Avsnitt

  • I don’t know what the deal is with all of you who didn’t find Longlegs scary, because this movie straight up gave me intrusive thoughts! This episode talks about those thoughts, how I learned to challenge my Nicolas Cage-related intrusive thoughts, and how you can challenge yours too through cognitive strategies and (seemingly paradoxically) through horror.

    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, Registered Psychotherapist and owner of Many Moons Therapy.

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    Show Notes:

    Want to work together? I offer 1:1 psychotherapy (Ontario), along with tarot, horror, and dreamwork services, but individually and through my group program, the Final Girls Club.

    Send me some Ghoul Mail!

    I love hearing from you spooky ghouls! Want a chance to have your story read on a future episode of Mental Health is Horrifying? If you’d like to share what horror movies mean to you, how they have helped you with your mental health, or about a particular horror movie that you have thoughts and feelings about, send me some Ghoul Mail.

    Podcast artwork by Chloe Hurst at Contempomint.

    Effects of suppression of personal intrusive thoughts by Anita E. Kelly and Jeffrey H. Kahn, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Vol. 66, Iss. 6Covering Up What Can't Be Seen: Concealable Stigma and Mental Control by Laura Richman and Daniel M. Wegner, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 77(3): 474-486A comparison of thought suppression to an acceptance-based technique in the management of personal intrusive thoughts: a controlled evaluation by Brook A. Marcks and Douglas W. Woods, Behaviour Research and Therapy, Volume 43, Issue 4, April 2005, Pages 433-445

    Neuroanatomy, Parasympathetic Nervous System by Jacob Tindle and Prasanna Tadi in National Library of Medicine

    Osgood Perkins Explains How ‘Longlegs’ Is an Ode to His Celebrity Parents’ Dark Backstory: ‘A Mother Can Lie Out of Love’ by Ryan Lattanzio, IndieWire
  • Let’s talk about Trap (2024) and about how teen heartthrobs, fantasy, and nostalgia are actually beneficial to our mental health by exploring self-psychology concepts of selfobject needs and reparative relationships.

    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, Registered Psychotherapist and owner of Many Moons Therapy.

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    Show Notes:

    Want to work together? I offer 1:1 psychotherapy (Ontario), along with tarot, horror, and dreamwork services, both individually and through my group program, the Final Girls Club. Visit my website to learn more.

    Podcast artwork by Chloe Hurst at Contempomint.

    Between Therapist and Client: The New Relationship by Michael Kahn

    Nostalgia as a Resource for Psychological Health and Well-Being by Clay Routledge, Tim Wildschut , Constantine Sedikides, and Jacob Juhl in Social and Personality Psychology Compass 7/11 (2013): 808–818, 10.1111/spc3.12070

    ​​‘It Was Never My Intention to Be a Heartthrob’: Josh Hartnett on Finding His Focus, Shedding the Darkness of ‘Black Mirror’ and That ‘Bats— Crazy’ ‘Trap’ Script by Emily Longeretta

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  • This episode talks about 2024 gothic romance horror comedy delight Lisa Frankenstien and its portrayal of the grieving process through the eyes of Lisa in all her sensitive, emo, goth teen glory. This movie is quirky, and silly, and romantic, and touching and I’m so glad that it exists and that it pays a beautiful tribute to its godmother, Mary Shelley.

    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, Registered Psychotherapist and owner of Many Moons Therapy.

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    Sources:

    Whether you have lost a beloved person or pet, Love Letters For The Dead offers you a space to process, feel, and be with your experience of grief for your dearly departed. Over a two week period, you will receive writing prompts, audio recordings, tarot exercises, and dreamwork rituals delivered to your inbox, along with a place to share memories of and feelings about your dearly departed.

    All you need is your heart, a journal, and a tarot or oracle deck.

    We begin on the dark moon of August 3.

    Early bird pricing is available until July 26. Visit manymoonstherapy.com/finalgirlsclub to learn more and to register.

    Order The Horror Concierge: A Mental Health and Horror Tarot Readings + Film Reco

    Podcast artwork by Chloe Hurst at Contempomint.

