I waited as the elevator ascended at an achingly slow pace. Anxiety filled my body, and I could hardly breathe.
When the doors finally opened, I stepped out, clutching my bag, expecting to see a creepy monochromatic clinical space filled with zombies and screaming people being held down by aggressive staff whose sole job was to control patients like caged animals. Instead, I was welcomed by a wall of bright, hand-drawn inspirational quotes and a handful of warm smiles from staff and other patients. I started to breathe again. Maybe this wouldn't be as bad as I thought it would be.
Every hospital is different, but the one thing I can attest to after several stays at several different institutions is that psychiatric hospitals are nothing like they are portrayed in movies or on television.
There are many problems with the systems, and they are far from perfect. I wonβt try to sugarcoat it, but they are certainly not as scary as has become common perception. They're not a vacation by any means, but they serve their purpose of keeping people safe and pointing them in the right direction without the straitjackets and padded cells.
Here are seven ways psychiatric hospitals today bust the myths of the asylums of yore.
[For more of this story, written by Danielle Hark, go to http://www.upworthy.com/7-myth...3c6fd02271396eef3a38]
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