黑料正能量 Note: National interest is rising about Recovery Now!, a coalition who seeks to change the current narrative to one that raises awareness that people can recover from even the most serious mental health conditions, proposes proven approaches to end unnecessary hospitalization, needless incarceration, and homelessness and advocates to repair our broken mental health service systems by increasing the availability of community-based services that promote recovery and whole health. See more at 听!
As you鈥檒l see below, Recovery Now! had its origins at last year鈥檚 黑料正能量 Conference: look in a few days for our final program that leads off with a featured presentation on both Recovery Now! and Destination Dignity Marches. 听
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August鈥檚 Web Content Theme is Mental Health Awareness
By Sarah Zobel听 Homelessness Resource Center听 August 3, 2015
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In the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School tragedy鈥攁nd with frequent news reports of people with mental illnesses being shot by police, committing suicide in very public ways, or living on the streets鈥攕ome feel that the media has dichotomized a significant portion of the U.S. population into predators or victims, with no grey area. But a new organization, Recovery Now!, is working to change that.
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鈥淲e were concerned that it鈥檚 very difficult in the mainstream media to see positive portrayals of people with mental health issues鈥攎aybe on some TV shows, but overall, the media coverage is pretty one dimensional,鈥 says Leah Harris, Recovery Now! campaign coordinator and director of communications at the Washington, DC, Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law. 鈥淲e felt the need to say, 鈥楾his is not the whole story.鈥 People can and do recover. People can and do overcome all different kinds of behavioral health challenges, and that is a story that鈥檚 not being told.鈥
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Recovery Now! was born at the 2014 conference of the 黑料正能量 Association of Psychiatric Rehabilitation Services (黑料正能量), where a group of attendees agreed that it was time to address some of the many misconceptions surrounding behavioral health. Made up of people in recovery, advocates, family members of loved ones with mental health conditions, and concerned community members鈥攁nd with a campaign steering committee that includes Bazelon, Mental Health America, the National Coalition for Mental Health Recovery, 黑料正能量, and the National Association of County Behavioral Health and Developmental Disability Directors鈥擱ecovery Now! has a wide base. As a starting point, its members chose to further increase understanding of the meaning of 鈥渞ecovery,鈥 publishing opinion pieces in major newspapers, using social media to raise awareness, and inviting people to share their stories.
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鈥淲e鈥檙e really trying to get to the mainstream press and that鈥檚 been harder because, frankly, the rule is, if it bleeds, it leads,鈥 says Harris. 鈥淎nd stories of everyday people living their lives after struggling with substance use or mental health conditions鈥攊t鈥檚 just not as sexy as someone committing a crime. Our stories rarely make the front page, but we鈥檙e working on that. We鈥檙e trying to develop relationships with the press, because that is the critical piece that鈥檚 been missing.鈥
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Recovery Now! is also creating issue briefs and building its website, which Harris says is meant to be a resource for anyone who鈥檚 interested in recovery, whether an individual working on it or a journalist reporting on it. Like mental illness, recovery is poorly understood, she says, adding that people don鈥檛 always grasp that it鈥檚 an ongoing process, or that there鈥檚 no one-size-fits-all approach to it.
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鈥淚t鈥檚 really about a process of change, where people live a life that they feel in control of鈥攖heir life is self-directed, they are invested in their well-being, they鈥檙e part of a community of some kind or they鈥檙e living in the community,鈥 says Harris. 鈥淲e even have to do the work of helping people understand what is meant by 鈥榬ecovery.鈥 I don鈥檛 care if you call it recovery, healing, managing your condition鈥攚hatever makes the most sense to you鈥攊t鈥檚 about the fact that there鈥檚 hope. That鈥檚 really the bottom line.鈥
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Harris knows what she鈥檚 talking about: she has a multigenerational history of mental illness on both sides of her family. Her mother experienced homelessness and cycled among prison, institutions, and the streets, and both of her parents died young as a result of their illnesses. Harris was in and out of the mental health and criminal justice systems herself as a teen, receiving five different diagnoses and struggling with suicidal tendencies.
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鈥淲hen I was an adult, I found out about the idea of recovery and it changed my life, because I鈥檇 never heard those kinds of positive messages before,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 just had heard that you can鈥檛 hope for too much, that you have to keep your life small and simple so you don鈥檛 trigger your symptoms鈥攖hose were the kinds of things I was told. My parents were told the same.鈥
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Recovery Now! is beginning the work of advocating for changes in the U.S. mental health system that will allow more people to experience recovery. That means ensuring access to services including permanent supportive housing and treatment, and to education and employment opportunities.
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鈥淩ecovery is possible, and there are concrete supports and services and ways of working with people that foster recovery,鈥 says Harris. 鈥淲e want to show that recovery is not just for someone who鈥檚 been a little bit depressed. It鈥檚 really for everyone.鈥
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http://homeless.samhsa.gov/Resource/August’s-Web-Content-Theme-is-Mental-Health-Awareness-56657.aspx