    Undergoing the situation: Emotional dwelling is more than empathic understanding by Robert D. Storlow

    Staring at the Sun: Overcoming the Terror of Death by Irvin D. Yalom Death Rituals, Ceremonies & Traditions Around the World by Tracey WallaceLittle Hidden Doors: A Guided Journal for Deep Dreamers – A Dream Journal by Naomi Sangreal Laurie Anderson’s Farewell to Lou Reed: A Rolling Stone Exclusive by Laurie AndersonJennifer's Body & Lisa Frankenstein's Shared Universe Explained: How The Horror Movies Are Connected by Brandon ZacharyFor Zelda Williams, Daughter of Robin, a Goth Zombie Comedy Is Cathartic by Melena Ryzik

    Mary Shelley’s Haunted Life by Caroline Macon Fleischer

    Mary Shelley’s Obsession with the Cemetery by Bess Lovejoy



    Mental Health Resources:

    Assaulted Women’s Help Line

    Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

    Distress Centres of Toronto

    Gerstein Crisis Centre

    Toronto Rape Crisis Centre / Multicultural Women Against Rape

    Victim Services Toronto

  • If you were staying at a spooky old mansion for the weekend and you found a condemned tarot deck in the basement that definitely looked haunted… would you read from the deck? Or would you run?

    I guess your answer depends on the power you believe that a deck of cards can have. Because even the non-believers — even those who think that tarot cards are fake and just a bunch of hocus pocus — even they seem scared to sit down and watch their fate unfold in front of them. If it’s not real, what are you so afraid of?

    On today's episode, we're going to talk about Tarot (2024) and its portrayal of the cards as a mirror into the deepest, darkest places of our psyches.

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    Sources:

    Order The Horror Concierge: A Mental Health and Horror Tarot Readings + Film Reco. Order yours HERE.

    Podcast artwork by Chloe Hurst at Contempomint.

    Jung and Tarot: An Archetypal Journey by Sallie Nichols

    ‘Tarot’ Movie Co-Director Details How New Horror Thriller Deals Fresh Hand To Audiences by Tim Lammers

    Jungian Perspective on the Tarot by Ken James

    Modalities of Psychotherapy, CRPO


  • Have you ever been in the middle of experiencing something so strange, or so cruel or surreal that you think to yourself – I have to be in some kind of nightmare? Well, what if you were? What if it was “all one great big movie”... uhh I mean nightmare?

    What if Scream is actually Sidney Prescott’s trauma nightmare? Let’s explore that theory and look at how Scream (1996) portrays the formation of trauma and how it can manifest into nightmares.


    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, Registered Psychotherapist and owner of Many Moons Therapy.

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    Sources:


    Hey final girls — we all have psychic capabilities. And learning how to tap into those innate capabilities can unlock a doorway to a world rich with meaning beyond what we can perceive with our conscious, waking minds. I invite you to join Through the Dream Veil, my 5-week email course where you will learn how to heighten your psychic capabilities by learning how to develop your own personal dreamwork practice, nurture a relationship with the dream realm, and embody the magic of your dreams to unveil a deeper understanding of both your personal and the collective unconscious.

    Beginning and the May 6 dark moon, you will receive psychoeducaiton about dreams, a framework for developing your own personal dreamwork practice, and an audio guided journey into your unconscious where you will be guided to discover what a dream of your choosing means to you.

    Sign up HERE.


    Order The Horror Concierge: A Mental Health and Horror Tarot Readings + Film Reco. Order yours HERE.


    Podcast artwork by Chloe Hurst at Contempomint.


    The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious by Carl Jung


    Dreams: (From Volumes 4, 8, 12, and 16 of the Collected Works of C. G. Jung) (New in Paper) by C.G. Jung


    The Interpretation of Fairy Tales by Marie-Louise von Franz and Kendra Crossen


    The Myth of Normal: Trauma, Illness, and Healing in a Toxic Culture by Gabor Maté, Daniel Maté


    The Scream, 1893 by Edvard Munch


    The 1990s Teen Horror Cycle: Final Girls and a New Hollywood Formula by Alexandra West



  • Does spending a weekend in a haunted house conducting paranormal investigations with a bunch of other spooky weirdos sound preferable to spending it with your codependent family members? Yes? Then pack your bags, sister.

    We’re heading to Hill House to talk about The Haunting (1968) and its portrayal of caregiver burnout.

    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, Registered Psychotherapist and owner of Many Moons Therapy.

