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January 2019

California’s new surgeon general changed the way we understand childhood trauma [qz.com]

When @Nadine Burke Harris, a pediatrician recently appointed to serve as California’s first ever surgeon general, talks about her work, she invariably brings up Diego. Diego was a 7-year-old patient who came to her clinic because he had stopped growing. He also had asthma, eczema, and behavior problems. When Harris sat down with Diego to discuss his medical history, she found out that he had been sexually assaulted as a 4-year-old. That’s when it all clicked for her. Years of...

Dancing in the Rain: On Becoming More Emotionally Resilient [psychcentral.com]

During the first half of my life, I tried to find THE solution to my depression and anxiety — a cure that would forever eradicate my symptoms. I was a gullible consumer of dogmatic books and advice promising Nirvana: by balancing my gut bacteria, by committing to a daily meditation practice, by taking fish oil and vitamin D, or by sweating out my toxins through hot yoga six times a week. While those are all pieces of my recovery program today, none of them alone provided the answer. After...

The Crushing Logistics of Raising a Family Paycheck to Paycheck [theatlantic.com]

Stephanie Land’s new memoir, Maid: Hard Work, Low Pay, and a Mother’s Will to Survive , is a bracing one: When Land was 28 and unexpectedly got pregnant, she threw out her plans to study creative writing at the University of Montana in favor of raising her child. But with little support from the father and no close relatives who could help out in any meaningful way, Land soon found herself in a homeless shelter in Washington State with her tiny daughter, Mia. In the years following, Land...

What is Possible When...

What is possible when we address #AdverseChildhoodExperiences #ACEs #Trauma... "...that my voices were a meaningful response to traumatic life events, particularly childhood events, and as such were not my enemies but a source of insight into solvable emotional problems," explains Eleanor Jane Longden in her Ted Talk, "This is My Story of Schizophrenia," linked below As introduced on Ted.com/talks/eleanor_longden, To all appearances, Eleanor Longden was just like every other student, heading...

Centracare Health and Twin Cities Public Television introduce a documentary series on childhood trauma and how these experiences impact health

CentraCare Health has partnered with Twin Cities Public Television (TPT) to raise awareness of childhood trauma and its effect on health. Research has shown that life experiences – especially during childhood when brains and bodies are developing rapidly – play a major role in overall health later in life. The health and social effects of these events, known as ACEs (Adverse Childhood Experiences), are featured in a series of five documentaries – much of which was filmed in St. Cloud and the...

Give judges more leeway to use incarceration alternatives for violent criminals [usatoday.com]

Incarceration in the United States peaked in 2008. Since then, many jurisdictions have expanded alternatives for low-level offenders, decriminalized some minor offenses, and reformed police practices. As a result, the nation’s incarceration rate has declined from 1,000 inmates per 100,000 adults to 830 inmates per 100,000 adults . The FIRST STEP Act, signed into law last year, is federal criminal justice reform that is designed to reduce sentences for nonviolent offenses — a sign that this...

Black, White & Blue [governing.com]

Ron Clewer couldn’t believe what he was hearing. A single mom, a black woman in her early 30s, had just told housing authority officials in Rockford, Ill., that she would kick her 15-year-old son out of her apartment if it meant she could keep the place for herself and her two younger children. It happened because private security guards hired by the housing agency had stopped the son, and, when they found he wasn’t carrying identification, searched him. They found the remains of a marijuana...

Trump administration to start sending asylum seekers to wait in Mexico [washingtonpost.com]

U.S. officials at the southern border will begin sending some asylum applicants back to Mexico on Friday as the Trump administration implements new measures preventing migrants from waiting in the United States while their cases are processed. The initiative, announced by the Department of Homeland Security on Thursday night, follows high-level talks between the two governments late last year as U.S. border officials struggled to contend with waves of Central American migrants fleeing...

How To Raise A Joyous, Spiritual Child

All children are born innately spiritual and loving. They are sponges and quickly absorb the nuances in their environment. As tiny, dependent beings they view their parents/caregivers as the living embodiment of God. Hence, we parents, play a very crucial role in our child’s spiritual development... For more on this important topic for enriching children's lives and avoiding ACE's in the home, See my blog post: How To Raise A Joyous, Spiritual Child .

A Convergence of Grief, Lack of Empathy, Sibling Conflict, Adoption, and Privilege

What could make people be able to empathize? People who have experienced very little loss in their lives can miss the ability to grasp the pain others live with every day. If they had tragedy happen in their lives my wish would be that from that tragedy they would henceforth be able to empathize with those they have dismissed throughout their privileged lives.

Connecting to Care Through Substance Use Disorder Peer Support: Aubree Rosenberg's story

Less than five years ago, Aubree Rosenberg had something few people in their 20s have: a living will. She was presented with the document by her father after being discharged from the hospital following a suicide attempt. Having spent years in and out of treatment facilities, battling multiple mental health diagnoses and addiction to alcohol, benzodiazepines, and opiates, Rosenberg, who is now 26 years old, describes the moment as having changed her life: “For my father to do that was a huge...

The Importance of Connection | Alissa R. Ackerman | TEDxCSULB (www.YouTube.com) & Commentary

Cissy's note: The TedTalk below is given by one of my good friends, Alissa. When she first told me about the restorative justice work she was doing with Dr. Jill Levenson, speaking with convicted of sexual offending, where she shared about her experiences as a survivor of sexual assault, (aka, without her "professional shield," as she says), I was concerned. Was it safe, wise, and helpful? What would the impact be on her? Part of me felt that it's not the place of survivors to help...

How gender disparities in salary add up over a lifetime [sciencedaily.com]

Around the country, women physician researchers make 7 to 8 percent less per year than men. At the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, efforts to eliminate such a gender disparity have cut the difference in salaries from 2.6 percent in 2005 to a statistically insignificant 1.9 percent in 2016. But even with that improvement and seemingly small pay gap, women faculty are likely to accumulate much less wealth over their lifetimes, Johns Hopkins researchers found. The researchers used...

A Federal Right to Education: Necessary Change to the Foundations of America’s Education System, or No Lawyer Left Behind? [the74million.org]

There isn’t currently a federal right to education. The Supreme Court made that much clear in the 1970s. But should there be? For one side of the debate Thursday at the American Enterprise Institute, guaranteeing a federal right to education is the only way to fix the sinking ship of inequitable American education. For opponents, it’s a “utopian abstraction” that will inevitably result in increased federal meddling in local decisions. The crux of the debate was the Supreme Court’s 1973...

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