Tag: celeb mental health

  • Comedian Gary Gulman On Toxic Masculinity, Depression

    Comedian Gary Gulman On Toxic Masculinity, Depression

    Gulman gets candid about depression in his new comedy special, The Great Depresh.

    There’s a lot of pain in comedy writing, but comedian Gary Gulman wants to push back on the idea that you need to be depressed in order to be funny. 

    “It’s a romantic myth, ‘I need to be troubled to write well,’” he said in an interview with The Daily Beast. “But it’s not true.”

    In his new comedy special, The Great Depresh, Gulman speaks openly about his mental illness, and how he keeps depression at bay today. The 49-year old said that he has had a lifetime struggle with depression. 

    “I’ve had episodes of depression since I’ve known myself. Since seven years old I can remember having these feelings. The episodes would never last more than a few months,” he said. However, in 2017 he was hospitalized after a severe episode. “This one lasted for two and a half years.” 

    Difficulty Coping With Mental Illness

    As a kid, Gulman wasn’t taught healthy ways to cope with mental illness. In the special, he jokes about growing up in the 1970s. 

    “The only antidepressants we had access to was ‘snap out of it’ and ‘what have you got to be depressed about?’ That was the second-leading brand of antidepressant,” he says. 

    Gulman was told to toughen up, a message about being masculine that undermined his health, he said. 

    “That didn’t work on me and I paid a price for it in my psyche,” he said. “I was always hiding things about myself and keeping things secret. Name-calling and bullying, either physical or verbal, was very painful for me growing up and when I saw the stance that millennials seem to be taking, I don’t have nostalgia for that. I could have used some more nurturing than I got and it just happened to be the generation I grew up in. We were just so mean to each other.” 

    Constant Vigilance

    Today, Gulman said he doesn’t feel depressed most days. 

    “But it’s in part because I’ve adopted 18 or 20 things that I do every day to stay this way. I’ve never been more vigilant because I’ve never fallen that far.” 

    That’s led him to the “longest, sturdiest recovery of my life,” he said. 

    Gulman told The Daily Beast, “I’m only comfortable talking about it now because I’ve come out the other side.” However, his comedy special opens with a scene of him at a Boston comedy club, right after he was released from the psych ward in 2017. 

    “I have a mental illness. I have a severe mental illness. It’s excruciating,” Gulman tells the audience. “It’s excruciating. This is like a cosmic bottom. This is like a bottom.” 

    Gulman remembers that night, and says he felt like he needed to share his pain. “I had to acknowledge that I was suffering,” he said. 

    Today, Gulman ends his special by speaking directly to those still suffering. 

    “If you are suffering from a mental illness, I promise you are not alone. You are not alone,” he says, then adds, “I’m sorry, you are alone, but only because you can’t leave the house today. But you should.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • John Mulaney Opens Up About Past Addiction: "I Drank For Attention"

    John Mulaney Opens Up About Past Addiction: "I Drank For Attention"

    The Emmy-winning comedian was a blackout drinker but got sober early in his career.

    Celebrated comedian John Mulaney recently opened up to Esquire about how he got sober at a young age and never looked back.

    Like many comedians, Mulaney has battled substance use disorder and even used the disease as material for his routines. Mulaney first started drinking when he was 13, and as he explained to the men’s mag, “I drank for attention. I was really outgoing, then at 12, I wasn’t. I didn’t know how to act. And then I was drinking, and I was hilarious again.” 

    Booze, Cocaine & Vicodin

    Following the pattern of many when they first become addicted, his drinking then transitioned into the use of other substances. Unlike a lot of teens, Mulaney wasn’t a fan of smoking pot, but he liked to mix cocaine and prescription drugs together.

    “I wasn’t a good athlete, so maybe it was some young male thing of ‘This is the physical feat I can do. Three Vicodin and a tequila and I’m still standing. Who’s the athlete now?’”

    Mulaney suffered from blackouts, and at one point he remembers drinking perfume. Then he went through a big bender when he was 23 and the experience served as a major turning point in his young life.

    “I was like, ‘You’re fucking out of control. I said to myself, I don’t like this guy anymore. I’m not rooting for him.’” 

    Helping Pete Davidson

    When Mulaney quit alcohol and cocaine, he didn’t join a 12-step group. He says he quit cold turkey, and is sober to this day. After cleaning up his act, he’s also been trying to help troubled SNL star Pete Davidson. He explained to Davidson, “You can have a life in comedy that is not insane – a sober, domestic life.” 

    Earlier this year, Mulaney appeared on SNL with Davidson, where they joked about mental health during the “Weekend Update” segment of the show. In the segment, Mulaney confirmed that he and Davidson spent time together, “but a lot of the time it looks like I’m Pete’s lawyer.” 

    To which, Davidson retorted, “And after observing John’s life I publicly threatened suicide. I know I shouldn’t make that joke, but it’s funny.” 

    View the original article at thefix.com