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 May is Mental Health Awareness Month: A Journey Through Healing, Awareness, and Empowerment

Welcome, dear seekers, to a month of profound reflection and transformation. May is Mental Health Awareness Month, a time dedicated to breaking the silence around mental illness, honoring those who live with it, and supporting the loved ones who stand by their side. As a grey witch who has navigated the shadowed depths of my own mind, I’ve come to see this month as a sacred invitation—a chance to weave magic into healing, to shed light on the unseen struggles, and to empower ourselves and each other. In this word journey, we’ll explore the history of this observance, its vital importance, what it means to those with mental illness and their loved ones, different therapy options, resources for seeking help, six simple DBT tips to start improving your mental health today, my personal story of living with multiple mental illnesses, and a preview of how we’ll dive deeper this month. Let’s step into this cauldron of awareness together.

The History of Mental Health Awareness Month

Mental Health Awareness Month traces its roots back to 1949, when Mental Health America (MHA), founded by Clifford Beers in 1909, first launched a week-long campaign to educate the public about mental health. Beers, a former mental health patient himself, wrote *A Mind That Found Itself* after his own traumatic experiences in psychiatric institutions, sparking a movement to reform treatment and reduce stigma. This initial effort evolved over decades, with the American Psychiatric Association joining in 1950 to expand its reach. By 1990, MHA extended the campaign to a full month, designating May as Mental Health Awareness Month to align with the blooming of spring—a symbol of renewal and hope.  

The movement gained momentum with the green ribbon, adopted in 1990 as a universal symbol of mental health awareness, reflecting growth and vitality. Over the years, key milestones like the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) joining the effort in the 2000s and the 2013 launch of the “B4Stage4” campaign—focusing on early intervention—have shaped its mission. Today, Mental Health Awareness Month is a global phenomenon, supported by organizations like the World Health Organization (WHO), which reports that 1 in 4 people worldwide will experience a mental health issue in their lifetime. This history reminds us that awareness is not just a trend—it’s a legacy of resilience built by those who dared to speak out, a legacy we continue to honor and expand. 

Why Mental Health Awareness Month Matters 

Mental Health Awareness Month is crucial because it shines a light on a crisis that affects millions yet remains shrouded in shame. According to the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), approximately 52.9 million adults in the U.S. experienced a mental illness in 2023, yet only about 47% received treatment. This gap highlights the stigma that still lingers—whispers of weakness, judgments of “just get over it”—that keeps people silent. This month challenges those narratives, urging us to see mental health as an integral part of overall well-being, not a separate burden.  

It’s also a call to action. With rising stressors—political unrest, economic instability, and the ongoing aftermath of global crises—mental health challenges are escalating. The WHO notes a 25% increase in anxiety and depression globally since 2020, a statistic that resonates deeply in a country where policies like Trump’s $5,000 baby bonus threaten women’s lives and reproductive rights, adding layers of trauma for many. Mental Health Awareness Month pushes for policy changes, funding for mental health services, and community support, ensuring no one is left to navigate this alone. It’s a reminder that mental health is a human right, not a privilege, and that collective action can shift the tide.  

What It Means to Those with Mental Illness 

For those living with mental illness, May is a beacon of validation. It’s a month where your struggles—whether it’s the relentless cycles of bipolar disorder, the emotional storms of borderline personality disorder, or the quiet chaos of dissociative identity disorder—are seen, heard, and honored. It means you’re not defined by your diagnosis but by your courage to keep going. This month offers a space to share stories, connect with others who understand, and find resources to cope. For me, as someone who has lived with multiple mental illnesses, it’s a time to breathe easier, knowing the world is pausing to acknowledge what I’ve carried in silence for so long. It’s a celebration of survival, a recognition that our minds, though complex, are part of our unique magic.  

