Episodes

Wednesday Mar 26, 2025
Wednesday Mar 26, 2025
Between Care and Control
What if healing was also a kind of obedience?
A figure sits in silence at the edge of a softly lit corridor. Not confined, but not quite free. There is a weight in their stillness, a pause between movements—as if they are waiting to understand which parts of themselves are welcome in the world beyond the door. This is not a story of illness, not even a story of recovery. It’s the quiet tension that sits between the two: the subtle negotiation between being known and being reshaped.
We speak easily of mental health now—more openly, more frequently—but often with a language inherited from institutions and histories we’ve only half-examined. What does it mean to care, really? To offer help without insisting on conformity? In this episode, we slow down to consider the fine line between support and surveillance, between relational healing and moral conditioning. It is a line that thinkers like G.W.F. Hegel saw as fertile ground for freedom—distress as an intelligible call for reconnection. But also a line that Michel Foucault feared was ripe for coercion—where the hand that soothes is also the hand that disciplines.
Throughout the episode, we explore how these frameworks reverberate through contemporary mental health care. We draw on Frantz Fanon, whose writings on psychiatry and colonialism remain piercingly relevant, and Thomas Szasz, whose critiques of diagnostic authority still challenge us to question who holds the power to name suffering. Even bell hooks, though writing in a different register, reminds us that love and care—when practiced with depth—resist domination. Against this backdrop, we also confront the institutional legacies of figures like Philippe Pinel, whose celebrated compassion may have masked subtler instruments of control.
This isn’t a polemic, but a meditation. On what we inherit. On how easily the desire to help can become a mandate to reform. And on the quieter question: who gets to define what it means to be well?
Why Listen?
• When care becomes indistinguishable from conformity
• When freedom and treatment speak different dialects
• When distress reveals what society cannot absorb
• What does it mean to heal without disappearing?
Further Reading
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📖 Madness and Civilization by Michel Foucault – A haunting genealogy of psychiatric power.
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📖 The Myth of Mental Illness by Thomas Szasz – A provocative challenge to the foundations of psychiatry.
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📖 The Wretched of the Earth by Frantz Fanon – On colonization, trauma, and the politicization of the mind.
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📖 All About Love by bell hooks – An invitation to reimagine care as radical freedom.
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