“I always knew I was different, but I’d never understood that it could make me feel alienated.”
While the United States still has a lot of work to do in destigmatizing mental health, the Middle East is much further behind us. This week I spoke with Forbes 30 under 30 Social Entrepreneur, speaker, podcaster, the founder of EMPWR MAG, and The Middle East’s Mental Health Ambassador, Ally Salama. Ally has made it his life’s mission to destigmatize mental health in the Middle East, but in addition to the cultural stigma, there simply is not enough awareness.
"We fear what we don't understand, you know. Mental health in the states, you have hundreds of millions of dollars in media and advertising being spent on awareness. Because they know, the West really knows the price, the burden that mental health has on economies." - Ally Salama (3:04)
Ally came from a prestigious family in Egypt, and accomplishments were very important in his upbringing. Because of his father’s job, Ally had lived in several different countries before even turning 18. Despite having great success in swimming, singing, and academics as a adolescent, he never really felt fulfilled and didn’t understand why.
“I always knew I was different, but I’d never understood that it could make me feel alienated.” - Ally Salama (18:06)
Through all of Ally’s ups and downs in life, his determination and upbringing taught him a lot about success and how to never stop learning, improving, and growing.
“Action breeds confidence, and then confidence, if you don’t really work on it, you lose it. And that comfort makes you less confident because that comfort comes from consistent action from you being always at that cusp of your comfort zone.” - Ally Salama (11:10)