What It Means to Loved Ones of Those with Mental Illness  

For the families, friends, and partners of those with mental illness, May is a lifeline. It acknowledges the exhaustion of watching a loved one suffer, the helplessness of not knowing how to help, and the strength it takes to stay supportive. It offers education—understanding that anxiety isn’t “just stress” or depression isn’t “laziness”—and tools to provide compassionate care. Loved ones often carry their own grief, guilt, or frustration, and this month validates their role as allies. It’s a chance to learn boundaries, seek support groups, and join in advocacy, turning love into action. As someone who’s leaned on my community during my darkest days, I know how vital this support is—and how this month can strengthen those bonds.  

Types of Therapy for Mental Health  

Navigating mental illness can feel like wandering a labyrinth, but therapy offers a guide. Here are some options to explore:  

  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT): Focuses on changing negative thought patterns. It’s evidence-based, helping with anxiety, depression, and OCD by challenging distorted thinking.  
  • Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT): My personal savior, DBT blends mindfulness with skills like emotional regulation and distress tolerance. It’s ideal for BPD, bipolar disorder, and complex trauma, teaching practical tools to live with intensity.  
  • Psychodynamic Therapy: Dives into unconscious patterns from past experiences. It’s great for exploring deep-seated issues like those tied to DID or childhood trauma.  
  • Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR): Targets trauma by processing distressing memories with guided eye movements. It’s effective for PTSD and can support fragmented realities like DID.  
  • Family Therapy: Involves loved ones to improve communication and support. It’s helpful for families navigating the impact of mental illness together.  
  • Art or Music Therapy: Uses creative expression to process emotions. Perfect for those who find words hard, it’s a magical outlet for binge eating or emotional overwhelm.  

Each therapy offers a unique path, and the right one depends on your needs. Consulting a licensed therapist can help you find your fit—don’t hesitate to ask for what works for you.  

Resources for Seeking Help  

If you or someone you love needs support, you’re not alone. Here are some resources to start with:  

  • National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI): Visit nami.org for helplines (1-800-950-NAMI), support groups, and educational materials.  
  • Mental Health America (MHA): Check mentalhealthamerica.net for screening tools, local resources, and a crisis text line (text MHA to 741741).  
  • Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA): Call 1-800-662-HELP or visit samhsagov for treatment locators and 24/7 assistance.  
  • Crisis Text Line: Text HOME to 741741 for free, confidential support anytime.  
  • Therapist Directories: Websites like Psychology Today (psychologytoday.com) let you search for therapists by specialty and location.  
  • Online Support: Platforms like BetterHelp or Talkspace offer virtual therapy, accessible for those with mobility or financial barriers.
  • Download an Ai therapy bot: There are a lot of apps now with AI chat bots that can be useful to use as well like Wysa anxiety chat bot

These resources are lifelines—reach out without shame. Healing begins with a single step, and help is there when you’re ready.

Six Simple DBT Tips to Improve Your Mental Health Now  

As someone transformed by DBT, I’ve distilled six simple tips you can start today to nurture your mental health, rooted in its practical wisdom:  

1. Practice One-Mindfulness: Focus fully on one task at a time (e.g., sipping tea). This calms racing thoughts, a gift for OCD’s anxiety.  

2. Use Opposite Action: If sadness urges you to isolate, reach out to a friend instead. This builds positive emotions, countering depression.  Learn more about this skill inside the patreon exclusive cauldron clarity here.

3. Try Self-Soothing: Engage your senses—hold a soft blanket or listen to nature sounds. It grounds you, easing BPD’s intensity.  Learn ways to self soother yourself in my Patreon exclusive post here.

4. Accumulate Positive Emotions: Do one small, enjoyable act (e.g., watch a funny video). This creates a buffer against bipolar lows.  

5. Practice Radical Acceptance: Acknowledge a hard reality (e.g., “This policy hurts me”) without fighting it. It frees energy for action, supporting DID’s fragmented state.  Dive into the healing of this skill inside the cauldron clarity community for FREE here.

6. Check the Facts: Challenge anxious thoughts (e.g., “Am I really in danger?”). This reduces OCD’s crippling need for order.  This skill is my savior every single day. Learn how to use this skill inside the cauldron clarity community here.

