HCBA Lawyer Magazine Vol. 28, No. 6 | Page 5

E D I T O R ’ S M E S S A G E E d C o m e y - L a w C l e r k t o U. S . B a n k r u p t c y Ju d g e M i c h a e l G. Wi l l i a m s o n destigmatizing depression Creating a better environment for talking about mental health … that’s where we need to get to. I ’ve always felt bad for Kevin Love. As NBA fans know, the five-time NBA All-Star power forward has been subject to trade rumors almost from the moment he was traded from the Minnesota Timberwolves to the Cleveland Cavaliers. Worse, more than once Love has been passive aggressively called out on social media by no less than LeBron James himself. Oh, and his teammates accused him of faking an illness so he didn’t have to play the second half of a game. That’s why I found the March 6, 2018 letter he penned to The Players’ Tribune so courageous. Just weeks before, DeMar DeRozan, himself a four-time NBA All-Star, tweeted — seemingly out of nowhere — that sometimes depression gets the best of him. In later interviews, DeRozan admitted he has suffered from depression since he was a young kid. And because of that, he learned an important lesson: Never make fun of somebody because you never know what that person is going through. In his letter, which came on the heels of DeRozan’s frank admission, Love revealed for the first time that he had suffered a panic attack during the first half of a game months before (the same one teammates accused him of faking an illness to get out of). He was startled because he’d never had a panic attack before. As Love tells the story, everything he thought about mental health changed that day. It was, in his words, “a wakeup moment.” And Love did something about it — something he once scoffed at. He saw a therapist. Much to Love’s surprise, the focus of the therapy wasn’t on basketball. It was on a range of other issues. One of those was Love’s difficulty dealing with the © Can Stock Photo / enterlinedesign SUMMER 2018 | HCBA LAWYER unexpected death of his Grandma Carol. His therapy sessions — which, in his words, were “awkward and hard” — made him see the power of saying things out loud. In sharing his experience, Love (echoing DeRozan’s comments) emphasized an often unspoken truth: “everyone is going through something that we can’t see.” And Love’s modest solution — for lack of a better word — is simple: “Creating a better environment for talking about mental health … that’s where we need to get to.” Mental health, of course, has been in the news lately with the unfortunate passing of Kate Spade and Anthony Bourdain. At the risk of hyperbole, depression has become an epidemic in this country. The problem is particularly acute in the legal profession. Fortunately, The Florida Bar recently created a Special Committee on Mental Health and Wellness of Florida Lawyers. The committee is evaluating ways The Florida Bar can help lawyers, such as by creating peer-counseling resources or other benefits that focus on exercise, diet, and stress reduction. But one of the committee’s chief functions is working to destigmatize mental illness in the legal community. I’m not remotely qualified to talk about what causes depression or how to treat it. But I do know that DeMar DeRozan and Kevin Love are right: everyone is going through something that we don’t see. And The Florida Bar’s new Mental Health and Wellness Center (www.floridabar.org/member/healthandwellness center/) is a great resource to help lawyers cope with those problems. But I also know that all the resources in the world won’t do any good if lawyers are afraid to ask for help. It is incumbent upon each of us to create a better environment for talking about mental health. 3