Alexithymia is a broad term to describe problems with feeling emotions. The authors claim:
What if I told you there was a condition that:
- severely affects every 1 in 10 people, and up to 50% of people with a diagnosed mental disorder
- negatively affects numerous aspects of physical health, mental wellness, general well-being, and quality of life
- was studied for over 50 years with over 5000 published scientific papers on the topic
So Alexithymia is a potentially common condition that significantly increases the likelihood of mental health problems. Further, the inability to perceive emotions a priori is likely to contribute to mental health issues.
Although the authors do not assess the effectiveness of existing solutions, it seems plausible that effective treatments could be developed. A few reasons for optimism:
- Unlike traditional mental health, where evaluation criteria are self-reported, in the case of alexithymia, better proxies might be built based on facial expressions.
- Gendlin Focusing technique (and related things) have been found useful in this and adjacent communities.
Since Alexithymia is mentioned only once on the EA Forum, it might be overlooked by mental health-focused organizations. Given the abundance of scientific literature on the topic, it could be worthwhile to do an evaluation.
AFAIK, the authors are currently fundraising to develop the animiapp.com
Author of the manifesto and Animi here. I was also doubtful initially when I was researching alexithymia to improve my condition. But that was gradually changing the more papers I read and the more people I talked with. There are 50+ years of research on the topic, and some papers show more than 10% of the general population with alexithymia score in the "clinical" range where it is correlated with all the associated problems. 1 in 10 actually makes a lot of sense given how prevalent and comorbid it is with mental disorders or i.e. neurodiversity - ~50% of those people are also alexithymic.
It is not always caused by trauma, though obviously, it is one of the possible factors influencing it. And even if it was caused by trauma, I don't find that line of thinking very satisfying, because it isn't actionable. The next step would be going to therapy to work on that trauma. But for people with alexithymia, therapy is much less effective since psychotherapy relies on being able to speak the language of emotions. And most therapists aren't trained to work with alexithymics.
I don't disagree that it can show as a symptom of other severe problems, but calling it a symptom is in my opinion insufficient, because without addressing the symptom it is significantly harder to address the initial severe problem, and research actually shows it exacerbates severity of mental disorder symptoms. So it's more of a risk and mediator / moderator factor that severely influences the symptom severity and treatment outcomes, along with a host of other problems, and hence saying it "severely affects" is justified.
Sources for the claims I'm making are all in the manifesto (100+ studies linked), happy for constructive feedback and open to talking more - it is possible that I'm tunnel-visioned and somewhat biased since I'm working on a solution for it, but I'm not the only one who is thinking this way - you can read this article which makes a similar point - https://www.bhcsmt.com/blog/alexithymia-one-of-the-most-impactful-health-conditions-youve-never-heard-of