Site icon Sport And Healthy

NATURAL MENTAL HEALTH: Integrative Insights

I’ve been a psychiatrist for 3 decades, and I remain an optimist about the human condition. I see it as our nature to be emotionally balanced and mentally healthy — or what’s often referred to as resilient. Though many things can deplete that resilience, In my opinion there is an innate capacity for self-healing within each of us. That’s what this column will focus on in the months ahead. 

First, though, we have to understand the mental-health problem we are facing — and it’s a big one. Just consider these staggering numbers: 

Mental illness is as old as human history. So why has it become a crisis today? 

Lifestyle Factors Are Key

Some experts believe our genes take into account up to 50 percent of the causes of mental illness, but our collective DNA changes so slowly it can’t explain why mental-health issues have risen so quickly.

Science and common sense suggest a host of other causes, including these modifiable lifestyle choices: 

Mental Health Is Natural 

To meet this crisis, we want an approach  that is more holistic and accessible than what is commonly used today. I practice what I call “natural mental health,” an integrative mixture of science, skills, and practices for optimizing well-being. 

The paradigm for natural mental health is among wholeness, building on strengths instead of focusing on pathology. We don’t ignore what is wrong, but we seek to comprehend the root causes before initiating treatment. 

An integrative practice doesn’t mean we throw out the standard toolkit, which includes medication and psychotherapy. We expand upon it by drawing from the variety of other sources, including neuroscience, functional nutrition, plant-based medicine, and also the psychology of mindfulness. Anything that works safely is worthy of consideration.

Self-care is central for this approach. We work with lifestyle medicine (addressing the standards above) to determine the underlying reasons for illness and promote greater resilience for future prevention.

Imbalance might be found in the neurotransmitters, of course, however it can begin in the body as a whole: mind, heart, or soul. The interior life — creating meaning, purpose, and deep connections — reaches least as important as brain chemistry in sustaining genuine mental health.

The goal is not simply to improve symptoms or even to prevent illness. It is to create a flourishing life. And that is feasible for everyone.

Exit mobile version