These tips are small spells of self-care—start with one, and watch your resilience grow.  

 My Mental Health Journey: From Trauma to Transformation  

My life has been a tapestry woven with trauma, each thread a lesson in navigating the wild landscape of multiple mental illnesses. From childhood to now, I’ve moved from one storm to the next, learning to dance with the chaos rather than be consumed by it. DBT has been my guide, turning my struggles into allies, and I want to share that journey with you. 

  • Bipolar II: The ups and downs are extreme—days of hypomanic energy where I create endlessly, crashing into deep, gray depressions where getting out of bed feels impossible. It’s a rollercoaster of mood swings that once defined my worth, but now I see it as a source of creative fire and reflective depth.  
  • Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD): The intensity of reality hits like a tidal wave—emotions so raw they blur the line between me and the world. Relationships were a minefield of fear of abandonment, but now I channel that passion into deep connections and empathy.  
  • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD): The crippling anxiety demands order—counting steps, checking locks, everything having to be in it’s proper place at all times, the constant need to clean my space making it tidy, organized and clean—leaving me exhausted. Never allowing me to truly sit down and be present in the moment. The ups are a sense of control; the downs are panic when chaos creeps in. It’s taught me the strength of structure, now a tool rather than a tyrant.  
  • Binge Eating Disorder (BED): My relationship with food is complicated—bingeing as comfort, then guilt as punishment leading to restricting myself from eating anything for days at a time. The highs are fleeting satisfaction; the lows are shame. I’ve learned to see it as a signal of emotional needs, guiding me toward balance.  
  • Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID): The fragmented reality—switching perspectives, losing time—once felt like a betrayal of self. The ups are a rich inner world; the downs are disorientation. It’s now a multifaceted lens, offering unique insights into life’s mysteries. Do you want more insight to what it’s like living as a prism of beings with multiple personalities? Read about my experience here.

For years, these conditions controlled me, defining my identity as broken. I let trauma—abuse, loss, near-death during pregnancy—dictate my narrative. But DBT changed that. Through skills like mindfulness and radical acceptance, I’ve reframed my illnesses as allies. They’re not curses but strengths, allowing me to experience reality through a unique, multifaceted lens. This shift has deepened my energetic connection to others, filling me with empathy and revealing a bigger truth—that our struggles are part of our magic. 

Acknowledging the Ongoing Journey  

I want to be honest: I’m still a work in progress. Healing comes in waves, not a straight line. These mental illnesses can’t be cured—they’re forever part of me, ebbing and flowing with life’s tides. Some days, the anxiety spikes, or the dissociation takes hold, and I falter. But I’ve learned to ride those waves, using DBT to anchor myself. This acceptance doesn’t erase the struggle; it transforms it into a dance with my shadow, a rhythm of growth. It’s a reminder that healing is a lifelong spell, cast with patience and grace.

Expanding on Mental Illness This Month  

All month, I’ll expand on each of these mental illnesses—Bipolar II, BPD, OCD, BED, and DID—sharing my story and offering ways you can support yourself or loved ones. We’ll explore rituals, DBT skills, and magical practices to navigate these conditions, turning challenges into sources of power. Each week, I’ll dive into one illness, providing insights, coping strategies, and community discussions. Join me on this journey—your experiences are welcome, and together, we’ll weave a tapestry of healing.  

Final Thoughts  

As we embrace Mental Health Awareness Month, let’s honor our minds—their shadows and their light. This month is a cauldron of possibility, where awareness becomes action, and healing becomes magic. If you’re ready to dive deeper into this work, I invite you to join Cauldron Clarity, an exclusive weekly event inside my Patreon community, where we explore mental health, mysticism, and resilience with exclusive content. Sign up today to connect with our tribe. I’m also hosting the Healing Mother Wound Event on May 10, a virtual ritual to release generational pain, and the Embrace Your Shadow Self 6 month program starting June 7th, where we’ll transform our inner darkness into strength. Visit here for details and let’s walk this path together.

