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Friend With Mental Health Issues Asked Me For Help - But I am Clueless What To Do


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Posted

A bit of background: I live in Manila but work on a 4wk/4wk rotation in the middle east – relevant because I have just arrived back and, well, hopefully the following will make it clear.

 

This may sound a bit vague because I don’t want to put too much detail into this as I feel it is disrespectful of his privacy, but I have a friend in Manila in his mid 20s who is going through a very tough time mentally. He has told me that he has attempted suicide several times over the past year, and is still experiencing long bouts of deep depression and suicidal thoughts.

 

He is from the US but has lived in Philippines for about 5 or 6 years.  He originally arrived on a university scholarship but that fell apart and he is now working freelance in his field. Because his studies failed (and other reasons not particularly relevant to this), he has been pretty much ostracized by his family back in the US and therefore has no support network there. He also feels that he cannot return to the US, and is determined to remain in Philippines. For most of the time in Manila he has been living with his Filipino girlfriend and I think his social life pretty much revolved around hers, but his erratic behavior and their shared money problems has led her to leave him last month, seemingly for good. He now remains holed up in their bedsit and seems to be isolating himself from the world.

 

His money problems stem from his inexperience in business. He has a viable service to offer and has a number of clients, but he started with a bad business model that ended up costing him lots of cash. Several of his clients took advantage of this and his confidence collapsed. Now he has managed to ditch the bad clients and is trying to get out of the deep rut he is in, but he is struggling to stay motivated and to pull himself out of the misery he is in, and he frequently refers to himself as a failure.

 

I only became aware of all this in the past month because, while I said he was a friend, he has never been a close friend but more of an acquaintance. He approached me when he was really low, and he told me in detail about the hell he has been going through. I listened as best as I could, and I empathized, but I am so far out of my depth that I really don’t know what else to do. I have literally zero experience in mental health issues, and I really don’t know what to say or do that will help him.

 

I have paid his rent for this month so he can at least breathe a bit while he sorts out his paying clients and hopefully earns some income, and I managed to encourage him to see a counselor, but I have now returned to the Middle East and he still messages me that he is feeling low and having suicidal thoughts. I am going to be here for another 4 weeks and I am worried that he may try to take his own life again.

 

I have been trying to encourage him to focus on his business – I have offered to help him create a business plan that would better prepare his business for growth, and he seems to show a bit of intermittent, short lived enthusiasm, but frequently reverts back to a depressive state.

 

Is there anything I should be doing other than blindly interacting with him? I am trying to be supportive, but I feel that my efforts are mere platitudes – for instance, I know he can present a strong, impressive presence when he tries, and that is one of the reasons people want him to work for them, but how many times can I tell him this before it loses its impact, especially as he has so many self doubts? I simply don’t know what else to say to him other than encourage him to continue with the counseling.

Posted
1 minute ago, malagateddy said:

R/r..is there no Samaritans organisation he can contact?


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I checked on Mental Health resources and there are actually several free or very low cost counseling services in Manila, but he told me that he had already tried some of them and they were no use to him. The counselor he saw is the brother of one of his clients, and he said that the session he attended helped him think more clearly about his issues, but despite my gently nagging, he has not booked a follow up appointment. It is almost like an intense ennui has a grip of him.

 

To be honest, he is both proud and stubborn, which I think is part of the problem - reaching out to me was clearly a huge thing for him as he had been struggling with this almost alone for over a year. 

Posted

Surely he must know other people apart from yourself..surely someone can take him by the scruff of the neck back to see the same guy??

I checked on Mental Health resources and there are actually several free or very low cost counseling services in Manila, but he told me that he had already tried some of them and they were no use to him. The counselor he saw is the brother of one of his clients, and he said that the session he attended helped him think more clearly about his issues, but despite my gently nagging, he has not booked a follow up appointment. It is almost like an intense ennui has a grip of him.
 
To be honest, he is both proud and stubborn, which I think is part of the problem - reaching out to me was clearly a huge thing for him as he had been struggling with this almost alone for over a year. 


Sent from my SM-G7102 using Thailand Forum - Thaivisa mobile app

Posted
1 minute ago, malagateddy said:

Surely he must know other people apart from yourself..surely someone can take him by the scruff of the neck back to see the same guy??

