advertisement

How to Help Someone with a Mental Illness

March 28, 2011 Natasha Tracy

Loving and supporting someone with a mental illness is hard. Here are some ways to help a love one with a mental illness. Breaking Bipolar blog.

I talk to many people who want to help a person with a mental illness. Often the people they want to help are loved ones who have just been diagnosed with a mental illness and those who want to help feel powerless.

The “helpers” have a hard job, but let me just say, we love you for it.

Be a Powerhouse of Support for Someone With Mental Illness

Let’s just start by recognizing that mental illness is a real illness and you can’t fix it any more than you can fix cancer. I appreciate that you want to take the pain away, but please understand, you can’t. You need to accept that.

That being said, you can have an extremely important role in helping us get better. Support and love are the best things in the world.

When someone is diagnosed they may feel defective, unlovable and like they will be abandoned. If you can stand by the person with love and support and with a reminder that you’re not going anywhere, that is a magnificent gift.

Supporting a Sick Person is Hard

It’s really tough to weather the storms of a mental illness. It’s tough for the person with the illness and it’s tough for those around them. We know it’s hard. That’s why it’s such an amazing gift to try to help.

What You Can Do to Support Someone with a Mental Illness

  1. Tell them you love them, support them and won’t leave them.
  2. Tell them that they are not broken and they are the person they have always been, but they just have an illness
  3. Learn about their illness. The amount of information available out there on any illness is daunting. If you can fill in some of the blanks and do some of the work, particularly in the beginning, that’s a great help. Plus it will give you insight into what they’re going through.
  4. Help them get treatment. Drive them to appointments. Make sure they have their medications. Make sure they are talking to their doctor or therapist.
  5. Check in. Make sure they are doing OK. Make sure they are following the treatment plan.
  6. Offer to take care of a chore. Offer to make dinner. Offer to vacuum. The smallest thing is wonderful.
  7. Ask the person what they need. We’re all different and what works for us is different so the person with a mental illness can tell you best what they need.

What You Need to Do for You

Remember, get help for yourself. It’s hard to be there for a sick person. It can be really hard on you. Get your own support. It’s OK to say you need help too.

Make sure you create some boundaries. If you do everything on the list you will fall over of exhaustion. Pick reasonable things you can do. No one can do it all.

Your Support is a Gift

Whatever you do, know that your support is a gift. We might not be able to tell you at this moment. We might be too wrapped up in our illness to tell you how wonderful you are. Other people would run, but you didn’t. Your support doesn’t have to be perfect to be amazing.

You can find Natasha Tracy on Facebook or GooglePlus or @Natasha_Tracy on Twitter or at the Bipolar Burble, her blog.

APA Reference
Tracy, N. (2011, March 28). How to Help Someone with a Mental Illness, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, May 8 from https://www.healthyplace.com/blogs/breakingbipolar/2011/03/how-to-help-someone-with-a-mental-illness



Author: Natasha Tracy

Natasha Tracy is a renowned speaker, award-winning advocate, and author of Lost Marbles: Insights into My Life with Depression & Bipolar. She's also the host of the podcast Snap Out of It! The Mental Illness in the Workplace Podcast.

Find Natasha Tracy on her blog, Bipolar BurbleTwitter, InstagramFacebook, and YouTube.

Christy Avery
January, 14 2017 at 9:31 am

Any advice on getting guardianship/ conservatorship? 72 year old mother, unmedicated, bipolar disorder, disease progressively worsening after lifetime of refusal to take medication, getting to the point where she is wrecking some major havoc with her finances in addition to experiencing some fairly major paranoid delusions. Involved the legal system 16 years ago and all that resulted was insurance benefits exhausted, our relationship was fairly adversely affected because I had her committed against her will and she hasnt really ever forgiven me, no medications given because she threatened hospital with lawsuit despite having court order to treat, hospital threatened to ship her off to large city nursing home far away when I pressed the issue, so I have been loath to do that again but I need to step in and take over soon to prevent her from becoming homeless and not sure how to go about it without paying an attorney an arm and a leg- looking for educational resources . Any help would be appreciated.

Melissa Brown
October, 18 2017 at 10:30 pm

My niece is 7 about to be 8. She has been telling me I hate you and I wish you would die and to leave and never come back. It hurts cause I helped raise her and her brothers. I want to know what to do? We put her in time out it don't help. It all started happening when I moved back in to help my brother and sister in law. She was so sweet and now she is evil. I have videos of her saying that she wishs I was dead.

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Natasha Tracy
October, 19 2017 at 4:29 am

Hi Melissa,
I'm not sure if you're suggesting that your niece has a mental illness, but I wouldn't jump to that conclusion. A change in behavior like that can be brought on by many things. If you find that you're hitting a wall with her, I recommend family therapy. Most issues can be worked out that way.
- Natasha Tracy

Leave a reply