I am Kayreign, the Divine Oracle of the Gods and Keeper of Mysteries, a solitary grey magic practitioner with over 15 years of experience walking the sacred paths of the unseen. As a mystic and relentless seeker of all knowledge, I weave together the threads of every magical tradition—light and dark, ancient and modern—to uncover the universal truths that bind us to the cosmos. My mission is to restore and re-enchant magic in this realm, igniting its spark in every soul I encounter, and guiding you to embrace the full spectrum of your being.

My work is rooted in the power of duality, honoring the dance between shadow and light as equal partners in your spiritual journey. I hold space for you to explore all magic paths and practices, drawing from the vast tapestry of mystical wisdom to help you uncover your unique magic and sacred contracts. As the Divine Oracle of the Gods, I channel divine insights to illuminate your path; as the Keeper of Mysteries, I guide you into the depths of the unknown, where true transformation awaits.

When you work with me, you’ll learn to live in energetic balance, embracing your darkness as a source of power, not just a stepping stone to the light. I’ll hold up a mirror to reflect your authentic self—unmasked, raw, and whole—inviting you to face your past wounds, traumas, and hurts with courage. Together, we’ll alchemize every chapter of your story, dark and light, into a blazing internal flame that lights your way on even the coldest nights. Through this process, you’ll find alignment with your purpose, release what holds you back, and step fully into your power.

Come join us inside the sacred circle! The temple gates are open to unlock the mysteries of the unseen and ancient wisdom for our modern souls!

Explore my offerings—personalized shadow work sessions, womb healing, eBooks for self-guided growth, Tarot readings for divine guidance, and more—in my shop. Let’s journey together into the mysteries, where duality becomes your greatest ally, and magic becomes your birthright.

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Living with Multiple Personalities – A Journey of Strength and Struggle

At modgepodgemystic.com and inside the mystic mysteries, we weave magic into the everyday, embracing the sacred in all its forms. Today, I’m opening my heart to share a deeply personal reflection on living with multiple personalities, also known as Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID). This is not just a condition—it’s a way of being that carries profound strengths, unique perspectives, and, yes, real challenges. My hope is to shed light on what it’s like, to dispel fear, and to honor the beauty and complexity of this experience.

The Chameleon’s Gift: A Strength Like No Other

Living with multiple personalities is like being a chameleon, adapting to life’s demands in ways others might not. Each personality, or alter, brings its own lens, skills, and energy to the table. One might be bold and outspoken, navigating conflict with ease, while another is gentle and nurturing, offering comfort in quiet moments. This adaptability is a survival superpower. Where others might falter under pressure, we shift, drawing on the strengths of different alters to meet the moment. It’s a resilience born from necessity, honed by years of navigating a world that can feel overwhelming.

This multiplicity allows us to experience life from many facets, like a prism refracting light into a spectrum of colors. One alter might revel in the intellectual thrill of a debate, while another finds joy in the tactile magic of planting seeds in the earth, as we explored in our Persephone’s Renewal Rite inside the patreon. Each perspective enriches our understanding of the world, giving us a kaleidoscope of experiences that deepen our empathy and creativity. We don’t just live life—we live it in layers, tasting its complexity through different eyes.

The Shadows: Struggles of Memory and Misunderstanding

But this gift comes with shadows. One of the hardest struggles is memory. When alters switch, time can slip away, leaving gaps that feel like missing pages or entire chapters in a book. I might recall a conversation vividly as one alter, only to find another has no memory of it. I might recall an event or entire year as one altar. While another may keep those events and years all to themselves for protection. Some altars may never come forward again leaving everything they experienced as a mystery, like me having no memories before the age of 10. These gaps can make daily life a puzzle, piecing together what happened when and who was present. It’s disorienting, and it takes patience—both with myself and with those around me—to navigate.

