The question "are boarding schools healthy" implies that people saying no or yes are allowed to both respond, and say their reasons. If we get just the "yes" side, or the "no" side, it won't be a true picture because there is no perfect yes or perfect no. I suppose the way the question is stated is also black and white. It implies that there is only a yes or no.
Perhaps it is better to say "No, AND Yes" Some people are sent to boarding schools like Fanda. Not too likely to be very healthy although there might be some little thing that is healthy, perhaps a friend made or something. Is the family healthy? The child might be coming to a decent boarding situation from an abusive family situation. In their case, boarding might contribute more to good mental health. There are other factors, the temperament of the child, the age, so many things. There are too many factors for a black and white yes or no.
I know someone who went to Mamou and was one of the many abused there. From him, Mamou and home were equal hell. Sad.
For myself, I had no sexual or physical abuse in the dorm. I experienced emotional and spiritual abuse at home and didn't with the dorm parents of my final two years. There were health building elements I got from them. At the same time, there are other aspects of dorming that diminished my mental health. Perhaps the better question is, what situation is healthier for this child at this time.
And..., in the context of this being a forum for people whose mental health was devastated by what happened to them..., perhaps there is a better focus for this discussion. It might be better to say, yes, this and this and this and this were unhealthy. Not just the obvious of the abuse that might not have happened if the parents were around and aware, but the 'little' things, the things the child 'learned' resulting from dorm living. For example, perhaps the now-adult has difficulty establishing close bonds with other people. That could result from the constant coming and going of people in your social community. Why make a good friend because next year they are going on furlough. When/if they come back you might be on furlough. Perhaps what we see as others trying to infringe on our independence is something they see as mutual support. What do they mean offering me help? Do they think I can't do this myself? I've been taking care of myself since I was 8 years old! Were these realities of dorming abusive? I don't think so. Were they unhealthy? Yeah, I think so.
Maybe a better question to discuss (considering the reason for the forum) is more along the line of "How did boarding school hurt you?" Some people coming here have already received some counseling and probably know some things that others haven't yet identified. Hearing/reading what another person says can perhaps help them recognize a lie that they also learned. Being abused as a child instills a lot of lies in the mind. A common one from any of the abuses; sexual, physical, emotional and spiritual is - "I am bad." These childhood learned lies are not easy to refute. Worse, they can amalgam into an insistent voice that says "you need to die, you need to die, you need to die"
If these words I just wrote triggered you, please hear me, THEY ARE LIES!!!
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