 


Sent from my SM-G7102 using Thailand Forum - Thaivisa mobile app
 

 

I honestly don't think he has - the fact that he came to me suggests to me that he has few other friends he could trust, because we were never close in the past.

 

My gut feelings are along the lines of your too, Teddy - I generally put my head down and slog on, so my innate response would to shake him and tell him to man up, but I understand now that this is not a lack of backbone or moral fibre, but something much more serious. 

Posted

Sounds a lot like my Brother. Suffers from being BiPolar. Old term Manic/Depressive.

When on his meds he is lethargic. When off his meds he is Manic but feels better.

Hard Row to Hoe I tell 'Ya

40+ years - no success in getting him 'Normal" - whatever that is.

  • Sad 1
Posted

i think he was really stupid to move when he didnt have a secure income in the first instance,

he should be sent back to US, get a job and get a life,

hopefully he has grown up not to believe in santa so he wont

try again without money to back it up

Posted

Difficult! He has to make a plan. Maybe sit down with him and do a plan of action, so he has a goal and A, B ,C depending on the outcome, one being that if he cant make things work, he goes back to US and sorts himself out.

Altho who pays for the flight ticket..

Surely he must have someone at home in US who can help?

  • Like 1
Posted

Sorry to say but he is self-destructive and will probably find a way to screw up any business plan he applies.

 

Throughout my life I have had 3 very very close long time friends kill themselves. It was never a surprise. There was never anything that I could have done differently to prevent it. 

 

Your friend needs to seek professional help and get proper meds... and even then, maybe. 

  • Like 1
Posted

 

Get him to watch some Jordon Peterson videos on YouTube. Dr. Peterson is a psychology professor at the university of Toronto. He has a lot of videos of self-help, particularly for men. One video in particular has helped me. He talks about how to make small, incremental changes to oneself. And this is a way to positive change.

 

Posted

I also have a friend like him. And altough I worked for 40 years in that branche, it wasn’t working for the best.

i adviced him to go back to his family in the USA, many months after I succeeded,and he went back for a couple of months to his roots, it’s important because they let you know who you are.

But...now he is back, and we’ll see what’s happening in the future. Because it’s a beast that returns the moment you’re weak or have problems.

Try to convince your friend to go back to his roots, he need to evaluate how and what, together with medication, maybe it helps.

professional help is always a must. And remember you can’t avoid that he does stupid things. Don’t blame yourself when you did what is in your possibilities.

good luck

  • Like 1
Posted

Do your best, that's all you can give as a friend! Go "over his head" if you think you have to! He needs PROFFS to take care of him, you can't!. 

I would like to have a friend like you! 

 

  • Like 1
Posted
14 hours ago, Katia said:

He needs professional help, period.  You can support him, but you can't be his therapist.  I had a friend try this on me once, and I and the other friend she approached told her gently that if she wanted to see someone, we would be supportive and even go with her to the appointment, but she needed real help and we couldn't be her counselors.  Never heard anything about it after that.

 

You're not a psychologist (I assume), you're not trained in mental health work, it is neither your job nor your place to have to be his therapist, and he should not expect you to be.  If he won't take steps to help himself, there is nothing you can do; you can't drag him to see someone (and if you did, he'd just hate you and/or possibly become dependent on you; he's not a child and you're not his parent).  Let him know you're there for him, but you won't take the place of professional mental help.

 

It's not about "manning up"-- mental illness isn't like that; it's not a weakness or moral failing.  And that's precisely why he may not be able to do this alone, without someone *qualified* to help him.

It this person is really suffering from a mental illness, they should be under the care of a professional, a therapist. They might also need medication. None of this you can personally provide as you are not a therapist and do not have prescribing powers.

 

I would make all your help conditional on this person attending a reputable therapist (one that is properly cerified). There are two reasons for this:

1. It could be that your friend is being highly manipulative and just planning to live off you for as long as it lasts. Maybe he managed that with his girlfriend too. Maybe the whole story about this qualification and business is also a lie. Just saying . . . 