Then there’s the ache to be understood. The moment someone hears “multiple personalities,” fear or judgment often creeps in, fueled by media portrayals of violence or chaos. But we’re not dangerous or “crazy.” We’re people, just like you, with more than one voice sharing the same body. Each alter is a part of me, not a threat. What I long for is curiosity, not fear—a willingness to meet each part of me as a unique person with their own story. I want to share that I’m not one-dimensional; I’m a chorus, and each voice has something to offer.

The Quiet Shifts: Not Always Dramatic

Discovering I had multiple personalities was its own journey. It wasn’t marked by dramatic shifts or cinematic moments. It stayed hidden for quite some time. For many of us, alters don’t announce themselves with fanfare. The changes can be subtle—a shift in tone, a different way of holding my body, or a sudden preference for a food I usually dislike. If you don’t spend every day with me, you might not even notice another alter has stepped forward. Figuring out this was happening took time, introspection, and often, the gentle observations of those closest to me. It’s like learning to read a map of your own soul, tracing the contours of each alter’s presence.

Not all of us have stark, obvious switches. Some alters blend seamlessly, coexisting in a quiet dance. This subtlety can make it harder to explain or validate our experience, especially when the world expects something more theatrical. But it’s real, and it’s ours.

Embracing the Magic of Multiplicity

Living with multiple personalities is a sacred journey. Each alter is a thread in the tapestry of who I am, and learning to honor them is an act of self-love. I’m not broken; I’m multifaceted, a living ritual of adaptation and survival.

To those reading this, I invite you to see us not as a mystery to fear, but as a community of souls within one body. Ask questions. Listen. Meet each alter with the same openness you’d offer a new friend. And if you’re walking this path yourself, know that your multiplicity is a strength—a chameleon’s gift, a prism’s light.

Six DBT Skills to Support Yourself if You Suspect You Have DID

If you’re beginning to suspect you might have DID, the journey of understanding yourself can feel both sacred and overwhelming. Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) offers practical tools to ground, regulate, and explore your inner world with compassion. These six DBT skills, infused with gentle magic can help you navigate this path. (Note: These are supportive practices, but a professional diagnosis and therapy are key for clarity and care.)

1.Mindfulness: Observe Without Judgment
Practice noticing your thoughts, feelings, or behaviors without labeling them as “weird” or “wrong.” If you sense a shift in your mood or perspective, pause and breathe, like you’re sitting by the Sauk River from our recent meditation. Ask, “What am I feeling? Who might be present?” Write it down to track patterns over time. This builds awareness of potential alters without fear.

2. Distress Tolerance: TIPP Skill
When dissociation or memory gaps feel intense, use the TIPP skill (Temperature, Intense exercise, Paced breathing, Progressive relaxation). Splash cold water on your face or hold an ice cube to ground yourself in the present, like connecting to Mother Earth’s energy. This can help you stay anchored during overwhelming moments.

3. Emotion Regulation: Check the Facts
If you feel confused or upset by a possible switch, pause to “check the facts.” Ask, “What triggered this feeling? Is it tied to a memory or a specific alter?” This helps you separate emotions from assumptions, creating space to understand your inner system without panic.

4. Interpersonal Effectiveness: DEAR MAN
Communicating with loved ones about your experiences can be hard. Use DEAR MAN (Describe, Express, Assert, Reinforce, Mindful, Appear confident, Negotiate) to share calmly. For example, “I’ve noticed I sometimes lose time or act differently. I’m exploring this and would love your support.” This fosters understanding without confrontation.

5. Wise Mind: Balance Emotion and Logic
When exploring DID, tap into your “wise mind” by blending emotion (how you feel) with reason (what you know). Journal questions like, “What do I sense about my inner parts? What do I need to learn?” This helps you approach your multiplicity with curiosity, like Elen of the Ways guiding a new path.

6. Self-Soothing: Create a Comfort Kit
Build a small kit with grounding items—a crystal, a scented oil like rosemary from our Ward of Reflection spell, or a soft fabric. When you feel disconnected, use these to soothe yourself, inviting all parts of you to feel safe.