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    Sources:

    Hey final girls — I’d like to take you on a transcendent journey into your psyche through — you guessed — horror movies! More specifically, horror movie monsters and villains. Join me on a very special dark moon/solar eclipse this April 8 for the Final Girls Club where we’ll be exploring How Monsters Show Us Our Guts. Informed by Jungian exploration of myths and fairy tales as portraits of psychic terrain, in this workshop, we will explore how we project our unconscious shadows onto our favourite horror monsters and villains, and imagine the creation of our own monsters as an act of emotional catharsis and reclamation of self. Register HERE.

    Order The Horror Concierge: A Mental Health and Horror Tarot Readings + Film Reco. Order yours HERE.

    Podcast artwork by Chloe Hurst at Contempomint.

    West ML, Keller AE. Parentification of the child: a case study of Bowlby's compulsive care-giving attachment pattern. Am J Psychother. 1991 Jul;45(3):425-31. doi: 10.1176/appi.psychotherapy.1991.45.3.425. PMID: 1951790.

    The Haunted Mind of Shirley Jackson by Zoë Heller

    Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted Life by Ruth Franklin

    The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious by Carl Jung

    Burnout: The Secret to Unlocking the Stress Cycle by Emily Nagoski and Amelia Nagoski

  • How would you feel if one day you tried to login to your online social media accounts, only to discover that they were locked and your online persona had taken on a life of its own? Pretty scary stuff, eh?

    Cam is an obvious commentary on the nature of camming and is based on writer Isa Mazzei’s own experiences as a cam girl, but what I’m most interested in is how this movie reflects the increasingly ego-focused nature of our society, and what happens when the ego is not in balance with the rest of the archetypal self. (spoiler alert: it’s bad.)

    Let’s talk about Cam (2018) and its portrayal of the ego run amok.

    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, Registered Psychotherapist and owner of Many Moons Therapy.

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    Sources:

    Hey final girls — I’d like to take you on a transcendent journey into your psyche through — you guessed — horror movies! More specifically, horror movie monsters and villains. Join me on a very special dark moon/solar eclipse this April 8 for the Final Girls Club where we’ll be exploring How Monsters Show Us Our Guts. Informed by Jungian exploration of myths and fairy tales as portraits of psychic terrain, in this workshop, we will explore how we project our unconscious shadows onto our favourite horror monsters and villains, and imagine the creation of our own monsters as an act of emotional catharsis and reclamation of self. Early bird final girl rate is in effect until March 1. Register by visiting manymoonstherapy.com/finalgirlsclub.

    Order The Horror Concierge: A Mental Health and Horror Tarot Readings + Film Reco. Order yours HERE.

    This Horror Screenwriter Subverted Every Shitty Sex Work Trope by Frederick Blichert

    Collected Works of C. G. Jung, Volume 11: Psychology and Religion: West and East by C.G. Jung

    The Interpretation of Fairy Tales by Marie-Louise von Franz, Kendra Crossen

  • Remember lockdown? I know I'm sorry — I know you don’t want to, but I think it’s worth considering for the sake of talking about Host (2020) and its genius encapsulation of the total anxiety of Covid lockdown.

    We’re in the depths of winter anyway, so why not hunker down at home at relive the horrors of Zoom hangouts with friends? And you know what might make It a bit more fun — is if we throw a séance in there.

    Let’s talk about Host (2020) and its portrayal of lockdown anxiety.

    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, Registered Psychotherapist and owner of Many Moons Therapy.

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    Sources:

    Hey final girls — speaking of getting haunted during a virtual meeting, registration is now open for the February meeting of the Final Girls Club where you’ll get to experience Dream Walk With Me — a live, experiential dreamwork journey where we will uncover the hidden meanings behind the symbols, archetypes and messages held within your dreams. Early bird final girl rate is in effect until February 1. Register by visiting manymoonstherapy.com/finalgirlsclub.

    Order The Horror Concierge: A Mental Health and Horror Tarot Readings + Film Reco. Order yours HERE.

