Note: This post talks about mental health and suicide. For anyone struggling, please reach out to the National Suicide Prevention Hotline (1-800-SUICIDE), which is available 24 hours a day to help you.
It’s Mental Illness Awareness Week, a topic I thought I’d never talk publicly about. And I talk publicly for a living, so that’s saying something. As the chief public affairs officer at MoveOn and an MSNBC political analyst, you can often find me talking in front of a podium or in front of a camera about the day’s top news stories.
A lot of the time, I’ll connect it back to my personal story. For example, when President Trump made derogatory remarks about Haiti, I talked about what that meant for me as the daughter of two Haitian immigrants. But in the immigrant community I grew up in, we didn’t talk about mental health. I was taught that it was something to keep quiet about, something you handled on your own. I internalized a lot of that shame and stigma, and, like the community I grew up in, have largely stayed quiet about mental health.
Know Your Value’s Mika Brzezinski and Karine Jean-Pierre on Mental Illness Awareness Week from Know Your Value on Vimeo.
But as I began writing my memoir, “Moving Forward,” I knew I wanted it to be honest and vulnerable. Because life isn’t always sunshine and roses — there’s hard stuff too. I wanted my book to be a guide for everyone who has been told “no” in their life. What kind of roadmap would my book be, I thought, if I didn’t talk about the times in my life where I’d struggled, too?
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So, for the first time in my life, I’m opening up about how I struggled with mental health when I was younger. In the book, I talk about the pressure of growing up in an immigrant household to succeed and how that pressure made me feel like a failure when I wasn’t able to meet those measures of success. I wrote about how that pressure grew so big, and my sense of failure so strong, that I felt like my family would be better off without me. At one point, I attempted suicide.
It’s not easy to write those words. But it’s also not easy to struggle with your mental health, especially in a world that continues to stigmatize it. We need to make it easier to talk about, because talking about your struggles is often the first step toward getting help. And getting help is possible.
I should know. It took some time, but I’m at a place in my life where I know how to keep my mental health in check. And I want to talk about what I do to stay healthy because I think we don’t talk about mental health nearly enough in this country. Mental health is just as much a part of our well being as our physical health.
One part of my routine is going on long runs as often as possible. I ran cross country and track in high school, and I’ve found that getting outside and out of my head is invaluable to staying balanced. I still find long runs to be one of my sure-fire ways to relax, and fit them into my schedule whenever I can. For a lot of people, physical exercise can be a crucial pillar of staying healthy mentally, not just physically.









