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Mental health challenges for our youth, education and society as a whole

The pressure of our current societal development on our youth shows important mental health issues in the form of trauma, anxiety, stress, negative self image, lack of confidence in the future, fear, etc. There are many reasons that cause such challenges: family pressure on educational performance, societal pressure due to expectations, lack of maturely balanced role models, broken families, general negativity in the media, social media influences, global instability, financial problems, etc.

During recent international encounters I met with educators from different areas of the world that were looking beyond their traditional teaching methods. They were passionate about values driven education and learning, looking into ways to empower the students with special attention, methods and overarching meaning. I myself participated with sustainocracy as overarching, human centered, societal approach to sustainable personal and regional development. We coincided so strongly that we started sharing insights, (proposed) publications, interaction with students, etc.

In general it opened a box of Pandora around mental issues in general and specifically seen in the context of the era we live in these days. Research shows that a stagering 12 to 15% of our upcoming generations suffer from some kind of mental or behavioral disorder. This is considered even a tip of the iceberg. My own experience, at societal level in my own region, places the burden even higher. Burdens that remain even unnoticed due to the tunnel vision of people forming society. This is influenced also by the recent Covid events, political polarization of societal diversity, lack of attention on values in the educational institutions (with certain exceptions) and the unreal pressure of the capitalist societal bias.

Gradually a network appears of professionals with a sense of responsibility, wanting to do things differently with and for our youth, to provide them with meaning, purpose, mental resilience and instruments to handle the challenges of this era effectively. If you wish to be part of this network feel free to contact me by email (jp@stadvanmorgen.com) or through replying to this blog.

We all share a set of responsibilities for our sustainable natural human presence on Earth

Every human being is a unique manifestation of living nature. We consist of clustered molecules and a delicate ecosystem of millions of interacting microscopic entities that are our symbiotic life support. When we pollute our environment, we pollute ourselves, with all kinds of nasty consequences. Equally, disconnecting ourselves from our natural core values and corresponding responsibilities, produces all kinds of mental disorders. Mental disorders that produce all the problems in the human world today (competition, aggression, hunger, refugees, narcissism, suicides, negative stress, excessive consumerism, greed, social segregation, discrimination, etc).

To overcome this we need to:

  • Acknowledge our shared (inter-human and institutional) responsibility for our core natural human values: integral health (physical, mental, spiritual, emotional, environmental), safety (including respect for each other and our natural environment), awareness (learning together), shared responsibility (seeing our sustainable existence as a co-creation, not a cost or financial liability) and fulfillment of our basic needs (water, air, food, warmth).
  • Create prioritized local, interdisciplinary communities to address these core natural human values together.
  • If none of the local silos takes the initiative, ask STIR for help. We can help set things up.

Peace desires in an aggressive society format

An online encounter about “Non-violence in a violent world” discussed how inherently violent our current societies are. The way we take from nature, not just for our fulfilment of direct needs but to develop imaginary financial economies of greed. The way we compete out of self interest. The way taxes and rules are imposed. The way social differences are exploited. And much more. The session was conducted by journalist Jagdish Rattanani from India, author of the book about “Abundant Love”. Multiple references were made to the views of Mahatma Gandhi and the wisdom of Satish Kumar (peace pelgrim and co-founder of the Schumacher College).

As a person who stepped away from the financial ratrace and doctrines many years ago, developing our societies around core natural human values as shared responsibilities, the encounter was yet another confirmation of my own choices and path developed with sustainocracy.