There’s a strange thing that happens when you tell people you’re studying to be a marine engineer. Their eyes light up a little. They picture uniforms, big ships, foreign ports, good salaries, adventure. Nobody ever asks the follow-up question: what does it actually feel like to be out there, for months at a time, cut off from almost everyone you know?
I’m a first-year cadet, so I haven’t lived that reality yet. Everything I’m about to write comes from reading, from listening to seniors talk during informal moments, and from a slowly growing realisation that the glamorous version of this profession leaves out one of its most important parts. Nobody really talks about what a seafarer’s mind goes through. And the more I read about it, the more I felt like this was a topic worth writing about, even if I don’t have my own sea-time to draw from yet.
A Job Built on Isolation
Most professions don’t ask you to disappear from your own life for months at a stretch. A merchant navy contract typically runs anywhere from four to nine months, sometimes longer, and during that time, a seafarer is essentially living inside a floating workplace with the same twenty or so colleagues, day after day, with no way to simply walk away for a bit of space. There’s no popping out for a coffee with a friend. No dropping by your parents’ place on a bad day. No sitting quietly in a park to clear your head. The ocean, for all its scale, can feel remarkably small when it’s the only world you have access to.
Add to this the unpredictability of internet connectivity on many vessels, which, even today, can be patchy or limited depending on the ship and route. A missed birthday. A parent’s illness you find out about two days late. A relationship that quietly falls apart over WhatsApp messages sent hours apart because of time zones and bandwidth. These aren’t dramatic, headline-worthy events. They’re small, constant erosions, and I think that’s exactly why they’re so easy to overlook from the outside.
The Culture of Not Saying Anything
One thing that came up repeatedly in what I read, and even in the way some seniors spoke about it, almost as a joke, was this unspoken rule that you simply don’t talk about struggling. There’s a toughness that’s expected on board, and understandably so, because the job genuinely does demand resilience, quick thinking, and composure under pressure. But somewhere along the way, that expectation seems to have turned into something else: a culture where admitting you’re finding it hard feels like admitting weakness.
I don’t think anyone sets out to build that culture on purpose. It just happens, quietly, contract after contract, when nobody talks about the bad days and everybody assumes they’re the only one having them. And that silence is exactly what makes the problem worse. If nobody says it out loud, it becomes very easy to believe that everyone else is handling it fine, and you’re the only one who isn’t.
Numbers That Don’t Match the Silence
What surprised me most while researching this wasn’t that seafarer mental health is a real issue. It was how consistently studies and industry reports have flagged it, year after year, without it translating into the kind of conversation it deserves back on shore. Surveys conducted by maritime welfare organisations have repeatedly found that a notable share of seafarers report symptoms of depression, anxiety, or general low mood during their contracts, often tied directly to isolation, fatigue, and long stretches away from family. Fatigue in particular seems to compound everything else, since demanding watch schedules leave little room for proper rest, and exhaustion has a way of making every other problem feel heavier than it actually is.
What struck me is that this isn’t a hidden secret within the industry. Welfare charities, maritime unions, and even shipping companies themselves have acknowledged it publicly. And yet, somehow, it rarely comes up in the way we talk about this career to newcomers like me. We hear about pay scales, promotion timelines, and the excitement of visiting new countries, but almost nothing about the emotional weight of the job itself.
What’s Actually Changing, Slowly
To be fair, there does seem to be some movement in the right direction, even if it’s not fast enough. Some shipping companies have started introducing better internet access on board specifically to help crew stay connected with family, recognising that this alone can significantly ease the sense of isolation. Maritime welfare organisations run helplines and support services meant specifically for seafarers, though awareness of these resources still seems patchy at best. There’s also, slowly, more conversation happening around training officers to recognise early signs of distress in their crew, rather than treating it purely as a discipline or performance issue.
None of this fixes the fundamental nature of the job. The isolation, the distance from family, the unpredictable hours, these aren’t going away anytime soon. But acknowledging that the mental toll is real, and building small systems of support around that reality, feels like a meaningful start.
Why I Wanted to Write About This Instead
Honestly, I could have picked a more technical topic for this blog, something about engines or new-age tech, which is probably what most people expect from an engineering student. But this is the one that stayed with me after I first came across it. Maybe because I’m about to enter a profession that will, sooner or later, ask exactly this of me: to be away, to be composed, to keep functioning while missing everything familiar.
I don’t have answers yet. I haven’t lived through a long contract, haven’t felt that particular kind of distance from home that seniors describe. But I think the first step toward a healthier culture on board starts with people like me, still in classrooms, choosing to talk about this openly rather than treating it as something you only discover once you’re already out there, and by then, already expected to stay quiet about it.
If there’s one thing I’d want a reader to take away from this, it’s simple: strength at sea doesn’t have to mean silence. Sometimes it means saying, out loud, that a particular contract was hard. That’s not weakness. That might actually be the beginning of a better industry.

