Since reading his book "Resurrecting the Person" I have been struck by how many negative ideas about mental problems there are in the world around us. For example, when was the last time you exclaimed that someone was crazy for something they thought/did/said? I do it all the time! But crazy is a profoundly negative word that suggests that someone is not in their right mind. It's the same a using 'gay' as an insult; it just really shouldn't be done.
There is also the idea that somehow people with mental problems need 'fixing'. My sister just the other week told me how, when I was at the worst of my mental problems, she felt as if she had 'lost' me. Swinton points out that people are not a problem to be fixed and shouldn't be hidden by their illness (they are a schizophrenic, she's bipolar etc) but rather should be still treated as a person (that's cindy, she is an amazing artist who also struggles with mental problems).
It's actually a lot harder to do this than I initially thought. It is so easy to look at someone who is a little different in the way they act and react by trying to diagnose them in order to understand them better, rather than getting to know them as they are without a label. And I have had the labels! I know how destructive they are to a person, and yet I fall into this trap as well.

I would like to be like that. I would like to take the time to listen and sit and be friends with the people that, let's face it, can be damn difficult to befriend sometimes. I would like to bring life and love. The question now remains, will I?
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