Is Mental Health Overrated?

Is Mental Health Overrated?

Updated On
October 11, 2025

Why Mental Health Often Gets Ignored

Mental health is one of the most overlooked priorities in modern life. Most people are focused on external results; money, image, productivity, but the root of lasting success is your internal state. When we ignore mental health, it doesn’t stay quiet. It shows up in how we act, react, and treat others.

Unhealthy Behavior Comes From Unhealthy Thinking

Here are five common patterns that stem from poor mental and emotional well-being:

1. Compensation for Inadequacy

When people feel unworthy or not good enough, they often try to cover it up. This can look like arrogance, addiction, or aggression, things that help hide the pain or pretend we’re doing better than we are.

2. Fear of Rejection

Some people lie, manipulate, or try to control others, not because they’re bad, but because they’re scared of not being accepted. When you believe you’re unlovable, you do whatever it takes to avoid rejection.

3. Shame and Self-Sabotage

If someone deep down feels broken or shameful, they might ruin their own progress. It’s subconscious. They don’t believe they deserve love or success, so they destroy it before it gets too close.

4. Projection of Inner Pain

Hurt people hurt people. When we’re struggling inside, it’s easier to judge, criticize, or blame others than it is to face our own pain. This is projection, it protects us from what’s going on inside.

5. Avoidance of Vulnerability

A lack of self-worth makes us afraid to be seen. So we withdraw, get angry, lie, or shut down. It’s not because we don’t care. It’s because being open feels risky when we don’t like who we are.

But Isn’t Loving Others More Important?

The Common Objection:

Some people think focusing on loving yourself is selfish or less important than loving others.

The Bold Truth:

It's the opposite. Building a strong, loving relationship with yourself gives you more to give others. It’s how you become a better parent, spouse, coworker, or friend. This isn’t selfish, it’s selfless.

Why You Should Prioritize Your Relationship with Yourself

Here are four bold reasons why working on your mental health and self-love is one of the best things you can do:

1. Improved Mental Health and Emotional Strength

  • What the Research Shows: Self-compassion leads to lower levels of anxiety, stress, and depression.
  • Real-Life Result: You handle stress better, feel calmer, and show up more present every day.

2. Better Relationships

  • What the Research Shows: When you love and accept yourself, your relationships get healthier.
  • Real-Life Result: You communicate better, have fewer conflicts, and feel more connected.

3. More Motivation and Success

  • What the Research Shows: People who accept and encourage themselves are more consistent and productive.
  • Real-Life Result: You set and hit goals faster, and you don’t quit when it gets hard.

4. Better Physical Health

  • What the Research Shows: Self-love includes taking care of your body.
  • Real-Life Result: Better energy, healthier choices, and lower risk of illness.

The Real-World Impact of Self-Love

Critics might say this sounds like fluff, but the science says otherwise. Prioritizing your relationship with yourself boosts mental health, builds strong relationships, increases performance, and even improves your physical health. It’s not just helpful, it’s life-changing.

The Bottom Line

Life gets better when you love yourself and work on yourself. I’ve seen it firsthand, in my own journey and in my coaching clients. When they change the way they think and treat themselves, their whole world changes.

Most people ignore mental health. Some think it’s weak, unnecessary, or selfish, especially men. But the truth is, building a healthy mind and strong self-worth is one of the most selfless and noble things you can do. It’s time well spent.

Want to Start Right Now?

Stable Living Coaching is offering a free 2-week trial for a limited time. Join us at StableLivingCoaching.com and see what happens when you prioritize you.

Remember: You cannot fail if you Don’t Ever Stop Chasin’ It!

FREE RESOURCE

Want stronger, closer relationships with your kids, your spouse, and everyone who matters most?

You deserve it. And you can!

Sign up for weekly tools to communicate better, connect deeper, and create more trust and love in every relationship.

Your guide to understanding yourself and the people you love on a whole new level.

Sign up here:

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
FREE RESOURCE

The Country Code for Stable Parenting:

Inspiration for parents. Enter your info below to get a free printable, frameable copy of The Country Code for Stable Parenting.

Print it. Frame it. Live It. Love It.

Live by the Country Code. It’s time to Thrive!
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

You May Also Be Interested In

Teasing is Destroying Trust in Your Relationships

Most of us grew up hearing, “It’s just a joke” or “Take a joke.” Maybe we even thought it was harmless, playful, or a way to bond. I believed it too. Until I started paying attention. Here’s the truth: teasing is criticism disguised as humor. It’s anger without ownership. And it always comes at a cost.

How to Change Your Past and Take Back Your Life

We all have a past. Some of us have things we are proud of, some we are ashamed of, and most of us have moments that shaped us in ways we did not choose. Here’s the truth: your past is not something that happens to you today. The only power it has over your present and future is the power you give it through your thoughts. I have lived a past most people would call broken. I have been in prison, struggled with alcohol, faced failed marriages, and carried shame that felt impossible to shake. I used to think all of that meant I was branded for life. That it would always limit me. But I was wrong. I changed my past. You can too.

Teens and Addiction: Understanding the Risks and Solutions

Teen addiction is rising, and it’s not just about drugs or alcohol. Shane Jacob breaks down why teens turn to addictive behaviors, what drives these choices, and how parents and mentors can help them build self-belief to prevent or overcome addiction. This article provides insights and strategies to protect and guide the teens in your life.

Embracing Vanity, Pride, and Self-Importance

Most people think vanity is bad. They think it means arrogance or thinking you are better than everyone else. I disagree. Admiring your own achievements and appearance is not bad. Pride is feeling good about what you have done. Being proud is valuing yourself.Society confuses self-acceptance with superiority. You only become arrogant if you put others down. Admiring yourself does not do that. It gives you the foundation to grow, contribute, and love more fully.

Style Matters: Your Style Shapes Your Self-Image and Success

Your style tells the story of how you see yourself. The question is, are you telling that story on purpose or by accident?

What Can I Do? The Question That Changes Everything

Horses taught me to keep things simple. They do not speak English. You have to break everything down into the simplest steps if you want them to understand. Here is the way forward when you feel powerless. The secret to getting unstuck when things are not going your way.