Cultural Frameworks and Mental Health in Practice offers a new way to understand mental health by examining the cultural scripts that shape how people experience stress, shame, self-criticism, help-seeking, compassion, recovery and wellbeing. Practical, compassionate and accessible, it helps readers recognise hidden cultural pressures and use cultural understanding to support change.Grounded primarily in cross-cultural psychology and drawing on cultural psychiatry, compassion science and clinically relevant psychoeducation, the book shows why wellbeing cannot be understood through individual factors alone. It introduces the “Cultural Wind” metaphor to explain how values, norms, emotional expectations and systems shape people’s inner lives. Chapters explore cultural scripts, different definitions of a good life, toxic productivity, stigma, fear of burdening others, over-adaptation, self-criticism, help-seeking and recovery. The book also highlights cultural strengths, including community care, ritual, belonging, humility, meaning and culturally varied forms of compassion. With key points, reflection questions, worksheets and practice notes, it turns cultural understanding into practical tools for everyday life and professional practice.Written in an accessible style, this book is essential reading for clinicians, counsellors, coaches, educators, helping professionals and interested general readers. It is also suitable for courses in culture, mental health and wellbeing, global mental health, counselling, health psychology, public health and related fields.