    'Host' Director Breaks Down The Mythology You May Have Missed & That Ending Shot By Perri Nemiroff

    Hwang TJ, Rabheru K, Peisah C, Reichman W, Ikeda M. Loneliness and social isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic. Int Psychogeriatr. 2020 Oct;32(10):1217-1220. doi: 10.1017/S1041610220000988. Epub 2020 May 26. PMID: 32450943; PMCID: PMC7306546. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7306546/

    How 'Host' director Rob Savage went from viral tweet to 3-movie deal By Sam Haysom

    Has School Become Optional? By Alec MacGillis

    The Implications of COVID-19 for Mental Health and Substance Use by Nirmita Panchal, Heather Saunders, Robin Rudowitz, and Cynthia Cox

    Mental health and the pandemic: What U.S. surveys have found by John Gramlich

    Pongou R, Ahinkorah BO, Maltais S, Mabeu MC, Agarwal A, Yaya S. Psychological distress during the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada. PLoS One. 2022 Nov 17;17(11):e0277238. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0277238. PMID: 36395148; PMCID: PMC9671380.

    Eric B. Elbogen, Megan Lanier, Sarah C. Griffin, Shannon M. Blakey, Jeffrey A. Gluff, H. Ryan Wagner, and Jack Tsai. A National Study of Zoom Fatigue and Mental Health During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Implications for Future Remote Work. Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking.Jul 2022.409-415.

    “Misinformation” vs. “Disinformation”: Get Informed On The Difference



  • Let’s talk about Krampus (2015) — everyone’s favourite half goat, half demon creature who has come to punish all the misbehaving children and dysfunctional families on Christmas — as a symbol for seasonal depression.

    It’s no surprise that December is a month of peak seasonal depression despite being labelled as the most wonderful time of the year. People tend to be ultra stressed out during the holidays — in particular at the prospect of spending time with their families. Oh the cognitive dissonance! So who better to reflect the true horrors of the season than a terrifying goat demon who brings along with him killer gingerbread men, teddy bears, and a jack in the box from hell?

    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, owner of Many Moons Therapy.

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    Sources:

    Order The Horror Concierge: A Mental Health and Horror Tarot Readings + Film Reco. Order yours HERE.

    Hey final girls — I have an exciting group experience coming in the new year that will guide you through dreamwork exploration. Sign up for my newsletter to be the first to know when this launches in January.

    Krampus by Amy Tikkanen in Encyclopedia Britannica

    Behind the scenes of Christmas horror movie Krampus with Wellington's Weta Workshop by Collette Devlin

    Seasonal Affective Disorder, John Hopkins Medicine

    Krampus Origin Story | Krampus (2015)

    The Simpsons - Krusty Doll Set To Evil

    Christmas Shopping with Cousin Eddie

    Champ Kind intro

    A Theory of Cognitive Dissonance by Leon Festinger

    Holiday joy despite narcissistic relationships by Doctor Ramani

  • Let’s talk about Five Nights at Freddy’s (2023) and its portrayal of the personal unconscious through dreams.

    K so the reason I went to see this movie is because Matthew Lillard is in it and I think he is one of THE BEST horror film actors of all time and I will see anything he is in. But I was SO pleasantly surprised at how much I liked this movie! I immediately saw that this movie was about the navigation of trauma through dreamwork and Jungian archetypes — AND there were adorable murderous animatronic critters who love pizza and singing songs so like… what’s there not to like?

    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, owner of Many Moons Therapy.

    Podcast artwork by Chloe Hurst from Contempomint.
    ..............................................................

    Sources:

    Order The Horror Concierge: A Mental Health and Horror Tarot Readings + Film Reco. Order yours HERE.

    Hey final girls — I have an exciting group experience coming in the new year that will guide you through dreamwork exploration. Sign up for my newsletter to be the first to know when this launches.

    Consciousness and the Unconscious: Lectures Delivered at ETH Zurich, Volume 2: 1934 by C.G. Jung and Ernst Falzeder

    Jung's Model of the Psyche by Ann Hopwood

    Five Nights At Freddy's Breaks Major Horror Movie Box Office Record Of 2023 by Nick Bythrow

    Five Nights at Freddy’s, the cult horror game turned movie, explained by Aja Romano

    What Is Dream Theory and How Does It Work in Five Nights at Freddy's? by Cassidy Ward

    Dreams: (From Volumes 4, 8, 12, and 16 of the Collected Works of C. G. Jung) by C.G. Jung

    Dictionary of Symbolism: Cultural Icons and the Meanings Behind Them by Hans Biedermann

  • On this special Halloween episode, I’m going to risk having my horror hall pass revoked by diving into a movie that is uhhh not TECHNICALLY a horror movie, but I believe still deserves a place somewhere in the genre for reasons we will explore in the episode — HOCUS POCUS (1993)!

