More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
?It Means They Hate You for Being Different.?
By Danny Gibbs, NAMI
Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Every student loves the pencils. At once a blatantly calculating scheme to trigger conversations that would not happen organically and an effective, albeit backhanded, form of bribery. With that said, it does successfully engage them into participation. Eager for the reward they try to define stigma as part of a plant or something wrong with the human eye.

A small girl in the back of the class blurts out, ?It means they hate you for being different.?
The eloquence of her estimation and the obvious experience behind it strikes me as if I were not prepared for it. I see myself in her desk long ago, thinking along similar lines but without the courage or opportunity to actually express them publically.

That is the power of NAMI Ending the Silence. We address an unspoken dynamic that exists in every facet of the high school experience. And yet no one acknowledges it. No one validates the feelings and questions relating to it. No one demonstrates the dire consequences of ignoring warning signs. And nobody equips these students with the essential tools in saving and improving the lives of those afflicted with severe mental illness.

NAMI Ending the Silence succeeds where so many other forms of outreach fail because of the genuine validity of our experience. Unlike many health teachers who work out of a book and have no personal context to draw on, we have the lived expertise acquired through years of struggle. We understand the hurt and anguish like no other and have earned the authority to portray hope as more than a concept. To us hope is a way of life that does not diminish our pain or give power to it.

What struck me about this young student?s eloquent and honest summation of stigma was not just its accuracy but also the courage to break through the bondage of discrimination through one singular voice. I could never have done this when I was in school. At that time, being different was my only identity and my existence was defined as an isolated intruder with nothing in common with anybody. So often my mind would cry out with hopeless fervor for somebody to care for me. Somebody who would understand me, teach me and remind me of my forgotten value.

That is what I am doing with every NAMI Ending the Silence presentation. I am screaming out to a stigmatized world that hope and inclusion are not the sole property of those our society defines as mentally healthy. Now I am receiving an answer. Now I am rallying the troops to stand up for issues once labeled as taboo or dangerous. When I relate stories of foiled suicide attempts I am restoring an all too often lost faith in the value of troubled lives. When I sound off about my accomplishments I help end the myth of our defective nature. And when I say there is hope for us to live a life of substance and value, I am drawing a line in the sand saying that no person should be hated because they are different.
 

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Ending the Silence of Mental Illness in High School
By Colleen Duewel, NAMI Director of Education
Wednesday, November 20, 2013

I am delighted to announce that NAMI has added NAMI Ending the Silence as a signature education program. NAMI Ending the Silence is an in-school presentation about mental health designed for high school students. Students can learn about mental illness directly from the family members and individuals living with mental illness themselves.

Although only a short, 50 minute presentation, NAMI Ending the Silence is effective at raising awareness, encouraging early identification and intervention and giving a human face to mental illness. By providing a realistic view of recovery and starting a dialog with the students, this program removes the fear and mystery that is often the result of the silence surrounding what can feel like a scary topic.

The goal of this program is to create a generation of students that are well-positioned to eradicate the stigma associated with mental illness through education, support and advocacy. In NAMI Ending the Silence, presenters are trained to ?share? as opposed to ?teach? the material. The tone set with this attitude is critical. Presenters talk to the students, not at them. They make eye contact with the individual students, chat with them upon entering the classroom and hang around after class is over to visit briefly. As a result, students realize that NAMI Ending the Silence presenters really care about them.

In the presentation, students learn about the signs and symptoms of mental illness, recovery and coping strategies, how to help friends, how to reduce stigma and other important topics that can help spread awareness and knowledge of mental illness.

In the coming months, we will be featuring personal perspectives from some of the presenters for the program on the NAMI Blog. One of those presenters is Danny Gibbs. In a blog for NAMI, Danny writes, "NAMI Ending the Silence succeeds where so many other forms of outreach fail because of the genuine validity of our experience. Unlike many health teachers who work out of a book and have no personal context to draw on, we have lived expertise acquired through years of struggle."

The experiences shared by presenters like Danny can help students learn about their own struggles. ?I believe I have had seasonal depression since seventh grade. I have been holding it in for a really long time,? wrote one of the students after attending NAMI Ending the Silence. ?After hearing the presentation I went home and told my mom. I told her I need help with this because it is not something I can fix myself; I have tried and tried? Now after the school day I have a meeting with a psychiatrist. I am really scared, but I know I am doing the right thing.?

As a parent, it?s incredibly moving to hear the compassion and understanding that some of the young men and women gain after attending NAMI Ending the Silence. As the program continues to grow I become ever more hopeful that this next generation will remove the stigma and make people feel it is ok to talk.

Ending the Silence of Mental Illness in High School


By Colleen Duewel, NAMI Director of Education
endingthesilence-1.jpg
I am delighted to announce that NAMI has added NAMI Ending the Silence as a signature education program. NAMI Ending the Silence is an in-school presentation about mental health designed for high school students. Students can learn about mental illness directly from the family members and individuals living with mental illness themselves.
Although only a short, 50 minute presentation, NAMI Ending the Silence is effective at raising awareness, encouraging early identification and intervention and giving a human face to mental illness. By providing a realistic view of recovery and starting a dialog with the students, this program removes the fear and mystery that is often the result of the silence surrounding what can feel like a scary topic.
The goal of this program is to create a generation of students that are well-positioned to eradicate the stigma associated with mental illness through education, support and advocacy. In NAMI Ending the Silence, presenters are trained to ?share? as opposed to ?teach? the material. The tone set with this attitude is critical. Presenters talk to the students, not at them. They make eye contact with the individual students, chat with them upon entering the classroom and hang around after class is over to visit briefly. As a result, students realize that NAMI Ending the Silence presenters really care about them.
In the presentation, students learn about the signs and symptoms of mental illness, recovery and coping strategies, how to help friends, how to reduce stigma and other important topics that can help spread awareness and knowledge of mental illness.
In the coming months, we will be featuring personal perspectives from some of the presenters for the program on the NAMI Blog. One of those presenters is Danny Gibbs. In a blog for NAMI, Danny writes, "NAMI Ending the Silence succeeds where so many other forms of outreach fail because of the genuine validity of our experience. Unlike many health teachers who work out of a book and have no personal context to draw on, we have lived expertise acquired through years of struggle."
The experiences shared by presenters like Danny can help students learn about their own struggles. ?I believe I have had seasonal depression since seventh grade. I have been holding it in for a really long time,? wrote one of the students after attending NAMI Ending the Silence. ?After hearing the presentation I went home and told my mom. I told her I need help with this because it is not something I can fix myself; I have tried and tried? Now after the school day I have a meeting with a psychiatrist. I am really scared, but I know I am doing the right thing.?
As a parent, it?s incredibly moving to hear the compassion and understanding that some of the young men and women gain after attending NAMI Ending the Silence. As the program continues to grow I become ever more hopeful that this next generation will remove the stigma and make people feel it is ok to talk.
 
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