NAMI is happy to invite you to our first ever Spanish Public Education Event "Ask The Psychiatrist", with Dr. Dragatsi and Dr. Caraballo from the New York State Psychiatric Institute.
This event will be held in the Washington Heights community. Our goal is to spread NAMI’s message of hope and recovery. This forum will give participants an opportunity to have their questions answered, as well as obtain valuable information about our programs and other resources. Families and affected individuals need to know that they do not have to suffer in silence and that NAMI’s programs can help.
Please help us spread the word about this very important event.
The event is taking place on Thursday, November 14, from 6 pm to 8 pm at the Russ Berrie Building, Columbia University Medical Center, located at 1150 St. Nicholas Avenue. See flyer attached for more information.
It is a free event that is open to the community. To reserve a seat, people should contact the NAMI helpline at 212-684-3264.
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
City Voices New Youtube Channel!
City Voices has a new Youtube Channel! And this is our first video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y2rYkShllYE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y2rYkShllYE
Friday, August 2, 2013
Some great Resources in Mental Health in and around NYC
Hello City Voices Readers:
This is the CIO Will Jiang, MLS of New York City Voices letting you know about some exciting, upcoming events as well as a great newsletter archive of a great support group:
This is the CIO Will Jiang, MLS of New York City Voices letting you know about some exciting, upcoming events as well as a great newsletter archive of a great support group:
Mood Disorders Support Group Newsletter Archive (MDSG):
The Return of the third season of the "Healthy Minds" series is big news
I like also, the mention of the radio program in the namynycmetro newslettter.
"TUNE INTO TABOO TALK RADIO DURING
MINORITY MENTAL HEALTH AWARNESS MONTH"
Please show your support and tune in to listen at www.blogtalkradio.com/taboo- talk
- July 3: NAMI IOOV presenters: Christina Sparrock and Mrs. Arlene Day
- July 10: Famous Psychiatrist, Dr. Dolores Malaspina
- July 17: NAMI IOOV presenters: Lucy Chi and Crispin Jackson
- July 24: Famous Author/Mental Health Advocate, Deborah Cofer
- July 31: Famous Psychiatrist and Famous Author, Dr. Sidney Hankerson and Mental Health Advocate, Terrie Williams
If you like any of these resources please leave a comment below. Even if you don't like them, it would be interesting to see your comments, as they may help others.
Mental health issues effect everyone, and that includes New Yorkers
Mental health issues effect everyone, and that includes New Yorkers. For example: Latinos living in the US, women, 45+ers, and the unemployed are groups at a higher risk for developing clinical depression or anxiety disorders. But what can be done about this?
I worked in at Columbia Psychiatry/NYSPI as their patient librarian where I procured for our Spanish-speaking patients the best mental health information that was available in English and Spanish, because knowledge is power. I read a lot during my tenure at the patient library, and I wanted to share my knowledge, so I wrote nine books. The books I wrote, I wrote to combat the stigma of mental illness and to educate.
My titles deal with mental health issues and language acquisition. Two of my books received the honor of a recommendation by the APA President Jeffrey Lieberman and internationally known mental health advocate Elyn Saks J.D., PhD.
http://www.amazon.com/author/williamjiang
I worked in at Columbia Psychiatry/NYSPI as their patient librarian where I procured for our Spanish-speaking patients the best mental health information that was available in English and Spanish, because knowledge is power. I read a lot during my tenure at the patient library, and I wanted to share my knowledge, so I wrote nine books. The books I wrote, I wrote to combat the stigma of mental illness and to educate.
My titles deal with mental health issues and language acquisition. Two of my books received the honor of a recommendation by the APA President Jeffrey Lieberman and internationally known mental health advocate Elyn Saks J.D., PhD.
http://www.amazon.com/author/williamjiang
Monday, June 3, 2013
Needed: Your Advice for Psychiatrists, Therapists, and Allied Health Professionals
Needed: Your Advice for Psychiatrists, Therapists, and Allied Health ProfessionalsThe Center for Rehabilitation and Recovery is dedicating a section of its website to helping professionals better support peers or c/s/x in recovery. Please send observations, anecdotes, and insights for professionals to Elizabeth Saenger, PhD, at esaenger@coalitionny.org. Thanks.
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Are You Ready for the World of Work?
Are You Ready for the World of Work?
By Sharon Goldberg
Consider some things first
There is a lot of talk lately about
consumers getting off the disability track and going to work. Well,
it is a lot easier said than done. This is especially so if you
happen to have an emotional disability like I do. I feel as if I have
spent my entire life preparing for work and living my life through
work.
After I graduated from college, I found
myself ill-prepared for the business world. I needed skills. The type
of skills needed to succeed in the business world are as follows:
clerical skills be it math, computer, typing, word processing,
bookkeeping, accounting, etc. All skills not acquired in a liberal
arts college.
More important than the above skills is
the ability to deal with people in a personable, social manner. If
you are not a people-person, you will have many problems.
You must be flexible and able to adjust
your attitude to the politics of the office community. You must be
pleasant, non-combative, and able to take criticism without taking it
to heart.
You have to be able to combine all
these skills into a reliable, likeable, capable and workable employee
in order to succeed in the world of work.
What are prospective employers looking
for? From my own experience, I recall many an employer's want-ad.
“Must be a people-person. Must be diligent and detail-oriented.
Must have computer skills. Must be well organized. Must be able to
take direction. Must be a self-starter. Must be able to multitask.
Must be willing to work overtime.”
