This Instagram Account Posts Hilarious Memes About Mental Health, Here Are The 50 Best Ones
InterviewIn the 21st century, there are few topics out there that haven’t already been turned into memes, one way or another. So it shouldn’t come as a surprise that even more sensitive things like mental wellbeing has also found its way into the ocean of internet content for our enjoyment.
The “PTSD.eezenuts” Instagram page shares hilarious and relatable mental health and therapy memes. We got in touch with the page’s admin and creator to learn more. So get comfortable as you scroll through, upvote your favorites and be sure to share your own thoughts in the comments below.
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Not the whistle! Even we autistic people fear the whistle.
Load More Replies...Oh god, I LOVE that!! I'm going to pass that on to my autistic son and grandgirl!
Load More Replies...I remember one of the first articles about Asperger's Syndrome (which I now understand has been reclassified as part of ASD) had said that it was sometimes referred to as "Little Professor Syndrome" because sometimes children on the Autism spectrum, even those who had difficulty with having a two-way conversation, would give "lectures" on topics of interest to them, leading some adults to say they sounded like a "little professor". I've always quite liked the term: "Little Professor Syndrome".
Exactly. Just because someone doesn’t seem to have a disability doesn’t mean the person doesn’t have one. Having a disability doesn’t justify that person being ridiculed and stereotyped either!
What is it with autism and trains? I have been a trainspotter since I was a child (even weirder for a girl), and because of this people always think I'm autistic (I'm not). Why the hell trains, of all things?
I worked with a developmentally delayed senior who probably never had typical speech habits, and old age didn't help. It could take him a minute to ask for a cup of coffee. Until you got him going on state capitals, where his speech became fluent, fluid, and he was completely unstoppable until he got to the end. He took so much pride from that that I asked him to name them every day.
I had two students who were autistic and only knew because I was told so at meetings with their case workers. One went on to be a physicist and the other to be the public point of contact for a public relations firm.
My oldest son as a kid, about anything mechanical. He's now QA at a high-quality automotive components factory. My grandgirl, about....well, just about anything. Tori specializes in a wide range of interesting factoids, and one particular fantasy book series. She's almost twelve. Both Terry and Tori own my heart.
good job luke #tottally autistic #ADHD #depressed#axious #D&Dlover
My daughter is autistic and terrified of trains so it just goes to show that autism is definitely on a spectrum and you cannot outwardly tell that many people are autistic, adults and women very much so because we can mask so well especially the older we get and then finally can realize and accept ourselves and be ourselves. This is also very funny 😁
You don't have to be autistic, or an idiot, to be a savant.
While I understant your choice of the word 'idiot' (after all, it's traditionally been known as 'idiot/savant'), I really wish no one used the word. Have a nice day.
Load More Replies...Persephone was kidnapped, though. She wasn't there voluntarily.
Bored Panda got in touch with the person behind PTSD.eezenuts and they were kind enough to answer some of our questions. Firstly, we wanted to hear why they made a page dedicated to mental health memes. “I started PTSD.eezenuts right in the thick of Quarantine. The “early Covid era” was already a tough, dark and devastating time that happened to coincide with some incredibly intense issues that were arising in my personal life.”
“As someone who already lives and struggles with the effects of PTSD, I was finding it harder and harder to cope with the isolation, fear, depression and uncertainty. I found that memes, dumb as it may sound, were an increasingly comforting means of escape. I had been posting two memes per day on my personal stories and was getting more and more views, reactions and generally positive responses to them,” they shared.
Money is the key to living life. Before you disagree, try living life with zero money and see how far you get.
Angel Dust: “No stronger bonds than those formed through bondage.”
“People kept messaging me to say that my stories were a bright spot in their day, or that they looked forward to it like “their favorite show,” and curating those two posts everyday was such a joyful escape for me; it had become the thing I looked forward to the most. I felt almost embarrassed about how much I liked memes and meme pages, but I did (and, of course, still do!) and had been wanting for the longest time to make one of my own.”
“I had this name, “PTSD.eezenuts” that kept coming into my head and just decided to go for it one day. I think of it almost like a form of therapy, it’s definitely catharsis- a fun way to take the power back. I joke (with some sincerity) that the more actively I’m posting, the worse my mental health is; I just really find it healing and am so grateful to have this outlet. Running this page has definitely saved me in some ways,” they shared with Bored Panda.
