Mental Illness: The War We Refuse to Name
A Biker’s Editorial on Trauma, Love, and “Mutual Individuation”©
July 2026
We met while each of us was walking through our own version of hell. And somehow… it changed everything.
Mental illness is not rare. It is not “out there.” It is not reserved for a broken few.
It is here…in our homes…in our relationships…in our colleagues, bosses, spouses, neighbors, churches, our children… in ourselves.
My father was diagnosed as Manic-Depressive and took his own life (RIP). My mother lived inside alcoholism and what I now understand as Borderline Personality Disorder. Like myself, the mother of my children carried wounds and unresolved traumas long before our paths ever crossed… wounds that sadly echoed through our marriage and, by all appearances, still weigh heavily beneath an otherwise functional exterior.
We live in a culture obsessed with labels…..narcissist, bipolar, borderline…..blame shifting as if diagnosis grants clarity and moral distance. It doesn’t. It often gives us permission not to look inward. But as Carl Jung warned, until we confront what lives beneath the surface, it will quietly shape everything we do.
Trauma is not rare…..it is common. And as explored in “The Body Keeps the Score”, trauma doesn’t just live in memory. It embeds itself in the body, the nervous system, and our patterns of reaction.
Mental illness, in many cases, is not madness. It is adaptation to pain. Two Worlds….Both Incomplete.
There are religious spaces that still reduce mental illness to moral failure, lack of faith, or even demonic influence. That view ignores decades of psychological, neurological, and scientific understanding and evidence. It abandons people in the name of righteousness. Clinical works like “I Hate You…Don’t Leave Me” and “Loving Someone with Borderline Personality Disorder” show clearly that conditions like BPD are rooted in emotional injury and dysregulation….not spiritual weakness.
But the secular world carries its own blind spot.
It dismisses the spiritual dimension entirely, as if human beings are nothing more than
chemistry and circuitry. Yet even thinkers like Dr. Jordan Peterson argue that without meaning…without something higher….people drift toward chaos. You cannot reduce a human being to biology alone. We are not just systems to be regulated. We are living, trying to make sense of suffering. The irony we avoid.
There is a quiet contradiction few want to talk about:
In many churches….where love, covenant, and commitment are preached…divorce rates often mirror those outside their walls. That is not an attack. It is a question. How do we preach love so fluently, yet struggle to live it under pressure? What a tragedy. How do we quote patience, kindness, and endurance… yet abandon relationships when they become inconvenient, complex, or painful?
Because if we actually truly lived this: “Love is patient, love is kind… it is not self-seeking… it keeps no record of wrongs…” (1 Corinthians 13:4–7) then many of our homes….and many of our wounds….might look very different. The failure is not in the teaching. It is in the application. In our ego, our selfishness, our pride, our fears.
There’s an old saying: “You never see a motorcycle parked in front of a therapist’s office.” I ride. I understand it. There’s a clarity on two wheels that’s hard to explain. The noise fades. The mind quiets. For a moment, everything feels aligned. But let’s be honest: That’s relief…not healing. Escape isn’t healing. The road can silence pain, but it doesn’t resolve it. And when the engine cuts, whatever was waiting… is still there.
Here’s the harder truth: Mental illness is not just individual….it’s collective. We all create environments that wound…..through neglect, abuse, instability, absence, unrealistic expectations. Then we act shocked when wounded people bleed on others or us. And we label the outcomes as if they appeared in isolation.
As explored in Dr. Bessel van der Kolk’s “The Body Keeps the Score”, society often prefers to imagine trauma, abuse, addiction, violence, and psychological suffering as distant problems belonging to other families, other neighborhoods, other lives.
But trauma is not far away. It is sitting at our dinner tables. Walking through our churches. Riding beside us. Working beside us. Quietly bleeding beneath polished smiles and functional lives. Looking at us in the mirror. And because pain is difficult to witness, many people spend their lives trying not to feel it at all.
Not because they are weak. But because unbearable pain will always demand an escape when healing feels impossible.
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We mock disorders. We weaponize diagnoses. We reduce people to categories. We declare them “heathens”, “narcissists”, “toxic,” etc…. And then we donate, as if charity replaces responsibility. That’s not compassion. That’s distance.
Modern culture tells us to chase happiness. But happiness without responsibility becomes damage. Relationships built on convenience….serial dating, emotional consumption….aren’t freedom. They’re instability disguised as choice. Dare I say a symptom of mental illness in and of itself? I know. I’ve been there.
As explored in “Healing as a Couple When You Both Have Trauma”, healing often happens in the tension of committed relationships…..where two imperfect people choose to stay, to learn, to regulate, and to grow. Love is not a feeling you wait for. It is a discipline you practice. Especially when it’s hard. C.S. Lewis warned that love can become inordinate when it is elevated above all else. Yet he also argued that even the most misguided loves may be less tragic than a life built around fearful self-protection and lovelessness. Perhaps the greater danger today is not loving too much, but risking too little.
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And Arlo…someone who has profoundly impacted my life has faced diagnoses most people would run from: Borderline Personality Disorder, Dissociative Identity Disorder, Autism Spectrum Disorder, eating disorders, self-harm, and suicide attempts. And yet the truth is this: She is not the anomaly. She is the mirror.
