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Life After the Storm: Children Who Survived Katrina Offer Lessons [NYTimes.com]

The children upended by Hurricane Katrina have no psychological playbook for the youngsters displaced by Harvey, or those in the path of Irma, the hurricane spinning toward Florida. In the aftermath of Harvey, more than 160 public school districts and 30 charter schools have closed in the sprawling Houston metropolitan area. Families have scrambled to higher ground, some to other cities like Dallas or San Antonio, others into shelters. Thousands of children will have to adjust on the fly,...

Free Webinar - Teen Suicide and Trauma, PESI, Inc.

This webinar is offered from PESI, Inc. You need to register through an email to watch this free webinar. Free CE available. Good overview for those of you that haven't seen the controversial series (or for those like me that watched it and had a lot of mixed feelings about it and want to know more) . The psychologist focuses on how trauma permeates throughout the series for most characters. She identities important gaps in the show and talks about risk factors for teens, and new scary...

Resources to help children in the aftermath of a hurricane (childtrends.org)

The devastation caused by hurricanes can be overwhelming to anyone, but poses unique challenges for children. Compared to adults, children suffer more from exposure to disasters --including psychological, behavioral, and physical problems, as well as difficulties learning in school. While a nationally representative study found that 14 percent of children in the United States (ages 2-17 years) have experienced a disaster , most will never have direct experience. However, even those who hear...

New Research Finds Possible Correlation Between Drug Addiction, Child Neglect [Daily-Iowan.com]

A new study from the University of Iowa may have discovered one reason for child neglect in drug-addicted mothers. Lane Strathearn, a UI professor of pediatrics, and Assistant Professor Sohye Kim of the Baylor College of Medicine recently collaborated on a study that produced data on the correlation between drug use and the disassociation that drug-addicted mothers may feel about their children. The data, recently published online in the journal Human Brain Mapping, is on the second phase of...

Six Myths about Success That Can Hold You Back [GreaterGood.Berkeley.edu]

How do you use 20 pieces of spaghetti, some tape, and a piece of string to build the biggest tower you can that will support a single marshmallow? Designer Peter Skillman has given this challenge to everyone from Stanford students to Taiwanese engineers, and one group is the clear winner: kindergarteners. It turns out this Marshmallow Challenge is a good metaphor for life: The path to success isn’t all that straightforward (at least for adults). We often find ourselves getting stuck before...

The War on Medicaid Is Moving to the States [TalkPoverty.org]

In the early 1960s, as the Johnson administration worked to enact Medicare and Medicaid, then-actor Ronald Reagan traveled the country as a spokesman for the American Medical Association, warning of the danger the legislation posed to the nation. “Behind it will come other federal programs that will invade every area of freedom as we have known it in this country,” he said in one widely distributed speech. “Until one day … you and I are going to spend our sunset years telling our children...

Indian Country Today hiatus is a blow to nuanced coverage of indigenous peoples [CJR.org]

On September 4, Indian Country Today Media Network ceased publishing. Although the site’s existing content will remain available online through January 2018, the owners of ICTMN, the Oneida Nation of New York, has decided to call it quits. The self-described “leading source of news and information for contemporary Native cultures” is for sale. The Oneida Nation bought the Indian Country Today newspaper in 1998 from Tim Giago, a Lakota journalist from the Pine Ridge Reservation in South...

Update: Cleaning Up America’s ‘Dirty Secret’ in the Black Belt [BillMoyers.com]

For more than 15 years, Catherine Coleman Flowers has worked as an advocate in America’s Black Belt, where improper sewage treatment is putting people at risk of diseases usually found only in the developing world. Flowers has deep roots in the rich soil of Alabama. She grew up in a small community between Selma and Montgomery, in Lowndes County. The rural county, known as “Bloody Lowndes” during the civil rights era, had a long and violent history of whites retaliating against black...

The Rollback of Pro-Worker Policies Since Trump Took Office Is Staggering [TheNation.com]

A few months ago, President Donald Trump devoted his weekly address to the beleaguered American employee. “For too long, American workers were forgotten by their government—and I mean totally forgotten,” he said. “My administration has offered a new vision. The well-being of the American citizen and worker will be placed second to none.” No doubt he’ll come up with more pro-worker blather for Labor Day. Don’t listen. The only way Trump is helping the average employee is if you consider The...

How One Connection at CYW’s ACEs Conference Sparked Awareness into Action

Origins offers a number of training and consulting services. We developed The Basics as a half-day session to provide the foundation to support trauma-informed and resilience practices across sectors and industries. The session includes an overview of the Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study, the neurobiology of toxic stress, the impact of social and historical trauma, and the science of resilience. We have tested The Basics with two cross-sector audiences, in Los Angeles and Phoenix.

Houston Teachers Drafted to Become Trauma Counselors [dailybeast.com]

As Houston ’s school district of more than 200,000 students scrambles to repair damaged schools before classes begin next week, they must also plan for traumatized students to enter the classroom. The Houston Independent School District is in the process of working with counsellors, nurses and social workers to develop a “mental health recovery plan” for the district’s hardest hit schools, according to a statement from HISD. In the meantime, Mental Health America of Greater Houston and...

Fathers & ACEs: Tuesday, September 12th

What supports exist to "uplift" fathers who have survived abandonment, abuse or torture as children? Where can men go to discuss the joys, struggles and issues of being a father with ACEs? Where are the men who face hard, heavy and complicated realities to make life easier and lighter for all who come after? We found two of them and they will be the featured guests in the next Parenting with ACEs chat . Meet Charles Clayton Daniels, Jr. of Father's Uplift and "Trauma Dad" Byron Hamel. Both...

The Trauma That Is Initiating Me (wakeup-world.com)

My dear friends, I just survived one of the most intense ordeals of my life. A series of traumas - one after the other over the past two years - have threatened to level me in a way that is reminiscent of the Perfect Storm that led me to leave medicine ten years ago. That Perfect Storm fundamentally transformed my life, resulting in a quantum leap in my consciousness, my career, my relationships, my spiritual journey, and how I live my life. I can only assume this one will as well. But damn...

Music Video about Suicide with a message of Hope

From Kali Joy's Facebook page... September is National Suicide Prevention Month. This song I wrote is about suicide. But it is a song about hope. I believe that together we can raise awareness and help prevent suicide. Please share this video and encourage others to share it. If this subject has affected you in your life in any way, whether through a family member, friend, or something you have experienced, this is a chance to talk about it. And we need to talk about it. We all need to be...

You'll Never Be Famous - And That's O.K. [NYTimes.com]

Today’s college students desperately want to change the world, but too many think that living a meaningful life requires doing something extraordinary and attention-grabbing like becoming an Instagram celebrity, starting a wildly successful company or ending a humanitarian crisis. Having idealistic aspirations is, of course, part of being young. But thanks to social media, purpose and meaning have become conflated with glamour: Extraordinary lives look like the norm on the internet. Yet the...

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