Girl Sent To Therapy After Sharing Dark Meme In Family Group Chat

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UNILAD

Mental health should always be taken very seriously, but for those who’ve been through dark times, such as 20-year-old Celeste Araslanian, it can be cathartic to find solidarity with others in humour.

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There are Facebook pages dedicated to these kinds of memes, notably Nihilist Memes, and Celeste uses them to relate to others who share her experiences.

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Except Celeste wasn’t paying attention when she shared one ‘dark’ meme recently, actually sending it to her family’s group chat by accident. Naturally they were concerned at the out-of context message.

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UNILAD

Speaking to UNILAD, Celeste, from San Diego, explained how the misunderstanding of her bid to find therapy in humour escalated very fast:

I have a group chat for my friends in therapy and we usually share self-deprecating memes, so I saw that one online and I was like ‘they’ll love this’ and I was in such a rush I hadn’t noticed I sent it to the group chat with my sister and mom.

My mom immediately messaged me asking if I needed to go to the hospital because I’ve been hospitalized for depression before.

It took a while but Celeste eventually spoke to a professional about her unconventional means of battling depression:

Anyway, my sister ended up basically forcing me to go to the hospital and I spent two hours explaining to a psychiatrist what memes were and how they help me cope with my depression.

I reassured him I wasn’t actually going to kill myself. Interesting night I must say.

The meme which caused so much concern among her relatives depicted a dog holding a noose and was captioned, ‘I’m ready to f*cking die now’:

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Celeste explained why humour is important in these dark situations:

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My mom still believes it was a subtle cry for help because she’s older and she doesn’t really understand memes.

I think it was fair for them to worry given the fact that I’ve been hospitalized before and I agree, suicide jokes shouldn’t be taken lightly, but sometimes, they help you cope.

Laughing at the situation helps me and a lot of my peers in therapy would agree that it normalizes the situation in a way.

I know for me it lets me know I’m going to be okay because, if I can laugh at it now, it means I’ll get over it later.

Celeste made it clear mental health isn’t a laughing matter but for her, it helps to send memes to the other people in her therapy group who are all going through similar things.

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The important thing is that Celeste and her friends are confronting the battle head on and sharing their thoughts, even in meme form, rather than suffering in silence.

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If you need help or support, you can contact the Samaritans for free from any telephone on 116 123. Don’t suffer in silence.

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