preview

Bell Let's Talk Analysis

Decent Essays
Open Document

Opinion Column:

On Jan. 28 of this year, Bell Canada managed to get a record 122,150,772 tweets, texts, calls, and shares on Bell Let’s Talk Day and raised more than $6.1 million for Canadian mental health programs. According to Bell Canada, that is 58.3 per cent more than last year. Clearly people want this talk to continue. Mental health is a topic of discussion that people are just now coming to support and understand. There are many stigmas that surround mental illness that need to be broken. There are also statistics about mental health people do not know but if we keep the discussion going more people can be informed of these issues. After Bell Let’s Talk, we need to keep the discussion going to make more people understand the struggle …show more content…

on social media towards Canadian mental health organizations. This is an amazing new feat for mental health programs and people that suffer from mental health but one day a year is not enough. People spoke out that day about their own battles with mental illness or the battles of someone close to them to prove that many people suffer from mental illness and the issue must be addressed.

After Bell Let’s Talk day the roar of the crowds began to die down and soon people forgot about the struggle of mental health all over again. We need more than one day a year to have this discussion be raised. I propose we dedicate an entire month to the struggle of mental health. There are awareness months for cancer and other illnesses so why not mental health awareness month? It’s just as important as any other illness today. About 4000 deaths a year in Canada are suicides. Suicide is the leading cause of death in people ages 15-24 in Canada, we cannot let this statistic go …show more content…

“Mental illness does not make people immoral. A depressed person does not morph into a killer. A suicidal person seeks death for himself, not necessarily because he wants to die, but because he sees it as the only solution to intolerable pain. In the process of that suicide ideation, he does not make plans to murder others. Suicide is not the same thing as homicide, and what Lubitz did is the latter, repeatedly accelerating to hasten the collision with the mountain.” According to the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) 46% of Canadians think people use the term mental illness as an excuse for bad behaviour. If we can continue the discussions about mental health, we can change these

Get Access