    It’s for the same reason that I believe so strongly that everybody should be able to connect with feelings of pure joy and excitement as they relate to Halloween, that I also believe that horror is for EVERYBODY no matter how much terror you can withstand. I have developed a theory to explore this —and it’s called the Spooky/Scary Spectrum.

    Okay so let’s talk about Hocus Pocus and my PATENTED Spooky/Scary Spectrum of horror and how it relates to the nervous system!

    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, owner of Many Moons Therapy.

    Podcast artwork by Chloe Hurst from Contempomint.
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    Sources:

    Order The Horror Concierge: A Mental Health and Horror Tarot Readings + Film Reco. Order yours HERE.

    Be sure to check out my Instagram @manymoonstherapy for a diagram of the Spooky/Scary spectrum, and to see what movies I placed on the spectrum for myself! Why don’t you give it a try too?

    Hocus Pocus (1993) Trailer, Rotten Tomatoes Classic Trailers

    Learning in the panic zone: strategies for managing learner anxiety by Rob Palethorpe, John P. Wilson in Journal of European Industrial Training

    How ‘Hocus Pocus’ Went From Box Office Bomb to Disney’s Halloween Darling by And Ortiz

    15 surprising things you probably never knew about 'Hocus Pocus’ by Marilyn La Jeunesse

    Scream Therapy: The Mental Health Benefits of Horror Movies

    How Scary Movies Can Help You De-Stress, According to Science by Kim Wong-Shing

    Why Do We Keep Going Back? A Q Method Analysis of Our Attraction to Horror Movies. Operant Subjectivity by Robinson, T. ., Callahan, C., & Evans, K.

    Pandemic practice: Horror fans and morbidly curious individuals are more psychologically resilient during the COVID-19 pandemic by Coltan Scriver, John A. Johnson, Jens Kjeldgaard-Christiansen, Mathias Clasen

    Neuroanatomy, Parasympathetic Nervous System by Jacob Tindle and Prasanna Tadi

  • So — have you heard about this tape?

    Let’s talk about The Ring (2002) and its portrayal of grief, nature vs nurture, and the psycho-therapeutic theory of emotional dwelling.

    There are many readings of what the metaphors in this movie are really about. And for a lot of people this movie is about technology — viral media and misinformation, technology as a virus, technophobia etc etc — but for me, this movie is so much about grief! Like — it just is! Miscarriages! Murder! Hauntings! Girls in wells! Grief.

    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, owner of Many Moons Therapy.

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    Sources:

    Psychoanalytic Dialogues 26: 103-108 Walking the Tightrope of Emotional Dwelling by George E. Atwood, Phd and Robert D. Stolorow, Phd

    Undergoing the situation: Emotional dwelling is more than empathic understanding by Robert D. Storlow

    Epigenetics and Child Development: How Children’s Experiences Affect Their Genes

    How "Ringu" (1998) Embodies Cultural Fear by Daniel Hess

    'The Ring' at 20: Millennial Horror That's Still Infecting Movies Today by Beatrice Loayza

    You Won’t Regret Rewatching The Ring by Kevin Townsend, Sophie Gilbert, David Sims, and Lenika Cruz

  • Let’s talk about They Live (1988) and its portrayal of mental health themes of oppression, manifestation vs. reality, and the attention economy and ADHD.

    They Live focuses on an ordinary man who discovers an alien race has been controlling the human population through subliminal messaging that promotes vapid consumerism. Is this a documentary? Maybe.

    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, owner of Many Moons Therapy.

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    Show Notes:

    As a special gift for my hallowed listeners, for a limited time use promo code HORRIFYING20 for 20% off The Horror Concierge: A Mental Health and Horror Tarot Readings + Film Reco. Order yours HERE.

    Trickle-Down Behavior Analysis by Mark R. Dixon

    American Psychiatric Association: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th edition. Arlington, VA., American Psychiatric Association, 2013.

    Association of Digital Media Use With Subsequent Symptoms of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Among Adolescents. by Ra CK, Cho J, Stone MD, De La Cerda J, Goldenson NI, Moroney E, Tung I, Lee SS, Leventhal AM.

