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The dangerous aesthetic of psych-ward TikTok Mental illness is becoming an accessory


January 7, 2025   6 mins

“Welcome to a day in the life of a psych-ward patient.” A TikTok creator called BPD Babe rolls out of a bed full of cuddly toys. Awaiting a consultation, she kicks her Crocs in the air with excitement, like a toddler. Later, a “wave of sadness” hits; the camera captures her bent double, weeping into a big yellow plushie. But it’s not all bad; she opens packages from fans, including a rabbit-ear headband which sends her into a fit of cartoonish, scrunched-nosed joy. She tells us how excited she is to launch her line of t-shirts, emblazoned with the phrase “BPD girl summer”. This is the frightening new aesthetic of mental illness.

The “grippy socks vacation”, so called after the non-slip socks given to shoeless psychiatric inpatients, has become a Gen Z fixation. Like other TikTok trends, this involves a clutch of symbols, visual shorthand for entry into the club of depression/anxiety/schizophrenia “girlies”. Among these is a prominent red mark on the forehead — a coveted accessory in pouty lip-sync videos which carry the hashtags “mhawareness” and “sectioned”. These headwounds have become an appalling hallmark of British psych-ward TikTok, which interestingly has not yet caught on Stateside. The result of head banging (the only self-harm possible in such wards), they speak to genuine torment — but also seem performatively conspicuous, shown off by groups of friends. It all sharply echoes the competitiveness of anorexia wards; a well-documented perversity of the teen-girl affliction is its “epidemic” nature, which sees inpatients egg each other on, with feeding tubes becoming a similar stigmata.

But this fresh fixation on mental health reflects a new social reality: in secure-care settings, young women are nine times more likely than young men to have a psychiatric diagnosis. Whereas men in psychiatric intensive care units (PICUs) are much more likely to be sectioned for aggression, substance use or psychosis, women are overrepresented in cases of self-harm and suicidality. In the UK, Covid provoked a disproportionate increase in women detained under Section 2 of the Mental Health Act, a rise of 48% in one NHS trust in Gloucestershire. Meanwhile, American girls are reporting record levels of sadness and suicidal thoughts. We can safely assume that the data supports a Western diagnosis larger than a mere TikTok trend — yet social media scaffolds the experiences of so many disturbed young women, who gain fans (and often financial rewards) for documenting their suffering.

What is particularly alarming about the TikTok psych-ward trend is its vibe of cossetted childishness. A common theme among “grippy socks” creators is the aesthetics of infantilism; grown women sit in teddy-bear-print onesies colouring in Mr Men books, surrounded by cuddly toys and watching cartoons as their “comfort shows”. Where the imagery of ED (eating-disorder) Twitter is all skeletal legscigarettes and accounts with “ugw” (ultimate goal weights) in the bios, psych-ward TikTok is equally faddish about teddy bears and felt-tip pens. Their places of confinement function as trend-pits: one fascinating TikTok of a unit in Italy shows a wall graffitied with the phrase “ACAB” showing, in the most uncharitable interpretation, how damningly fad-based a lot of this is, so that an imported American political curio joins the other more predictable adolescent causes of the inpatients (there is also an anarchy symbol and less probably, the Nietzschean howl “god is dead”). But at the cutting edge of mental-health content creation, in the UK and US, it’s less about raging against the machine than cleaving to an extended adolescence: healing by collecting sheets of shiny stickers.

This psych-ward aesthetic has now so utterly invaded feminine youth culture that “fashion girlies” are lip-syncing a quote from 1999’s Girl Interrupted: “Maybe I was just crazy, maybe it was the Sixties,” they murmur in the middle of a smokey-eye tutorial. The film, starring Winona Ryder and based on the bestselling 1993 memoir by Susanna Kaysen, is the iconographic homeland of the modern mental-health influencer. Ryder, admitted to an institution with a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder, meets Angelina Jolie’s character Lisa, a diagnosed sociopath and long-term inpatient — who also happens to be a cigarette-puffing model/rock chick. And we meet a host of characters including Janet the anorexic, Polly the pyromaniac, Georgina the pathological liar, and Daisy with OCD and sexual trauma.  The novel, which The Boston Globe claimed “threatened to replace Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar ‘as a must-read for young women”. It equivalenced middle-class femininity and “psychological risk”, and the subsequent Hollywood film became an unstoppable draw as a template of tortured “cool”.

