taboo is lifting, if not exactly quickly.
I’ve seen it vary widely from place to place (America is pretty big, after all).
I would say the prime candidate to be open to talking about mental health in America is a young (~15-25), wealthy, city-living person. As you move away from those traits, the less likely the person is to being candid about their mental health (i.e. older, poorer, and rural-living people are less likely to talk about it).
There’s definitely some taboos about speaking about it among blue-collar workers. It seems like there was a push a decade or so ago to start doing psyche evals for people who worked in heavy machinery. I knew one guy who (as a wave of psyche evals ame through) was dropped from his machinist job (that he’d done for 20+ years without injuring hisself or others) after telling the doc he had 1-3 beers almost every night. Cause for firing was that “he is a hazard to himself and the people he worked with”. I know everyone else in that shop clamped their mouths shut about any depression, anxiety, and sleep issues after that.
Word is they’ve gotten a lot better about how they conduct them, but the point is that among blue collar workers, it feels like talking about mental health issues has (historically) been a fast track to losing the ability to put bread on the table.
I do white collar work now, and on this side of the wall, its definitely a lot less taboo. There’s still a stigma about it, but that could just be my own anecdotal experience.
All that is to say, there’s a history of mental health being used to harm people, so its not yet an open subject, but that taboo is lifting, if not exactly quickly.