A few months ago we released an 80,000 Hours Podcast episode I recorded with my colleague Howie on having a successful career with depression, anxiety and imposter syndrome.
It’s since become our most popular episode ever (both in terms of feedback and listening time).
We're considering doing a follow-up Q and A episode covering Howie's advice on getting treatment, managing mental health issues, thoughts on specific challenges, or anything else we didn't get to in the episode.
We’ll record it in a couple of weeks if we get enough questions that Howie has views on, so if you could post anything you'd like us to answer or discuss in the comments below by August 30, that’d be great.
(Or, if you'd like to submit a question anonymously, you can use this form.)
Thanks!
When people say "EAs should do X", it's usually wise to reflect on whether that is really the case - are there skills or mindsets that members of the EA community are bringing to X?
The case I would like to see made her is why EA orgs would benefit from getting mental health services from some EA provider rather than the existing ones available. Could you elaborate on why you think this is the case? I'm not sure why you think current mental services, eg regular therapists are unapproachable and how having an 'EA' service would get around this. I don't buy the access point, at least not for EA orgs: access is a question of funding, and that's something EA orgs plausibly have. Demand for a service leads to more of it being supplied (of course, there are elasticities). If I buy more groceries, it's not like someone else goes hungry, it's more like more groceries get produced.
I assume you didn't mean it this way, but I found the tone of this comment rather brusque and dismissive. Please be mindful of that for discussions, particularly those in the EA forum.
I'm not sure how else to explain my point. One approach to MH is to talk to each individual about what they can do. Another approach, the organisational psychology one, is to think about how to change office culture and working practices. Sort of bottom-up vs top-down.
I'd be interested to hear you expand on what you mean here!