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October 2021

[The Grand Finale] All new Talks on Trauma featuring 33+ amazing experts, celebrities & healers [wisdomoftrauma.com]

We are just a few days away from broadcasting our all-new 7-day event October 4‒10 , which includes the Talks on Trauma Series Part 2 , a showing of the Wisdom of Trauma Movie, daily meditations, integration sessions, and artistic performances. Dr. Gabor Maté will be in conversation with 33+ trauma experts, physicians, authors, visionaries and artists. The talks will be exploring how trauma relates to parenting, chronic pain, the medical paradigm, the climate crisis, politics, spirituality,...

The statue of a doctor who experimented on enslaved women still stands in Alabama. But now there’s also a monument to his victims. [washingtonpost.com]

By Linda Matchan, The Washington Post, October 2, 2021 Michelle Browder is a Black artist and activist who runs a civil rights tour company called More Than Tours — so named, she says, because "it's an experience." A sobering experience: stops include historical lynching sites, the city’s former slave market and the old Greyhound Bus Station where 21 young Freedom Riders were viciously beaten by an angry mob in 1961. Still, no historic site on the tour riles Browder as much as a statue on...

The Gates Foundation Avoids a Reckoning on Race and Power [thenation.com]

By Tim Schwab, The Nation, October 2, 2021 Over the last year, Doctors Without Borders has faced a major scandal, as more than 1,000 current and former employees signed on to a letter accusing the Nobel Peace Prize-winning humanitarian organization of institutional racism, citing a colonial mentality in how the group’s European managers view the developing world. Such an allegation would be serious in any field, but it deserves another level of scrutiny in the context of global health and...

Top global foundations mount effort to confront legacies of eugenics [devex.com]

By Stephanie Beasley, Devex, October 1, 2021 The heads of several U.S.-based philanthropic organizations say they are reckoning with their groups’ legacies of eugenics as they seek to help domestic and international grantees overcome systemic racism and other prejudices that could impact their projects. Ford Foundation President Darren Walker and John Palfrey, president at the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation , spoke about the philanthropy sector’s early involvement in the...

‘I Don’t Want to Hit My Children. I Don’t Want to Hit Anybody.’ [nytimes.com]

By Rachel Louise Snyder, The New York Times, October 1, 2021 When I was a young teenager, I was uncontrollable, rebellious. My father believed in corporal punishment, sanctioned by the evangelical church. My mother, who was Jewish, died of cancer when I was 8, and I believe my father’s response to his grief was to double down on his faith: to interpret the Bible literally, to make himself the ultimate authority in our home and to try to create the world he wanted through sheer force. He...

New program led by Dr. Ben Danielson to keep youth out of jail [newsroom.uw.edu]

By Susan Gregg, University of Washington Medicine, September 30, 2021 A program to tackle youth incarceration by promoting paths to opportunity for young people, especially among youth of color, is being formed by the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Washington School of Medicine. The program, Allies in Healthier Systems for Health & Abundance in Youth (AHSHAY), will be directed by Dr. Benjamin Danielson, a clinical professor of pediatrics at UW...

People, Parks, and Power: A National Initiative for Green Space, Health Equity, and Racial Justice [rwjf.org]

From Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, September 15, 2021 Purpose The People, Parks, and Power initiative comes at a critical moment. Imbalances in political and economic power and a legacy of racial discrimination in the conservation movement have excluded groups led by people of color from full participation in park and green space work or have tokenized their involvement. The P3 initiative is grounded in the premise that urban parks are essential community infrastructure that should serve...

The Back-to-School Nightmare: Five school nurses on parent protests, sick kids, and school shutdowns in the first month back in classrooms [thecut.com]

By Sangeeta Singh-Kurtz, The Cut, September 30, 2021 The toll the pandemic has taken on parents , teachers , and health-care workers has been well documented. But comparatively little has been said about how school nurses are handling the return to classrooms. Now they’re on the frontlines, trying to keep students safe as school districts insist on full reopenings, a decision the CDC began pushing in the spring when case numbers were low and vaccines made normal seem within reach. But now,...

Firearm Relinquishment Laws Associated With Substantial Reduction In Homicide of Pregnant and Postpartum Women [healthaffairs.org]

By Maeve E. Wallace, Dovile Vilda, Katherine P. Theall, and Charles Stoecker, HealthAffairs, September 22, 2021 Abstract Homicide is a leading cause of death among women who are pregnant and up to one year postpartum in the United States. Most incidents are perpetrated by an intimate partner with a firearm. Some states have implemented laws that prohibit firearm possession by perpetrators of domestic violence and, in some instances, include explicit statutory language mandating...

Canada set to pay billions to Indigenous children removed from their families, court rules [cnn.com]

By Nicole Chavez and Elizabeth Joseph, CNN World, September 30, 2021 Canada observed its first national holiday honoring victims and survivors of the country's residential school system. The statutory holiday came a day after a federal court upheld a 2016 ruling ordering the Canadian government to compensate Indigenous children who were placed into foster care. Thursday's National Day for Truth and Reconciliation and the court decision highlight the history of discrimination and harm toward...

Have You Ever Lost Your Cool?

Have you ever been snarky with a partner? Yelled at your kids? Lost it in rush hour traffic or when you couldn’t find your keys? Then you, my friend, have failed to self- regulate! No judgement here! Unfortunately, this is a skill we’ve never been taught and because of that...we see ourselves failing day in and day out. When we lose our cool, uncomfortable feelings come up and we start to feel shame, disconnection, guilt, or anger for our actions. We question ourselves and wonder who we...

Self-Harm and Complex PTSD

Self-harm, also known as self-injury, happens when a person becomes overwhelmed and deliberately hurts their own body. The injuries inflicted on oneself can be anywhere from minor cuts to severe injuries that are life-threatening.

The metachallenges of the metaverse [brookings.edu]

By Tom Wheeler, Brookings, September 30, 2021 F acebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg told listeners to his July 2021 quarterly earnings call that “I expect people will transition from seeing us as a social-media company to seeing us as a metaverse company.” A few weeks later, the business plan had morphed into a political plan and the Washington Post headlined , “How Facebook’s ‘metaverse’ became a political strategy in Washington.” “[T]he metaverse is already a full-on political push,”...

Tele-psychiatry a resounding success in 5-year trial [newsroom.uw.edu]

By Bobbi Nodell, University of Washington Medicine, August 25, 2021 John Nolan served in the U.S. Army and Marines and later worked in law enforcement and as a correctional officer. A career spent dealing with traumatic events led to post-traumatic stress disorder and insomnia. He felt like his life was spinning out of control. Nolan was greatly helped by telepsychiatry services in his town, 125 miles from Little Rock, Ark. He was invited to chair the community advisory board for the largest...

The myths about slavery that still hold America captive [cnn.com]

By John Blake, CNN, October 2, 2021 At first, Clint Smith had trouble making out the objects beside a white picket fence in the distance. Then he drew closer; what he saw made him shudder. Planted in a garden bed in front of the fence were the heads of 55 Black men impaled on metal rods, their eyes shut and jaws clenched in anguish. Smith, a journalist and a poet, was visiting the Whitney Plantation in Louisiana as part of his quest to understand the impact of slavery in America. He had...

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