In her Washington Post review from 1993, Diane Middlebrook described Kaysen’s memoir as a consummate “girl’s story” because of its “preoccupation with confinement in a pink-and-white-body”. The imagery of pink and white speaks to something broader that is still true of the fantasy of the psych ward today: that it is a locus of suspended adolescence, of somatic and social liminality, whose inhabitants cower between the twin poles of protected asexual girlhood and frenzied, freighted womanhood. In 1994’s Reviving Ophelia, the therapist Mary Pipher lamented a generation of “lovely and promising” girls falling prey to “depression, eating disorders, suicide attempts, and crushingly low self-esteem”; she cited a “developmental Bermuda Triangle” caused by a “girl-poisoning” culture which had traumatised the young women floating through her office with sexualisation and body complexes. Her namechecking of Hamlet’s tragic waif nails the critical character of the suffering of teenage girls: that it is spectacular. That is not to say that it is not real — anyone who has ever been a teenage girl will know exactly how real it is — but it has a peculiarly performative inflection which affects the way it is experienced by girls and misunderstood by baffled adults.

“What is particularly alarming about the TikTok psych-ward trend is its vibe of cossetted childishness.”

These TikTok psych-ward influencers, then, alien and faddish as they may seem, are simply the latest embodiment of an ancient tradition. The theorist Michele Aaron has studied the cinematic archetype of female mental suffering, anchoring her in another weapons-grade source of sad-girl iconography, Sofia Coppola’s 1999 The Virgin Suicides (the Air soundtrack of which, in no coincidence, plays in the background of those Girl, Interrupted TikTok videos above). This film depicts the deaths of five sisters as watched by the infatuated boys who live across the street; though the aesthetics of girlish delirium seem disconnected from men (that pink-and-whiteness, or Ophelia’s flower-strewn watery grave, suggest this is, if anything, about a toxic excess of femininity) it is important to remember the tension between the young woman and her male spectators, and the curiously gendered inflection this produces. What began with Giotto’s 14th-century feminisation of the suicidal vice of Despair, continues throughout the Renaissance with death-struck heroines such as Lucretia (Raphael) and Dido, Queen of Carthage (in Marlowe’s 1594 play, then Purcell’s gorgeous 1689 opera). The academic Heidi S. Kosonen says the staging of these tragic women, “cogitating their suicides while holding weapons in their hands, in a state of bodily sanctity and mental resolution”, affords them the status of “masculine heroism”. In her analysis, women die for love and men for glory; we must understand the atmosphere of feminine mental illness, if not the reality, as steeped in its associations with ancient tragedy. Only then can we attempt to process the weirdness of the present-day psych ward: in drawing on shared symbols — the forehead wound, the teddies, the Girl, Interrupted quotes — these teens can ennoble their suffering.

Emily Dickinson was the ultimate American shut-in poet and muse, clad in white and known, not unlike the plushie-hugging creators of today, for her strange, confected childishness. The feminist critics Gilbert and Gubar write of Dickinson that her shunning of adult, maternal and marital society meant the “price of her salvation was her agoraphobic imprisonment in her father’s household, along with a concomitant exclusion from the passionate drama of adult sexuality”. How hauntingly familiar in the context of the suspended adolescents of today, shut away from the world of employment and responsibility and left to shuffle around corridors in socks, broken by intervals of colouring-in.

Dickinson’s own curation of this purgatorial lifestyle might help explain the strange lure of PICU life: the isolated girl, a font of meaningful suffering, can shield herself from a cruel and intimidating public existence and spend her time instead creating doleful poems or, indeed, videos, about herself. Teen girls have always, always done this — and they always will, not understanding that this “traumatic passage” really is just that, not realising that stable, if less keenly felt, adulthood is probably just around the corner.

The modern mental-health martyr of social media is engaged in the same search for meaning as every tragic teenager before her; what’s changed is that for the first time these girls can communicate and compete, instantly and constantly. The resultant arms race to extreme and conspicuous suffering means that what might ultimately have amounted to a tricky couple of years threatens to become an extended stay in a secure unit, and an interrupted journey into adulthood.

In 2023, Susanna Kaysen gave a fascinating interview to The Cut to mark 30 years of her Girl, Interrupted; in it, she laments the “label soup” of modern psychiatric culture which, she says, can prevent “an acceptance of the variety of human emotions”. “Stowing people away” in wards is not the answer, she says — though the girls who quote her own memoir idealise just that. One senses that this is a writer who has watched her own story become cannibalised by a generation of fans, ravenous for identity and meaning. Her solution? “‘I have ADD, I have OCD, I’m depressed.’ Come on! You’re a teenager, This is what it’s like. It’s terrible. That much, I remember.”

There is a difference, though, between life-ruining psychological conditions and the transient unease of being a young woman; neither is easy, and both deserve sympathy. The danger is that teens building their fragile identities around the aesthetics of torment they see on TikTok undermines both the suffering of the gravely ill and the truth that all former teenagers learn in time: that sometimes, the only way out is through.


Poppy Sowerby is an UnHerd columnist

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Philip Hanna
Philip Hanna
2 days ago

I’m 42 and I’ve suffered from serious depression and drug addiction over the years. It was and still is something I’m not too comfortable talking about. It’s really weird to see young people essentially trying to one-up one another on who is the most clinically screwed up. I hope none of these ladies ever get locked up in a ward because there is nothing glamorous about it.

