Psychology, Mental Health, and Orientation to What Is Happening
- Brainz Magazine

- Jan 16
- 5 min read
Lance Kair is a licensed professional counselor, founder of Agency Matters Mental Health, and published philosopher integrating trauma-informed care with existential and postmodern insights. He brings depth, compassion, and decades of lived experience to the evolving landscape of mental health.
Psychology often mimics the precision of physics but struggles with the fluid nature of mental health. While psychology seeks to categorize and explain mental phenomena, mental health remains grounded in the real-time processes that unfold regardless of theory. This article delves into the distinction, highlighting how mental health as a field speaks to what is happening in practice, independent of fixed theoretical frameworks.

Psychology’s physics envy
Psychology has long attempted to function like physics by identifying underlying mechanisms, such as brain chemistry, attachment styles, disorders, and theories of mind, meant to explain mental life. In doing so, it implicitly adopts physics as a model: a discipline that discovers stable structures beneath surface phenomena, structures presumed to operate independently of interpretation or belief.
The difficulty is not that psychology seeks structure, but that it does not, in practice, operate this way. Unlike physics, psychological theories do not settle into stable agreement. They are continually debated, revised, and replaced, and none function independently of the interpretive commitments that sustain them. More importantly, psychology lacks an agreed-upon basis for what is being identified as its object of analysis. The grounds of explanation themselves remain in question. As a result, psychological theories must not only account for phenomena but also argue for the terms under which those phenomena are to be understood. Physics does not behave this way.
The discipline that runs on frameworks
For this reason, psychology functions less like a hard science and more like a belief-structured discipline. This is not an accusation of error, nor a claim that psychology is merely subjective or arbitrary. Belief-structured systems, including philosophy and religion, can be coherent, rigorous, and practically effective. The distinction here is structural: psychology organizes understanding through interpretive frameworks rather than through belief-independent laws.
Mental health is not psychology’s leftover category
Mental health, by contrast, is less a derivative outcome of psychology and less a vague residual category that emerges once theory has done its work. In many institutional and everyday contexts, public policy, funding structures, or common talk about “improving mental health,” it is indeed treated derivatively. But as it functions in practice, mental health is itself a theory that speaks to what is already happening. It does not require subjective verification or argumentative defense, because it brings into view patterns and processes already in play. To articulate mental health in this way is not to impose a new framework, but to make explicit what has been implicitly organizing practice all along.
What clinicians are already doing
In practice, clinicians already operate with this distinction, whether or not it is explicitly acknowledged. Psychological explanations, neurobiological, developmental, diagnostic, and relational are used to orient engagement with situations as they present themselves. These explanations are not detached from what is occurring, nor do they compete with it. They function as ways of organizing attention. Mental health does not begin from a preferred framework, it begins with the situation itself. Psychological theory enters afterward, as a means of rendering that situation intelligible.
When theory starts talking to itself
Psychology does attempt to regulate itself through feedback, revising its models in response to what is encountered in practice. In this sense, it operates cybernetically. The difficulty is that there is no shared agreement about what this feedback is fundamentally reckoning. When psychology attempts to connect brain processes, mental constructs, and situations, the connective structure itself becomes another theoretical object. Instead of settling description, the method generates further debate about how description should proceed.
This produces a characteristic dynamic within the field. Rather than beginning with what is happening and allowing theory to remain responsive to it, theoretical frameworks increasingly function as organizing authorities. What began as interpretive tools risks becoming implicit standards. The method turns inward and begins to refer primarily to itself.
Baking is not the same thing as food
A metaphor helps clarify this distinction. Psychology is like baking. It treats human life as a particular kind of thing and develops increasingly refined diagnostic recipes, categories, theories of intervention, and explanatory models. Within baking, this makes sense. Recipes can be compared, adjusted, taught, and reliably reproduced. Baking works well when what is being made is, in fact, a cake.
Mental health, however, is like food in general. It includes baking, but it is not limited to it. Not everything people eat is a cake, and not everything that sustains or organizes life fits a baking recipe. There are many kinds of food, many ways of preparing it, and many ways food functions across situations. Psychological theories retain their usefulness within this broader domain, but they do not define it. Problems arise only when baking is treated as the definition of food itself, rather than as one mode of engagement within a much larger field.
What keeps happening, whether we name it or not
This is where the comparison to physics becomes instructive. Mental health refers to processes that occur regardless of how they are specifically named or categorized. Naming can matter to the people involved, shaping how a situation is understood and engaged, but it does not organize mental health in the same way across contexts. Families reorganize. Patterns of strain and adaptation emerge. Situations change. These developments are not generated by a theory, even though theories may describe them. Mental health remains oriented toward what is occurring as it unfolds, while different ways of naming and explaining those processes come and go.
Why the field never quite settles
This also explains a familiar tension in the field. Practitioners widely agree that no single theory can govern all situations and that rigid prescriptions are neither realistic nor ethical. Yet psychology, as a discipline, continues to debate its own foundations and categories. This work is not misplaced, but it belongs to a different register than the task of reckoning what is happening in concrete situations.
Mental health philosophy, stripped down
Mental health philosophy, as used here, does not aim to resolve those debates or replace psychological theory. Its role is descriptive: to clarify how the field already operates and to distinguish between interpretive frameworks and the situations they are used to understand.
Psychology provides structured ways of making sense of what is happening. Mental health names the field in which what is happening is already underway. Keeping this distinction clear does not diminish psychology, it situates it.
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Read more from Lance Allan Kair
Lance Allan Kair, Licensed Professional Counselor
Lance Kair is licensed professional counselor and founder of Agency Matters Mental Health, he blends trauma-informed therapy with deep philosophical insight drawn from thinkers like Zizek Badiou, and Kierkegaard. Formerly immersed in 1990s psychedelic and rave culture, his lived experience with addiction, grief, and harm reduction drives his radically compassionate care. He's the author of multiple philosophical works, including The Moment of Decisive Significance, and is a leading voice in the emerging field of Mental Health Philosophy.