I use tea spoons for anything in a container that is smaller than 20 cm wide. I also have a singular favourite spot on the couch (Sheldon vibes)
I appear as the “weird kid with strange interests and possible trauma” at school. At home I am also the “weird kid with strange interests and possible trauma”
We also wanted to hear their opinion on what helps the page remain so popular with its almost one-hundred-thousand followers. “I think my page is popular for all the same reasons that I enjoy posting on it; the main one of course being that laughter is healing. It’s a mini escape from some of the struggle and darkness of the world around us, but not in a way that denies it- more like an irreverent embrace.”
“Another big reason, and the one I find most poignant, is that the acceptance and acknowledgement of people’s struggles with mental health is relatively new. For most of human history we’ve had to hide it; we’ve been made to feel ashamed, othered, different and bad, but recently there’s been this sort of mental health revolution where it’s become increasingly acceptable and even encouraged to be vocal about your struggles.”
I have ADHD and no medication. I took it for like two months three years ago but I would’ve had to make another appointment to get more but just… couldn’t? And in my mind I just ran out temporarily but like I said it’s been literal years since I got a taste of how “normal” people get to feel every day.
Is that not normal? Do other people also tend to tune out other people's voices to the point you just don't hear them at all until their voices fade back in audibly to your ears? It annoys people who try to get my attention.
“I think one of the best and most fascinating things that’s come out of this is the realization that it’s not just a small group of sad, defective little weirdos skulking in the shadows, it’s everyone. There really is no “normal” in the traditional sense and most people are struggling with their mental health to some degree. It’s not looked down upon so much anymore as a weakness or a defect or a dirty little secret. I think the people who like my page like it because it's an embodiment and celebration of that,” they shared.
I work well under pressure as long as that pressure is less than one singular task due in six days.
“It’s not denying the seriousness of what people go through, more so just reframing how we think about it, taking a little of the sting out and providing a place where you can say, “Yeah I hurt and what of it.” It’s irreverent, it’s stupid, it’s funny- it’s dumb little memes about depression and sex and honestly it’s just fun. My hope is that people can laugh, take things a little less seriously, feel seen and understood and maybe even feel a bit better.“
My therapist basically told me I was very self-aware but still kept doing the stupid thing and I was like yeah, that checks out.
So we wanted to know if they had any parting thoughts on mental health memes and anything in between. “The only thing I’d like to add is to just say, genuinely, thank you. Thank you to everybody, who follows, likes, supports and just interacts with PTSD.eezenuts in any way. It’s so fun for me to run this page and I’m so humbled that people like it and am grateful to any and everyone who allows me to do this.”
Does anyone else wonder if a therapist will need therapy one day?
“If you like the page, or even if you hate it, and would like to check out my merch, you can find it online.” They also recommend getting in touch if you would want to contribute something. “I’m also always taking merch ideas and design suggestions so if you have any, I’d love to hear them- just hop in the dm’s!”
Even though life IS plastic. It is NOT fantastic. Don't touch my hair! Don't touch me anywhere!
This is my secret...until I unsecret it by making people laugh about something /really/ dark before they catch themselves.
“I happened to listen to that song, every other song by that artist and now have a full understanding of their life.” OKAY THAT IS MY IDEAL PERSON
I have this problem without being tipsy... should I try getting tipsy to see if I can reverse this???
Me: I critique pretty much anything I don't like (me for instance). Sometimes unreasonably harshly
You stand up but you have an iron deficiency: *warning lights and sirens*
I've thinking of doing this if I ever get put on jury duty just because I know no one will not agree with me, anyways, and there will be a hung jury and everyone will be pissed off at me, and plan their own crime against me because we'll all miss dinner.
The way my mum taught me to spell necessary was “one collar two shoes” (one c two s’s)
During the diastolic phase of my heartbeat, I'm thinking, "Oh no, my heart has stopped, this is how I go, oh, the things I would have done with my life", and during the systolic phase of my heartbeat, I'm thinking, "Ugh, this mess again? Guess I'll keep working."
During the diastolic phase of my heartbeat, I'm thinking, "Oh no, my heart has stopped, this is how I go, oh, the things I would have done with my life", and during the systolic phase of my heartbeat, I'm thinking, "Ugh, this mess again? Guess I'll keep working."