What if Mental Health Care Actually Cared?

Mental health doesn’t come from a drug or cognitive behavioral therapy. Real mental health is built on what has always made humans whole: safety, connection, dignity, and the right to be felt and seen in the truth of our pain.

The mental illness industry treats symptoms as if they float separate from the life that holds them. Depression, anxiety, dissociation, and compulsions are not glitches, but adaptations. They are natural responses to overwhelming conditions and signs of systems doing what they can to survive in a world that does not offer enough regulation, protection, or relational support.

Interpersonal Neurobiology (IPNB) teaches us to examine the whole system, not just the brain, not just behavior, but the context: the relationships, the body, the past, and the present moment. It shows us that what the culture calls mental illness often arises from disconnection from others, from the body, from safety, and from hope. It illustrates that healing does not come from managing symptoms, like the mainstream mental illness industry asserts with its pills and ineffective therapies. Healing comes from restoring the conditions in which a human nervous system can finally rest and repair.

If mental health care actually cared, it would center on regulation instead of compliance, performance, and symptom suppression. It would respect our deep biological need to feel safe enough to exist. It would be a place in which people are not judged or pathologized for how they’ve survived, but gently supported back toward coherence. It would offer community models that prioritize co-regulation, not just professional intervention. It would understand distress as relational, not defective.

Imagine a world where trauma responses are met with curiosity and presence instead of suspicion. Where grief is allowed, not rushed. Where children learn how to feel their bodies instead of being taught to fear and distance themselves from them. Where a psychiatrist asks about your relationships before prescribing a pill. Where no one has to earn the right to be believed.

This isn’t idealism. It’s biology. The nervous system is built for connection. And because the mental illness industry rejects that, it will continue to fail the people who need it most.

People don’t need to be fixed. We need the conditions that let our system do what it knows how to do: heal. Real mental health care starts there.

About Shay Seaborne, CPTSD

Former tall ship sailor turned trauma awareness activist-artist Shay Seaborne, CPTSD has studied the neurobiology of fear / trauma /PTSD since 2015. She writes, speaks, teaches, and makes art to convey her experiences as well as her understanding of the neurobiology of fear, trauma theory, and principles of trauma recovery. A native of Northern Virginia, Shay settled in Delaware to sail KALMAR NYCKEL, the state’s tall ship. She wishes everyone could recognize PTSD is not a mental health problem, but a neurophysiological condition rooted in dysregulation, our mainstream culture is neuro-negative, and we need to understand we can heal ourselves and each other through awareness, understanding, and safe connection.
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