By: Frankie Hanman-Siegersma
Community responses to those experiencing mental health crisis and distress are important. However, in Australia and many other colonised countries, responses to distress have become highly medicalised, punitive, individual and privatised. Exploring friendship responses to mental health crisis may increase the possibilities for building on community connectedness and local support networks. The work described in this paper aimed to make visible the acts of care, solidarity, friendship and mutuality that friends and members of the community have taken up in response to someone close to them experiencing distress. The work was guided by intentional peer support and narrative practices including re-authoring, collective documentation and outsider witnessing.
Key words: friendship; solidarity; trans; queer; LGBTQIA+; peer work; intentional peer support; narrative therapy
Hanman-Siegersma, F. (2024). We are a spider’s web: Friendship in times of mental health crisis. International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work, (1), 64–76. https://doi.org/10.4320/XPSE7049