These skills are like seeds planted in your soul’s soil—nurture them daily, and they’ll grow into tools for self-compassion and clarity. Always seek support from a therapist trained in dissociation to guide your journey.

Supporting Someone You Think May Have DID: Tips for Loved Ones


If you suspect someone close to you might be living with DID, your support can be a beacon on their path. Here are five tips, rooted in the open-hearted spirit of Cauldron Clarity, to help you connect with them compassionately and foster understanding.

1. Approach with Curiosity, Not Assumptions
Instead of assuming what their experience is like, ask gentle, open-ended questions like, “I’ve noticed you seem different sometimes—can you share what that’s like for you?” Avoid referencing media stereotypes about DID. Treat their experience as unique, like a ritual unfolding in its own time.

2. Be Patient with Memory Gaps
If they forget conversations or events, don’t take it personally. Memory gaps are common with DID. Offer gentle reminders without judgment, like, “We talked about this yesterday—want me to fill you in?” This builds trust and patience.

3. Learn Their System (If They Share)
If they’re open about their alters, take time to learn about each one’s preferences, triggers, or roles. You might say, “I’d love to know more about who I’m meeting today.” This shows respect for their multiplicity, like honoring different facets of Mother Earth’s energy.

4. Create a Safe, Predictable Environment
DID often stems from trauma, so consistency helps. Keep routines stable and communicate plans clearly to reduce stress. If they seem dissociated, offer grounding cues, like, “Let’s sit and feel the ground beneath us together,” echoing the grounding rituals we share.

5. Encourage Professional Support Without Pressure
Gently suggest seeking a therapist experienced in DID, framing it as self-care, not a fix. Say, “I’ve read that a dissociation specialist can help explore this—would you like me to help find one?” This supports their journey without pushing, like guiding a seed to sprout in its own time.

Your presence as a non-judgmental ally can be a powerful gift. Educate yourself through reputable resources (like the International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation) and keep showing up with love and openness.

Thank you for being part of the mystic mysteries community. For supporting my site and the different facets of us. Let’s keep weaving magic together, embracing all the facets of who we are. Share your thoughts below or join us on Patreon.com/TheMysticMysteries for more rituals and reflections.

With love and clarity
Kayreign, keeper of mysteries, divine oracle, and multifaceted being.

About me: I am Kayreign, the Divine Oracle of the Gods and Keeper of Mysteries, a solitary grey magic practitioner with over 15 years of experience walking the sacred paths of the unseen. As a mystic and relentless seeker of all knowledge, I weave together the threads of every magical tradition—light and dark, ancient and modern—to uncover the universal truths that bind us to the cosmos. My mission is to restore and re-enchant magic in this realm, igniting its spark in every soul I encounter, and guiding you to embrace the full spectrum of your being.

My work is rooted in the power of duality, honoring the dance between shadow and light as equal partners in your spiritual journey. I hold space for you to explore all magic paths and practices, drawing from the vast tapestry of mystical wisdom to help you uncover your unique magic and sacred contracts. As the Divine Oracle of the Gods, I channel divine insights to illuminate your path; as the Keeper of Mysteries, I guide you into the depths of the unknown, where true transformation awaits.

When you work with me, you’ll learn to live in energetic balance, embracing your darkness as a source of power, not just a stepping stone to the light. I’ll hold up a mirror to reflect your authentic self—unmasked, raw, and whole—inviting you to face your past wounds, traumas, and hurts with courage. Together, we’ll alchemize every chapter of your story, dark and light, into a blazing internal flame that lights your way on even the coldest nights. Through this process, you’ll find alignment with your purpose, release what holds you back, and step fully into your power.

Explore my offerings—personalized shadow work sessions, womb healing, eBooks for self-guided growth, Tarot readings for divine guidance, and more—in my shop. Let’s journey together into the mysteries, where duality becomes your greatest ally, and magic becomes your birthright.

Come join me for community, knowledge, and to restore the enchantment of magic in yourself and life today!

Don’t forget to head over to the shop today for eBooks, workshops, resources, and 1:1 services with me!