    They Live Fight Scene: Secret Behind Cinema’s Greatest Brawl by Tim Buckler

    Consumer Price Index: Annual review, 2022

    What Does Barbie’s Box Office Bonanza Mean for Mattel Stock? by Jaime Katz

    Move Fast and Break Things: How Facebook, Google, and Amazon Cornered Culture and Undermined Democracy by Jonathan Taplin

    What Was the Subprime Meltdown? What Happened and Consequences by Will Kenton

    The Secret by Rhonda Byrne

    The Work of Byron Katie by Byron Katie

    Paying Attention: The Attention Economy by BER Staff

  • It’s summertime, ghouls! It’s hot, it’s humid, and wouldn’t you non-vampire people just love a day on the beach? Or are you afraid to go in the water? On today’s episode, I’m going to be talking about the OG summer blockbuster that made everyone afraid to go in the water, Jaws (1975).

    Let’s talk about Jaws as a metaphor for emotional avoidance, its portrayal of existential themes of meaning vs meaninglessness, and believe it or not — pet and animal grief!

    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, owner of Many Moons Therapy.

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    Sources:

    ‘Jaws’: The Groundbreaking Summer Blockbuster that Changed Hollywood, and Our Summer Vacations, Forever by Sven Mikulec

    The Real-Life Drama That Almost Prevented Steven Spielberg's 'Jaws' From Being Made by Lloyd Farley

    Attachment and Loss by John Bowlby

    The Strange Situation by Mary Ainsworth

    Staring at the sun: Overcoming the terror of death by Irvin Yalom

    The Birth of Tragedy by Friedrich Nietzsche

    What Song Quint Keeps Singing In Jaws by Kevin Maclean

    Repressing Emotions by Angelica Attard Ph.D.

    Veterinarians group fighting 'staggering' statistics on death by suicide in profession by Kevin Yarr

    Not One More Vet

    Replacing animal agriculture and shifting to a plant-based diet could drastically curb greenhouse gas emissions, according to new model by Ker Than

    On the Endless Symbolism of the Best Summer Movie Ever Made: Jaws by Olivia Rutigliano

    Steven Spielberg Regrets How ‘Jaws’ Impacted Real-World Sharks by Jacquelyne Germain

    Support local bunnies!

    Rabbit Rescue

    Tiny Paws Rabbit Rescue

  • Let’s talk about the apocalyptic— today’s forecast is misty with a chance of monsters — low key 2007 creature feature, The Mist.

    I had seen this movie a handful of times over the years and upon a rewatch for this episode, I really wanted this movie to just be about climate change. It’s easy to see it that way pure and simple — there’s literally monsters in the mist outside that prevent people from going out lest they get eaten. But on closer inspection, there is so much much more going on here and begs the question — is climate change really just environmental terrorism? And who exactly is the real monster here?

    This episode explores the film’s portrayal of climate anxiety, a psychological concept called sense-making, in and out groups, spiritual bypassing, and hopelessness. Good times!

    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, owner of Many Moons Therapy.

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    Sources:

    The 1990s Teen Horror Cycle: Final Girls and a New Hollywood Formula by Alexandra West https://mcfarlandbooks.com/product/the-1990s-teen-horror-cycle/

    Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain by David Eagleman https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/9827912-incognito

    Canada wildfires: US East Coast sees worst air quality in years https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-65828469

    The Social Psychology of Organizing by Karl E. Weick https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/134489

    Deep Diversity: Overcoming Us Vs. Them by Shakil Choudhury https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/26781095

    Toward a Psychology of Awakening: Buddhism, Psychotherapy, and the Path of Personal and Spiritual Transformation by John Welwood https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/14457.Toward_a_Psychology_of_Awakening

    ‘The Mist’ Is Still Relevant for Unfortunate Reasons by Kristen Lopez
    https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/mist-is-still-relevant-unfortunate-reasons-1060573/

    Leviathan by Thomas Hobbes https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/91953.Leviathan

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    Mental Health Resources:

    Assaulted Women’s Help Line
    awhl.org
    416-863-0511

    Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
    camh.net
    416-535-8501

    Distress Centres of Toronto
    dcogt.com
    416-408-4357

    Gerstein Crisis Centre
    gersteincentre.org
    416-929-5200

    Toronto Rape Crisis Centre / Multicultural Women Against Rape
    trccmwar.ca
    416-597-8808

    Victim Services Toronto
    victimservicestoronto.com
    416-808-7066

  • Let's talk about the blood-soaked, prom queen of our dreams who — spoiler alert! — burns the whole ass gymnasium down cinematic masterpiece from 1976, Carrie.

