I’ve made my first attempt at a zine!
For the last few months I’ve been thinking a whole lot about the social side of mental distress. It feels really important to me to recognize how our suffering is embedded within our relationship dynamics; our workplaces, communities and other institutional systems; and our wider society.
I often notice what a relief it is for me – and my friends and clients – when we realize this social element to our suffering: particularly how the self-criticism that we do so constantly is something that everybody else does as well, because we’re all in this self-critical culture. It’s not that there’s anything wrong with us. It’s understandable.
This week I’m speaking at a few conferences which touch on themes of inequalities, individualising and intersectionality, and on mental health and mindfulness. So I thought – instead of the usual stand-up presentation – I’d make a zine that captures my experiences of these things, and makes some suggestions about how we might creatively engage with them.
It was also a good opportunity – for me – to get back into making comics: something I’d love to do more of, especially now I’m working on a comic introduction to queer theory with a professional artist. Here’s one of the comics I made for the zine. You can download the whole zine at the end of this post if you’d like to read it more clearly.
For my zine, the comics really helped me to understand how intertwined all these social levels are – as are the inequalities that we suffer from, and benefit from, and the ways in which we are individualised and individualise others.
You can download the zine as a pdf by clicking here. I’d suggest printing it out as a booklet to get the full zine experience – or just reading it online.