Showing posts with label Matt_Haig. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matt_Haig. Show all posts

Monday, 2 October 2017

How to conquer our obsession with eternal life

an article by Matt Haig for the Guardian 30 July 2017

Our anti-ageing quest only increases anxiety, says Matt Haig. Instead, we need to understand the tricks of time

Helmut Berger as Dorian Gray, holding a mirror and seeing a younger man
Mirror, mirror: Helmut Berger selling his soul in Dorian Gray (1970). Photograph: Sargon/Kobal/Rex/Shutterstock

As a culture, we are obsessed with ageing. We have always been obsessed but now, paradoxically, in an era where we live longer than ever, we fear it more than ever before too. There is, of course, a whole industry devoted to capitalising on our fears of the natural ageing process and it’s a lucrative one. In fact, the anti-ageing industry, which is the largest part of the beauty industry, is now worth more than $200 billion a year.

Our perfectly understandable worries about time and mortality are being capitalised on, and exploited. Every advert that encourages us to look young is confirming the same thing: we need to fear growing old. And yet no anti-wrinkle eye cream in the world is going to stop us from getting old. The anti-ageing industry is a marketer’s dream because it is an industry offering continual solutions for something that isn’t ever really solved. Ageing.

Even if or when we work out how to stop the physical process of ageing – and organisations such as the SENS Research Foundation and various Silicon Valley biotech firms are trying to do just that – it won’t curb our anxieties. It will accentuate them (not least, the ultimate fear of missing out for those who can’t afford it), and give us many new ones (a new population crisis being the first one).

Continue reading and pick up a couple of useful links


Saturday, 16 September 2017

Matt Haig: ‘There is no more shame in mental illness than having tonsilitis’

I am having a real problem with finding a point at which to stop copying the article by Matt Haig in the Guardian and asking you to continue reading. Every point that he makes seems to me to be valid.

An MRI image of a brain
‘The brain is the body. Mental health is physical health.’ Photograph: Alamy

The problem we have with talking about mental health is that we still don’t think of it as an equal priority with physical health. This is wrong not simply because it leads to less money being spent on mental health service provision by governments, but also because it fails to see that the whole idea of mental health shouldn’t be an isolated one.

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