When it comes to memes, nothing is off the table, even mental health. Licensed Clinical Psychologist and Professor Lynn Zubernis, Ph.D., writes that memes can actually help us cope. The humor and communication that they can provide help us deal with anxiety and stress. And when we relate to them, it validates our sadness and our struggles.
Full of such memes is the page "Just Nihilist Things." Its creator simply shares content they find funny. Why? "Well, I don't know either since none of this really matters," the page's bio reads in a very fitting manner. If few things in the world make sense anymore, perhaps this collection of memes will?
Bored Panda reached out to Dr. Benjamin Burroughs, associate professor of Emerging Media at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV), and he kindly agreed to share his expertise with us. His research focuses on social media and digital journalism, so we asked him how memes about mental health fit into the larger context of Internet culture. We also asked Dr. Janina Scarlet of Superhero Therapy to weigh in on the effect of mental health memes. Read the insights from both experts below!
Dr. Janina Scarlet | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram
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Be more fun if you spring load the coffin to pop open and launch the bouquet in the air.
The Just Nihilist Things meme page has been running since 2016. As of 2024, it boasts over 21k followers. That might not seem like a lot, but the number doesn't diminish the relatability or relevancy of the content. A portion of the memes are nihilistic, but, more than anything, they are about mental health and those who struggle with mental health issues.
Licensed Clinical Psychologist Dr. Janina Scarlet believes that memes about mental health can have a positive effect for people who struggle with mental health issues. "I find that individuals with anxiety and depression often feel invalidated and unseen in their experiences," Dr. Scarlet tells Bored Panda.
"As such, well-researched and supportive memes can significantly benefit people with anxiety and depression by destigmatizing their experiences and make them feel less alone. At the same time, memes that are not well-researched might be damaging to people with anxiety and depression because they can add to those individuals' suffering and experiences of being unseen, unheard, and undervalued."
Dr. Scarlet says that whether memes can shape societal attitudes toward mental health depends on their content and who's creating them. "Some mental health themes have been extremely helpful and are suggestive of societal understanding and destigmatizing of these experiences."
I spent my youth across the river from a primary target. It was the Cold War and I took comfort in the thought of instant nuclear annihilation. No sad sorry bunker for me thank you.
Interestingly, memes can be used in therapeutic settings as well. "Provided that they are depicting a sensitive and compassionate attitude toward people who struggle with mental health,” Dr. Scarlet adds.
"Sometimes, seeing a meme, hearing a song, or seeing another piece of media that reflects one's own experience of suffering can not only be helpful, it can give that individual hope and can, in some instances, be life-saving."
As we've mentioned above, memes can actually help with issues like anxiety and stress. Associate professor of Emerging Media, Dr. Benjamin Burroughs, tells us that it’s because Internet memes can be a great source of humor and release. "Memes often work so well within the clutter of modern social media and digital life because they can quickly and humorously puncture the quotidian."
"The memes with ‘Just Nihilist Things’ seem to play a role in being a kind of cathartic release," Dr. Burroughs observes. "Memes are referential and not long-form humor, so you should immediately get the reference and the joke embedded within. Humor is often a coping mechanism, and these kinds of memes can stud our everyday digital life – granting us a cathartic release."
He notes that memes can be both beneficial and harmful to individuals who struggle with mental health conditions. "They can make social media platforms lighter and grant moments of joy within the heaviness or negativity that can algorithmically dominate some social media channels and platforms. On the other hand, these memes can be jarring and constant reminders of trauma that is embedded within the humor."
As the world of memes stretches far and wide, who should be responsible for the ethics of sharing mental health memes? "Memes circulate so quickly and are largely anonymous or devoid of single authorship that it can be difficult to assign a specific set of ethical considerations to those generating memes," Dr. Burroughs explains. "Certainly, there are ethical considerations, for those who decide to circulate these memes and the platforms that facilitate the exchange."
"What are you up to?" "What do you mean? I'm just sayi-" "What do you want from me?"
Dr. Burroughs also says that the ethics of sharing mental health memes is kind of a gray area. "The difficulty is that meme circulation and reception can be highly contextual, and within that ambiguity, you don't want to lock down or eliminate ways that memes can be cathartic when it comes to mental health while not wanting to exacerbate trauma through memes," he tells Bored Panda.
In the end, Burroughs sees more positives than negatives. They are important because of their relatability element, and they can also educate people. "Mental health memes can be seen as ways to demystify and shed light on the struggles that those struggling with anxiety, for example, deal with on an everyday basis," he notes. "Mental health memes can also help those who don't have any experience or knowledge of these mental health issues and challenges to better understand what others are going through."