Thanks for the analysis as always Poppy…the world of social media is beyond confusing to me…and your pieces help me to catch a glimpse of the challenges that the newest generations of kids have to deal with.

Last edited 2 days ago by Philip Hanna
Andrew R
Andrew R
2 days ago

Another thoughful, well written article. Thank you.

David Morley
David Morley
19 hours ago
Reply to  Andrew R

Yes – with a clear message at the end.

I honestly don’t want to delve into this TikTok stuff myself, but am happy to read Poppys reports from the front line. My only question is: how common and representative is this stuff?

Daniel Lee
Daniel Lee
2 days ago

Hard to discount the fact that much of the therapy industry has morphed from beneficial healing, learning and acceptance to willful unending, enabling and encouragement of neurotic excess that feeds the appetite for drama of both the sufferer AND the so-called therapist.

Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
2 days ago

Those who.underestimate Poppy’s articles might never have expected to read a reference to Giotto!

David Morley
David Morley
1 day ago
Reply to  Lancashire Lad

I’m coming round to her writing, I have to say.

ralph bell
ralph bell
2 days ago

A very informative article about modern trends and behaviours.
Certainly lots of group navel gazing going on here, propbably due to too much time online/mobile doom scolling. If only they’d get out more!
Whilst the females are very active about communicating there feelings, its the males still who sadly continue to disproportionately take the drastic suicidal action….

Last edited 2 days ago by ralph bell
Josef Švejk
Josef Švejk
2 days ago

This performance has been brought to you by ta ran tarra The Royal College of Psychiatrists.

Anthony Roe
Anthony Roe
2 days ago
Reply to  Josef Švejk

As always, follow the money.

David Morley
David Morley
1 day ago

And to think, a couple of years ago I would have been in trouble for talking about “crazy girlfriends”. Now they’re on TikTok

David Morley
David Morley
1 day ago

Had a look at the TikTok video and didn’t really know what to make of it. To begin with I thought it might be fake or a parody. What runs through it is a bizarre form of attention seeking – it left me wondering if she was misdiagnosed and had NPD. I found it oddly disturbing. Would be interested in what others think. How common is this stuff.

Evan Heneghan
Evan Heneghan
1 day ago

Good article Poppy, and a sad insight into our times.

Paul Airey
Paul Airey
1 day ago

Just another boring winge from Popsicles. I pray for the Caliphate to put these useless females in their place.

David Morley
David Morley
1 day ago

her line of t-shirts, emblazoned with the phrase “BPD girl summer”

Thats actually pretty good!

Would these girls actually qualify as influencers, showing other girls the products you need to buy to be trendily, perhaps even ironically, mentally ill.

David Morley
David Morley
1 day ago

I’m not sure how new this difficulty of moving from girlhood to womanhood really is.

There have always been the girls who wear oversized sweaters til they get used to the idea of having breasts, the exaggerated (feigned?) anger at suddenly getting attention from men, the ones who continue to wear childish clothing as if they are still being dressed by mum, and of course the ones who duck femininity by adopting masculine dress styles while eschewing, even hating on, men.

Some grow out of it, some reach some kind of compromise, and some never really resolve it. And of course some girls sail through it no problem.

It was always very visible at university, where relaxed attitudes and dress codes allowed it to be indulged – social media has just made it more visible and acceptable.

Will D. Mann
Will D. Mann
1 day ago

The stigma of mental illness is still prevalent, even with younger generations its difficult to talk about. Any one who has been in or visited patients in a psychiatric ward will know they are far from being glamorous, people in psychosis neglect personal hygiene, have little interest in their appearance, or anything else other than what is going on in their own heads.
The experience of severe depression is simply awful

Tony Lee
Tony Lee
7 hours ago

Late catching up to read this article. Poppy Sowerby is an excellent writer and observer in my opinion. I’m 70 in March, with two divorces behind me, five ‘kids’ (ages 23 to 42), 17 years of counselling for manic depression (now more ‘sexily’ described as bipolar) and 6 years as a recovered alcoholic, during which time I’ve attended thousands of meetings and worked with maybe a hundred alcoholics. My point being that I’ve seen and heard just about everything about addiction and mental health trauma and self-obsession is never a cure. The dopamine-driven need for attention brought about by self-pity, resentment, self-loathing etc can only burn itself out, leaving the sufferer in even worse shape than before and returned to addiction or trauma or both. Society is acting as an enabler on a vast and growing scale, as illustrated in the article. The answer in my experience, is in finding the honesty, openness and willingness to confront our demons, and not in performing to an audience. Hopefully these troubled souls will find a solution.

Paul Airey
Paul Airey
1 day ago

Get rid of Poppy the winging adolescent.
Our future Islamic government will sort this nonsense in short order. Bring it on. Can’t happen too soon.