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I met Arlo long ago. And truthfully, we met while each of us was walking through our own version of hell. Her world can feel like an ocean. Unpredictable. Intense. Beautiful. Dangerous. Stormy. Peaceful. But what most people miss is this: So is mine. So is yours. Arlo dismantled many of my preconceived ideas without apology. Burned away parts of me that had become rigid, performative, controlling, self-righteous, and yes, hypocritically religious. She forced me to stop assigning easy labels to human suffering from safe distances. Caring for her has never been about fixing anything. It has been about understanding.
It has been about learning to see beauty where the world sees brokenness. Both choosing patience when it’s costly. Both offering presence when it’s uncomfortable. Both choosing selflessness when ego demands control.
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She has fought demons that most people will never understand. Yet she continues to love and hope with understanding and profound self-awareness … boldly, patiently, without safety nets, without guarantees, without apology.
Pain may wound the mind, but it does not automatically diminish the soul, the intellect, or the ability to love consciously. Diagnosis does not erase autonomy, wisdom, intelligence, or the capacity for profound self-awareness.
Arlo has more courage than the majority of us. Her parents have a lot to do with the miracles in her life, but she is the one who runs her ship and she makes no excuses.
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We have been misunderstood. Criticized. Vilified. Mocked. Alienated. Discarded. Judged. Ostracized. Reduced to narratives created by people observing from the outside. But pain has a way of stripping performance from people.
And somewhere in the middle of that chaos, something unexpected happened: I changed. Not because I avoided suffering… but because I walked directly through it with intention. There are people who study pain from a distance. And some people face it, confront it, survive it. The survivors often carry truths the experts forget.
Some people enter our lives not to be possessed, but to profoundly alter the architecture of who we are. And if that transformation was real, then its meaning does not disappear simply because life continues to move. Perhaps the rarest kind of love is not the kind that promises permanence or eternity, but the kind so honest and transformative that even time, silence, separation, or distance itself could never make it unreal.
Mental illness is not something “they” have. It is something we all participate in…..through how we raise, neglect, love, judge, and abandon one another. That is, inside and outside our walls of worship. And until we face that truth, we will continue to misunderstand the very people carrying the weight of it.
There is more pain in this world than we are willing to admit. And that pain is not asking for labels. It is asking for love. Not the easy kind. Not the performative kind. Not the self-righteous religious kind. But the kind that is patient. Disciplined. Honest. Costly. The kind that says “I love loving you” even when there is nothing left in it for us.
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Because whether you lean on science, faith, or both…Healing seems to happen most where those two meet…..in truth, and in love.
Night Train: www.facebook.com/floridanighttrain or IG: @FloridaNightTrain
Model: IG @ArlotheFaerie Photos: Susan Lynn Cooke @lynn.cooke2022
Sources Referenced:
- “The Body Keeps the Score” by Bessel Van Der Kolk
- “I Hate You…Don’t Leave Me” by Jerold J. Kreisman, MD and Hal Strauss
- “Loving Someone with Borderline Personality Disorder” by Shari Y. Manning PhD
- “Healing as a Couple When You Both Have Trauma” by Aimee Daramus, PsyD
- Carl Jung
- Jordan Peterson
- “The Four Loves” by CS Lewis
“Mutual Individuation” … a psychological and relational process in which two individuals, while maintaining their own identity and autonomy, become catalysts for one another’s healing, growth, and integration. Rooted in Jungian psychology, individuation refers to the lifelong confrontation and integration of the conscious and unconscious self … the refining of a human being into wholeness. Mutual individuation occurs when two wounded but self-aware people walk beside one another not as saviors, owners, or dependents, but as mirrors, challengers, witnesses, and companions through suffering, truth, and transformation.
In simpler terms: It is when love stops being possession…and becomes refinement. Not codependency. Not rescue. Not emotional consumption. But two imperfect souls entering the fire of life together… and somehow emerging more whole than they were before.
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About Florida Night Train
Florida Night Train is an independent writer, visual storyteller, and creative exploring themes of psychology, human struggle, transformation, motorcycles, love, trauma, and modern culture through editorial writing and cinematic imagery. Formerly a national finalist in the Johnny Depp’s 2026 People’s Artist competition.
Acknowledgments
Special thanks to Eric, Jade, and Trinity.
Special gratitude to Arlo…
For the courage to be seen, the willingness to walk through fire consciously, and for inspiring some of the deepest reflections ever written under Florida Night Train … not only through the visual collaboration, but through the honesty, courage, and profound self-awareness that helped shape the spirit of this piece.
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Attorney Fran Haasch and Rhett Jones for their unwavering support and loyalty.
Auri, Mirjana, Giuseppe, Candise, Heather, Laura who “hustles over everything”.
The staff of Epicurean Hotel in Tampa for always making personal reflection space.
Chris and Jacqueline at Parts of Paris Bistro in Safety Harbor, Florida.
Pier and the entire staff at Turbo Images for the incredible professional growth.
Attorney Gary Williams at The Law Firm for Family Law for his heart protecting the ones who truly need.
And my “Legendary Bastards” Ducati brothers… Domenico, Rich, Nick, Donnie, Matias, Danny, Elias, David, Alex, Cory, Mark, Chris, Trever, Jason C., Hans, Gianni, Josh, Kevin, Andrew, Joe, Craig, Charles, Brandon, and so many others…for the roads traveled, the conversations survived, and the loyalty that remains when life gets dark.
Last but certainly not least, deep gratitude to Dr. James M. Adams, PhD.
Night Train: www.facebook.com/floridanighttrain or IG: @FloridaNightTrain