A bit delayed today, as in life. But, don’t worry, still very much here. Today’s 3 are really all over the place. I guess I’m here to diversify the content you consume so let’s get to it. The recs:
1/ This article on mental illness in the UK was super interesting. Two important pull quotes to further sway you into reading the piece:
The most complicated factor to consider is what it feels like to be told you have a mental disorder. As Timimi puts it: “The object of study, which is the mind, is not the same as the object of study when it’s a kidney. The kidney doesn’t worry about the future. The kidney isn’t going to abandon me if I read out a set of kidney results.” He observed that the language psychiatrists use can have a huge impact on a person’s self-perception: there’s a big difference, for instance, between being told that you are ambitious and being told you are suffering from delusions of grandeur.
and…
When we spoke over Zoom, I asked Jones what had aided her recovery. She didn’t hesitate: “empowerment”. The worst part of falling ill had been becoming a psychiatric patient. “The problem wasn’t: ‘You’ve got schizophrenia, or you’ve got psychosis’… The deep thing was losing all meaning in my life, all social value. And the healing thing was being able to enter into conversations as an equal.”
I always appreciate reframing an issue or at least considering different approaches. Curious how this evolves over time.
2/ Lillian Faderman is an excellent historian and one of my favorite resources on American LGBTQ+ history. I first found her work when I read The Gay Revolution. This one-on-one interview is a lovely, gentle chat that adds some personal context to Faderman’s work.
She’s an OG, having come out in 1956, into what she and her friends at the time called, “gay girl culture”.
Fun fact: The term “gay” likely comes from the late 19th century heterosexual female prostitutes and was first published (with the meaning it connotes today) in the early 1910s by Gertrude Stein. The term wasn’t truly popularized amongst straights until after Stonewall.
3/ Lastly, you should learn about investing. One way is to watch this: How to Invest for Beginners. I wish this content was taught in school and more widely built into our education system. If we’re going to have to exist in a capitalist society, we should at least all have the same information and understandings of how to participate.
Bonus recommendation for the week, because it’s somewhat specific. To anyone who saw or read Slave Play, this interview with Jeremy O’Harris by Elvis Mitchell is a great listen.
That’s all for this week. Thanks for reading, be sure to share with anyone you think may be interested and see you next Thursday.