2. People are often afraid of treatment and if you keep helping but they don't get treatment, the "cure" never happens. You then become part of the problem as you make the situation bearable enough for them not to go for treatment.

 

As I always add to any reply to a poster who is asking for advice to do with health/medical issues, go to a professional. Even on the offchance you find someone on this forum with the right speciality, they will never provide medical advice without seeing the patient. As I always say, patient has to be seen by doctor, or in this case Therapist.

  • Like 1
Posted

the only one who can give help to a depressed person is the person himself, is what a person who has been severely depressed told me.

if there is no desire to improve, and just attention seeking to confirm the developing behavioural pattern, then I am afraid your time is, albeit well-spent, not leading to results.

Your friend should go see a doc, get some meds, analyse what has gone wrong, learn from that, and get on with his life.

wish you wisdom and patience should you, without experience, try to replace a psychiatric counsellor .

  • Like 2
Posted
16 hours ago, Katia said:

He needs professional help, period.  You can support him, but you can't be his therapist.  I had a friend try this on me once, and I and the other friend she approached told her gently that if she wanted to see someone, we would be supportive and even go with her to the appointment, but she needed real help and we couldn't be her counselors.  Never heard anything about it after that.

 

You're not a psychologist (I assume), you're not trained in mental health work, it is neither your job nor your place to have to be his therapist, and he should not expect you to be.  If he won't take steps to help himself, there is nothing you can do; you can't drag him to see someone (and if you did, he'd just hate you and/or possibly become dependent on you; he's not a child and you're not his parent).  Let him know you're there for him, but you won't take the place of professional mental help.

 

It's not about "manning up"-- mental illness isn't like that; it's not a weakness or moral failing.  And that's precisely why he may not be able to do this alone, without someone *qualified* to help him.

I agree with all which you have said. Very skilled options you have offered

 

The OP can only be supportive and offer assistance when able to do so.

Do not get sucked into being a financial backstop. 

The friend needs to continue to seek professional help and possibly a business mentor. 

 

  • Like 1
Posted

Best would be a psychiatrist, but a general physician (visitation only about 200 Pesos) can get him started on medication as fast as possible :A combination of an SSRI and a sedative :The anti-depressant drugs take time to work (a couple of weeks usually), and often make things worse, with insomnia and anxiety, before it gets better :Once the SSRI kick in the sedatives are slowly tapered off. These are controlled drugs in the Philippines, so he will need a prescription. 

  • Like 1
Posted

You cant do anything but being supportive. HE is the one who can, he should make a switch in his mind. Thats why you have mental helpers, they are standing away. You are close by.

You will never know what is in his mind and at one dark point he maybe will commit suicide. Medicines are sometimes a solution, but not always.

 

I know a nephew of my Thai gf. He is 14. At school in class the teacher asked what they wanted to be in the future. He answered: he was dead then ! 14 yo ! Even his classmates laughed then for his answer, but he meant it serious. Then you think jeepers what is going on, a young boy just saying out loud, he wants to be dead !!

I had some younger college, he got in a divorce, his (good) job was troubled, but made him commit suicide. I never would have expected that, as i saw him as a balanced kind of guy.  

You just cant tell what is in the mind and what does it do at certain times.

What today is normal or what is not normal. How do you cope with the situations before it can bring you down.

Posted

You can't help someone who doesn't want your help. He certainly seems to be headed for a crash. If you're wealthy and can afford to pay his rent and other expenses, you may find yourself in a long-term situation. Make sure he has no "dirt" on you in any way, because desperate people can do desperate things out of desperation. Protect yourself. 

  • Like 1
  • Sad 1
Posted

Thank you all for your input - I appreciate it very much. What is clear is that, while he acknowledges that he is ill, the decision to seek treatment is his. I will continue to offer supportive friendship and help, but I realise from many comments here that I cannot take responsibility for him or what may or may not happen in the future. 

 

There were several suggestions that I should contact his family and explain the situation, however (1) his circumstances are very uncommon and, as he explained it to me, I understand his reluctance to engage with them further; (2) I have no idea how I would contact his family or where in the US they actually are - he doesn't share their family name and I don't know what it is. 

  • Like 1

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