It is exhausting trying to constantly be positive for everyone else's benefit
What are the potential dangers of mental health memes then? "The challenge is when the biting humor of memes might trivialize or diminish that experience rather than provide a reflexive space for enhanced sharing, learning, and understanding," Dr. Burroughs explains.
Never say anything about yourself that you wouldn't say to a stranger!
Researchers have already proved that browsing the Internet for memes can help with anxiety. In a 2021 study, people said that viewing and sharing COVID-19-related memes helped them deal with severe anxiety. The researchers concluded that memes, thus, can be a great coping mechanism for those struggling with anxiety-related symptoms.
Just had pineapple upside down cake for breakfast myself, cookies work though
Load More Replies...I *can* multitask, but I *won't* multitask. Especially at work. If I'm paid one salary why should I do two or three jobs ?
Another study in 2022 concluded that memes can help individuals with psychiatric symptoms. "While mental health memes typically depict dark and negative humour, their proximal nature to those experiencing psychiatric symptoms may be considered contextually positive," the researchers wrote. "Most psychiatrically vulnerable individuals report positive experiences when engaging with such memes."
'Depression memes' and 'sad posting' can also be an antidote to the perfection we see online. Donna Freitas, the author of The Happiness Effect, interviewed more than 800 college students and found that the majority feel pressured to post happy things online.
Because we see our friends and peers only post positive things about their lives, this creates a false image in our heads that everyone else's life is perfect except for ours. But memes about mental health struggles subvert the happiness effect.
This is the reason I want to be a therapist now - i love helping people through s**t mentally yk
People perceive mental health memes as authentic, as representations of who they are and how they feel. As PhD researcher at Tilburg University Lucie Chateau writes, "The meaning to be reconstructed in a depression meme consists in peeling back the layer that demands from us to act as the best, happiest, version of ourselves online. Simply put, it unmasks the actual authentic self behind the curated one."
If it works for a bit use it and get the tools needed to fix it to be more stable when u can so its better for next time
Joking aside, you can see it in her eyes. Awesome work by the artist.
*My future self knowing damn well that I will be trying to find every possible excuse to cancel.
I'd be curious to see what the 'Source' button does. Or try and change the channel. Then, still go for the power button :)
If I see a really funny person, I know they got some real s**t going on in their life.
I have second round of interviews today. It's with the ENTIRE team in a panel style interview. I am so overwhelmed with anxiety I can barely move. My friends have been telling me just being there is half the battle. So wish me luck please. My last job ended in March 2023, so this past year has been not great money wise. I really need a job. And I am so so so so so nervous.
Thanks everyone. I took my prescription medication for anxiety and my SO actually offered to drive me to my interview, I was sobbing on the sofa. Managed to get myself calmed down and my voice back to steady. Interview was decent. I will hear back next week. Thank you so so so much. Seeing support really helped. 🫂
Load More Replies...I made it through the first ten or so and quit. Anyone who reads these and wasn't depressed at the beginning will be before long.
I suffer from panic attacks and agoraphobia. I feel less alone now. This is why I love this site
Me too. I suffer from exactly the same and even if it's just random people online it makes me feel atleast a tiny bit better knowing that there are others who understand somewhere out there. Especially the agoraphobia part sometimes makes the whole world outside seem to disappear and existence just feels so small. Things like this sometimes help remind my brain that there's still a world and people out there.
Load More Replies...I wish I could just reply with the blanket statement of "Every. Single. Morning." to ALL of these posts. It's so much work otherwise.
I have second round of interviews today. It's with the ENTIRE team in a panel style interview. I am so overwhelmed with anxiety I can barely move. My friends have been telling me just being there is half the battle. So wish me luck please. My last job ended in March 2023, so this past year has been not great money wise. I really need a job. And I am so so so so so nervous.
Thanks everyone. I took my prescription medication for anxiety and my SO actually offered to drive me to my interview, I was sobbing on the sofa. Managed to get myself calmed down and my voice back to steady. Interview was decent. I will hear back next week. Thank you so so so much. Seeing support really helped. 🫂
Load More Replies...I made it through the first ten or so and quit. Anyone who reads these and wasn't depressed at the beginning will be before long.
I suffer from panic attacks and agoraphobia. I feel less alone now. This is why I love this site
Me too. I suffer from exactly the same and even if it's just random people online it makes me feel atleast a tiny bit better knowing that there are others who understand somewhere out there. Especially the agoraphobia part sometimes makes the whole world outside seem to disappear and existence just feels so small. Things like this sometimes help remind my brain that there's still a world and people out there.
Load More Replies...I wish I could just reply with the blanket statement of "Every. Single. Morning." to ALL of these posts. It's so much work otherwise.