Dr. Donna Marks Breaks The Silence On Mental Health Stigma During National Awareness Month
While awareness around mental health has grown in recent years, many people continue to suffer privately, avoiding help because of shame, guilt, fear, or denial. According to a 2025 Harris Poll conducted in partnership with the American Psychological Association, 84% of Americans believe mental illness still carries a stigma. Marks says those emotional barriers continue to prevent countless individuals from addressing issues such as anxiety, depression, grief, trauma, addiction, and emotional distress.
“So many people are living in silence because they are afraid of being judged,” says Marks.“There is still a great deal of shame attached to mental health struggles, and many people remain in denial because facing what keeps them stuck can feel overwhelming.”
Marks, who has spent decades helping individuals work through addiction, trauma, and emotional healing, says one of the most harmful misconceptions is the belief that asking for help is a sign of weakness.
“It is not easy to ask for help,” Marks explains.“For many people, it is one of the hardest things they will ever do. But speaking out and reaching for support is often the beginning of healing.”
Marks says many people feel they have to carry their struggles alone, often out of fear of how others may respond.
“People may feel afraid of how others will react,” says Marks.“But staying silent only deepens the pain. Healing begins when people feel safe enough to be honest about what they are going through.”
Marks also believes greater compassion and understanding are needed when discussing mental health, particularly as more people openly share their struggles online and in everyday life.
“We have to stop treating mental health challenges as something people should hide,” concludes Marks.“Everyone struggles at some point in life. There should never be shame in needing support, guidance, or professional help.”
“The first step is acknowledging that something is wrong,” Marks adds.“The next step is reaching out. That Moment of honesty can change everything. No one should have to suffer alone.”
About Dr. Donna Marks
Dr. Donna Marks is a licensed psychotherapist, addiction counselor, educator, speaker, and author based in Palm Beach with more than three decades of experience helping individuals navigate addiction recovery, trauma, emotional healing, and personal growth. Having worked with more than 6,000 clients throughout her career, Dr. Marks holds a Doctorate in Adult Education and is certified in addictions, Gestalt therapy, psychoanalysis, hypnosis, and sex therapy. She developed an award-winning addiction training program at Palm Beach Community College, co-owned an outpatient treatment center, and continues to consult with treatment facilities nationwide. Dr. Marks is the author of Exit the Maze, The Healing Moment, and Learn, Grow, Forgive.
To learn more about Marks and her work, visit Dr. Donna Marks ' official website
Dr. Donna Marks is available for interviews.
Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Comments
No comment