    One of my favourite things about the origin story of this movie is that after Stephen King scoured the deepest, darkest, recesses of his mind to conjure up the most horrific scenario that he could —a teenage girl has her period for the first time in a public school shower, leading all of her classmates to laugh at her and pelt her with tampons! Horrors!

    This episode explores the film’s portrayal of interconnected themes of religious trauma and abuse, shame, and the monstrous feminine.

    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, owner of Many Moons Therapy.

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    Sources:

    https://www.cinemablend.com/news/2566855/adapting-stephen-king-carrie-queen-of-prom-brian-de-palma-sissy-spacek

    A Night at the Movies: The Horrors of Stephen King https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2076787/?ref_=ext_shr_lnk

    Understanding and Treating Chronic Shame: A Relational/Neurobiological Approach by Patricia A. DeYoung https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/22776119-understanding-and-treating-chronic-shame

    https://mashable.com/video/stephen-king-role-of-horror-dark-times

    Dead Blondes and Bad Mothers by Sady Doyle https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/43802026-dead-blondes-and-bad-mothers

    The Monstrous-Feminine: Film, Feminism, Psychoanalysis by Barbara Creed https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/395435.The_Monstrous_Feminine

    https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2015/10/17/449176709/horrible-things-happen-to-nepali-girls-when-they-menstruate-15girls


  • Let's talk about 2023 AI dystopian murderous doll from the bowels of tech hell masterpiece — M3GAN.

    It is my belief that horror movies reflect not only the zeitgeist of the time in which they are made, but also our inner most fears and anxieties. While this movie is a lot of fun and M3GAN herself is a riot, it also carries an incredibly powerful message about the potential impacts of AI on human attachment.

    This episode explores M3GAN’s portrayal of our society’s overall garbage relationship to grief and conversations about death, existential themes of loneliness and isolation, and the intersection of technology, mental health care, and attachment theory.

    Mental Health is Horrifying is hosted by Candis Green, owner of Many Moons Therapy.

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    Sources:

    https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/movies/story/2023-01-05/m3gan-movie-malignant-akela-cooper-james-wan-horror

    https://www.orderofthegooddeath.com/resources/fear-of-death/

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2062034.Staring_at_the_Sun

    https://www.eterneva.com/resources/death-rituals

    https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fhumd.2021.684137/full

    https://bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12889-022-13409-0

    https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/03/06/can-ai-treat-mental-illness

    https://vos.health/

    https://replika.com/

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1295472.Attachment?ref=nav_sb_ss_4_6

    https://www.vice.com/en/article/qjvk97/eating-disorder-helpline-disables-chatbot-for-harmful-responses-after-firing-human-staff

    Special Thanks To:

    Danielle Matar at Geist

    Kait Fowlie

    Cover art by evil genius Chloe Hurst

  • Are you someone who watches horror movies and thinks — that nasty old well that Samara climbs out of in The Ring is really a metaphor for her grief? Or that like…Ghostface at his core is a spectre of intergenerational trauma?

    I’m your host of darkness — Candis Green and I’d like to welcome you ghouls to Mental Health is Horrifying — the podcast where we journey through the depths and examine how mental health themes are portrayed in the world of horror. I’m a Psychotherapist who also happens to be terminally spooky. As the darkness-seeking bat that I am, I spent my childhood summers locked away in the public library scouring the aisles for books about Halloween, witches, and all things haunted. And surprisingly, my parents were not too concerned. So as a mental health professional and lifelong horror fan, I really can’t help but see the world through the lens of the macabre.

    This is a podcast for horror fans who know that when it comes to what we fear, there is much more than what meets the eye.

    From Carrie, to Michael Meyers, to Hill House and everywhere in between — join me each month as we discuss how horror is really a mirror into ourselves.

    Coming this June to Spotify, Apple Podcasts - and wherever you like to listen.