It begins with a confession. A young project manager shares on LinkedIn how they took a mental health day after “grappling with chronic burnout.” A few scrolls down, a junior marketing executive announces a keynote talk at a tech summit on “resilience in high-stress environments”—anchored by their lived experience with anxiety. Welcome to the new professional discourse, where vulnerability is no longer hidden but highlighted. Where stress is not a setback but a credential.
There’s a greater emphasis now on mental health with more talk of anxiety, depression, and how to manage stress, particularly among younger generations. But what is being done with the increase in mental health awareness by young professionals, and how are younger professionals using the increase of mental health awareness for their own benefits?
This shift is not without merit. Decades of stigma around mental illness are finally being dismantled. Celebrities, athletes, and influencers have cracked open long-silenced conversations, leading to policy changes, workplace reforms, and a broader cultural reckoning. According to a 2023 report from the American Psychological Association (APA), Gen Z adults are more likely than any other generation to report mental health struggles—and to seek help for them. This transparency has saved lives.
But what happens when authenticity morphs into performance? When mental health becomes not just a concern, but a brand?
Vulnerability as Social Capital
Among younger professionals—particularly in white-collar industries—the public discussion of mental health has become not only normalized, but incentivized. In online spaces like LinkedIn, Instagram, and even conference panels, personal narratives about burnout and anxiety are increasingly framed as leadership qualities. A junior consultant shares their journey through therapy and earns praise for “emotional intelligence.” A software engineer discusses their struggles with impostor syndrome and is featured in a workplace well-being initiative.
What we’re witnessing is not just advocacy, but a form of strategic vulnerability—a calculated embrace of personal struggle that aligns neatly with institutional narratives of resilience, authenticity, and wellness.
In some ways, this trend reflects progress. As researcher Brene Brown famously argued, vulnerability fosters connection. But as critics now point out, it can also foster curated personas that mask ambition as authenticity. When disclosures of mental illness become a form of currency—measured in likes, shares, and speaking invites—the line between honesty and branding blurs.
Therapy Speak and the New Professional Lexicon
One hallmark of this phenomenon is the rise of what journalist Molly Fischer has called “therapy-speak”—a clinical vocabulary that has migrated from the therapist’s couch into professional and social vernacular.
Terms like “trauma,” “boundary,” “toxic,” and “self-care” are now regularly invoked in performance reviews, Slack messages, and exit interviews. Managers describe employee feedback as “emotionally triggering.” Teams are “processing” after organizational changes. Entire HR departments are built around wellness programming that co-opts the language of psychological care.
While this shift might increase empathy, it also risks trivializing serious conditions. The more language becomes aestheticized, the less meaning it retains. When “burnout” is used to describe both a week of overtime and a full-scale depressive episode, its diagnostic precision fades.
Moreover, the normalization of therapy-speak creates a linguistic gatekeeping effect—those fluent in the idioms of mental wellness may appear more evolved, while others (especially from different cultural or class backgrounds) may be marginalized for expressing themselves differently.
Exploitation or Empowerment?
To be clear, the younger generations are not at fault for seeking space for their mental well-being. In fact, data confirms that their concerns are real. The CDC’s Youth Risk Behavior Survey reported record-high levels of depressive symptoms among young adults in 2022. The labor market, shaped by gig economies and digital surveillance, often leaves them overworked and underprotected.
But the question remains: where is the line between raising awareness and leveraging awareness?
Some critics argue that mental health has become a “soft skill” used to distinguish oneself in a competitive marketplace. A 2024 study by the Harvard Business Review noted that Gen Z professionals who publicly disclosed mental health struggles were perceived as more relatable and emotionally intelligent by hiring managers—regardless of whether those disclosures were relevant to job performance.
In other words, mental health has become performative capital.
The Marketization of Mental Health
The professionalization of personal struggle also serves industry interests. Corporations eager to appeal to younger workers now embrace “mental health authenticity” as part of their brand. Tech firms launch resilience bootcamps. Banks host employee story hours where junior analysts discuss therapy breakthroughs. Media platforms offer monetization tools for creators who build audiences around their mental health journeys.
In this context, commodifying vulnerability becomes a business model. Influencers post anxiety reels with product placements. Corporate campaigns sell self-care with merchandise and hashtags. And every wellness narrative—however personal—is potentially content.
The irony, of course, is that the original intent of mental health awareness was to destigmatize, not to monetize.
Consequences of Cynicism
So what’s the harm in all this? If people feel empowered, supported, and validated, why interrogate their motives?
Because authenticity is fragile. The more that mental health discourse is used for personal gain, the more skeptical the public becomes. This undermines legitimate advocacy efforts, especially for those with severe, less “marketable” conditions like schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or PTSD.
It also creates a chilling effect: when mental health becomes a branding tool, those unwilling or unable to share are left out of the narrative. A young Black employee from a lower-income background may hesitate to disclose their depression in a workplace dominated by polished vulnerability from wealthier peers.
And perhaps most damaging of all, performative awareness distracts from structural issues. Real mental health reform—affordable therapy, workplace accommodations, social safety nets—requires policy, not just storytelling.
A Call for Discernment
We should celebrate a culture that values mental health. We should welcome a workplace where burnout is acknowledged and rest is normalized. And we should continue encouraging younger generations to speak up, especially when silence leads to suffering.
But we must also develop critical media literacy about how and why these stories are told. Not all vulnerability is equal. Not all awareness is altruistic.
As society moves toward a more open dialogue on mental health, we need to balance empathy with accountability, story with structure, and performance with purpose. Otherwise, we risk replacing one form of silence with another—where speaking out becomes just another way to get ahead.