Mental Health Crisis
Mental health struggles often go unseen; buried under silence, stigma, and systemic neglect. But creative expression gives it form.
Whether you paint, write, photograph, or build- your story deserves to be seen.
Over 1.2 million people are on NHS mental health waiting lists — with some waiting over a year for help.
Why is it so hard to get mental health support in the UK?
Because the system is overstretched and underfunded. People wait months- sometimes years- for therapy, assessments, or crisis intervention. Meanwhile, private care is unaffordable, and emergency services aren't equipped to handle mental illness with dignity or skill.
What’s happening to young people in crisis?
CAMHS (Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services) is overwhelmed. Many children are told they’re “not sick enough” to be seen — until they self-harm or reach a breaking point. The average wait is 30–40 weeks. In severe cases, young people are moved far from home because no local crisis care is available.
Why are suicide rates rising — especially in men?
Because stigma is still stronger than support. Men are less likely to reach out, and when they do, services often fail to respond quickly or with cultural sensitivity. Suicide remains the leading cause of death for men under 50 in the UK.
What about people with complex trauma, PTSD, or neurodivergence?
They’re often bounced between services. PTSD, C-PTSD, and co-occurring conditions like autism and ADHD are misunderstood and under-resourced. Many are misdiagnosed or left untreated entirely. Unless they’re in crisis.
Is it this bad for everyone?
Not quite. It’s actually even worse for those already marginalised. People of colour, LGBTQ+ individuals, disabled people, and carers don’t just face the mental health crisis- they face it while battling racism, ableism, misgendering, financial hardship, and exclusion from services that were never built with them in mind.
What You Can Do
Support Crisis Mental Health Charities
Mind, YoungMinds, Rethink Mental Illness, and CALM are doing what the system should be. They offer crisis support, campaign for reform, and fight for those left waiting, unheard, or unsafe. These organisations are lifelines in a country where the safety net is torn.
Donate if you can. Volunteer if you’re able. Share their work so more people know they’re not alone and that help exists beyond the waiting list.
Push for Transparency & Accountability
Support calls for NHS mental health trusts to publish wait times, service thresholds, and crisis admission stats. Visibility creates pressure.
Right now, too many decisions are hidden behind closed doors. Publishing this data would expose where people are falling through the cracks. It would also force accountability, which blatantly being avoided. Transparency isn’t just bureaucracy; it’s how we push for fairer access, faster support, and an end to postcode lotteries in care.
Support Creative Therapies
Groups like Hospital Rooms bring world-class art into NHS mental health units, transforming sterile wards into spaces of colour, dignity, and care. Their work proves that creative environments can promote recovery, reduce agitation, and restore a sense of identity to those in crisis.
You can also support Studio Upstairs, a UK-based creative community for people with mental health needs and neurodivergent conditions. They provide safe studio spaces, exhibitions, and art-as-therapy support when the system falls short.
Talk About It. Online or Offline
Every time we speak, create, or share, we chip away at silence. Whether it’s a story, a painting, or a post, expressing our mental health struggles makes it harder for stigma to survive.
Speak. Even when it feels awkward. Share. Even when it feels small. Every honest act makes space for someone else to feel seen.
Because being “not fine” deserves visibility, dignity, and expression.
Why This Belongs on an Art Site
NotFine.Art is a platform where people turn lived experience into powerful creative work; art born from survival, grief, rage, hope, and resistance.
This isn’t decoration. It’s testimony. Every piece in our gallery comes from someone who’s lived through broken systems: disability, neurodivergence, carer burnout, mental health crises, institutional neglect. If you’re here to make a statement with what you collect, if you're here to buy art that means something- then, Hi. You’re in the right place.
If you’re an artist living through it: share your truth. If you’re a buyer, collector, or ally: this is your chance to see, feel, and support that truth.
Share your work or explore the gallery. Every piece helps tell the story.