Some ideas I would suggest in order to
decide whether you are ready to work is to decide what you are good
at. Are you good with numbers? Do you like to write? Do you like
people? Are you artistic? Are you good with computers?
Do you need some type of
skills-training? Perhaps you need to sit down with a job counselor.
Maybe you need to take an aptitude test. Perhaps you want to start
with a volunteer job. Maybe you want to start working part-time.
All of these suggestions would have
helped me a great deal but I did none of them. To make it easier,
please do as I suggest.
Are you ready for the world of work?
Think long and hard about it before you jump in.
Editor's Note: Please don't be
frightened of the possibility of work after reading this article.
There are ways of getting your feet wet before you decide whether or
not to take the plunge. For instance, you can join a clubhouse and
participate in their temporary employment program and get paid for
doing work that is at or below your potential. Or, you can go to a
consumer-friendly employment program and talk to a working peer who
can counsel you about employment based on your needs. Two such
programs are Network Plus
(718)
797-2509
or Network Plus West (718) 377-8568. Tell them City Voices sent you
and receive a wink and a nod.
My Story by Emily
My
Story
By
Emily
Hope
you get something from it
I'm
twenty-six and I have social anxiety and agoraphobia. I've had it
since before I can remember, although I wasn't diagnosed until I was
twenty-one. Anxiety runs in my family.
I
was bullied as a child, though I can't remember a whole lot from my
childhood, except for various instances both positive and negative. I
don't remember a whole lot of the bullying, just specific feelings
and perceptions. I
strongly suspect that I was clinically depressed since I was twelve
or thirteen years old. I was depressed constantly, always fighting
back tears. Getting out of bed was a constant struggle. When I got
out of middle school, I improved, but not much. After I graduated
high school I started to get worse. I was kicked out of college for
missing so many classes, because I was too terrified to leave my
apartment.
I had suspected I had a mental illness since I was eleven. I was always terrified of ending up in a straightjacket, and would rather be dead than go to a place where such a thing could occur. I tried to hide my mental illness for as long as I could. I was teased a lot for being weak, although I still think of myself that way. I wanted to be strong, and so I would 'punish' myself by cutting my wrists, starving myself, etc.
Age thirteen was the worst time period, as I began to think about ending my life. I thought about when or where and how I would do it, what I would leave behind, and what I would write in my note. But I didn't really want to leave and searched for any reason to stay. Right about that time I started developing coping mechanisms. In the end, I decided to suffer through it because dying would hurt my parents.
My parents had sat me down and told me I really needed to see a psychologist. I was terrified. The people I mostly depended on were throwing me under the bus. But I was too tired to fight them. When I went to the psychologist, I could not have gotten a better one. She was friendly, comforting and classy. We even shared the same political beliefs. She made me feel a whole lot better about everything; it wasn't nearly as horrible as I feared it was going to be.
I was a bit gun-shy about going back to school because of what happened at MSU. I went to Drury for a while, which was great, but the same problem kept coming up. I got panic attacks every time I thought about going to class. So I went on sabbatical. I got a job at Prometric/Sylvan as a TCA, but I couldn't answer the phone so they had to let me go.
My coping mechanisms included horseback riding, my dog, Spider-Man, Harry Potter, and Digimon stories that exhibit humor and heroism make me feel much better. I've always been a horse nut. I feel very spiritually connected when I'm around horses. I still do those things now, but I also have other tools. I cover my hair with a tichel or head scarf, I employ lavender scents, meditate, pray, exercise, and of course, take my meds.
I had suspected I had a mental illness since I was eleven. I was always terrified of ending up in a straightjacket, and would rather be dead than go to a place where such a thing could occur. I tried to hide my mental illness for as long as I could. I was teased a lot for being weak, although I still think of myself that way. I wanted to be strong, and so I would 'punish' myself by cutting my wrists, starving myself, etc.
Age thirteen was the worst time period, as I began to think about ending my life. I thought about when or where and how I would do it, what I would leave behind, and what I would write in my note. But I didn't really want to leave and searched for any reason to stay. Right about that time I started developing coping mechanisms. In the end, I decided to suffer through it because dying would hurt my parents.
My parents had sat me down and told me I really needed to see a psychologist. I was terrified. The people I mostly depended on were throwing me under the bus. But I was too tired to fight them. When I went to the psychologist, I could not have gotten a better one. She was friendly, comforting and classy. We even shared the same political beliefs. She made me feel a whole lot better about everything; it wasn't nearly as horrible as I feared it was going to be.
I was a bit gun-shy about going back to school because of what happened at MSU. I went to Drury for a while, which was great, but the same problem kept coming up. I got panic attacks every time I thought about going to class. So I went on sabbatical. I got a job at Prometric/Sylvan as a TCA, but I couldn't answer the phone so they had to let me go.
My coping mechanisms included horseback riding, my dog, Spider-Man, Harry Potter, and Digimon stories that exhibit humor and heroism make me feel much better. I've always been a horse nut. I feel very spiritually connected when I'm around horses. I still do those things now, but I also have other tools. I cover my hair with a tichel or head scarf, I employ lavender scents, meditate, pray, exercise, and of course, take my meds.
My
religious path has been long, arduous, and conflicted. One reason I
was so adamant that I deserved my pain was I rationalized that God
wouldn't let this happen to me if I didn't deserve it. When I was
thirteen, I felt that God had abandoned me and so I began questioning
Christianity. Now I'm twenty-six, and a polytheist Pagan. But, I'm
much happier.
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