The Mental Health Opportunity: Transforming Struggles into Strengths | Julia Krankl | TEDxOjai

NOTE FROM TED: Please do not look to this talk for mental health advice. This talk represents the speaker’s personal views and interpretation of the relationship between mental health, technology, and evolutionary psychiatry which remains an ongoing field of study. We’ve flagged this talk because it falls outside the content guidelines TED gives TEDx organizers. TEDx events are independently organized by volunteers. The guidelines we give TEDx organizers are described in more detail here: http://storage.ted.com/tedx/manuals/tedx_content_guidelines.pdf

What if our toughest challenges held the seeds of our greatest strengths? In this inspiring and thought-provoking talk, Julia Krankl reframes today’s rising mental health struggles as an opportunity for resilience, connection, and growth—calling on us to replace stigma with compassion and understanding, and to rebuild the communities we all need to thrive. (This talk is for informational purposes only and does not substitute for professional medical advice or treatment.) Julia Krankl is a Harvard and UCLA-trained psychiatrist, trauma resilience specialist and the author of The 21st Minute, with proceeds supporting mental health nonprofits. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx

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47 Comments

  1. Honestly we've already come so far. They used to just give people shock therapy and lock them away in facilities to the point people were terrified of talking about how they were really doing

  2. Thank you for this. I've had insomnia on and off since my early 20's and it's something that affects every other aspect of your life. Hearing that a LOT of other people also experience this was really validating for me

  3. I think it's time for us to collectively acknowledge that our way of life in the western world is so far removed from what a human life is meant to be and actually DO something about changing it

  4. I like the reframe and it is an opportunity for us to be better as a society but considering there are very limited resources for public health I feel like it's just another thing that's going to fall by the wayside

  5. Honestly I wouldn't be surprised if that 1 in 5 stat is a little conservative. I feel like most people I know are struggling with something pretty serious regarding their mental health.

  6. It's very hopeful to think of it as an opportunity instead of a crisis but really what is it an opportunity for? On a societal level I mean, not just a personal one

  7. She makes a lot of really solid points about all these things being pretty natural responses to the conditions we're living in atm. Sadly I don't think much will change though

  8. The first step is to stop thinking of it as a struggle! I saw a video of a kid and his mom and the moms saying this is my kid he struggles with Autism and the kid says "I don't struggle I just have it." Words have power and this kid rejecting what his mother was putting on to him, I just thought it was amazing

  9. Okay I really like what she says about "grist for the mill" because honestly people just don't know how to turn their trauma and into resilience anymore. So many people want to stay stuck in the victim mindset and then over a long amount of time it turns into "mental illness"

  10. So much of this can be helped by not ignoring the problems in your life. I get what she's saying and yeah life is hard and we don't all have the resources to get therapy and eat unprocessed foods but there are a lot of easy thing you can do to pull yourself out of a mental health crisis.

  11. I think the real struggle is because people will often just keep pushing themselves until they are like… beyond exhausted and depleted. Then they realize there's an issue but they have no energy to fix it.

  12. We're definitely not all this mentally ill. It's just modern life and what it does to people, add isolation, loneliness, an inability to emotionally regulate and terrible diets on top of everything and really what chance do we have?

  13. Another issue I think is that yes we're meant to be social/community minded people but we're used to having small communities and so the problems we're used to worrying about and trying to fix are small problems and instead we're confronted with all these really huge global problems every day and I think that does add to the stress of existing

  14. Wishing everyone struggling through these kinds of issues a whole world of healing. Especially those with insomnia… sleep is so important for your mind AND body

  15. The individual can learn to harness and channel their "mental illness" into something productive but we still need some big changes on an overall sociological level.