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Last chance to apply for a scholarship for the Creating a Resilient Community Conference!

Apply for a Scholarship In this new video PJI Director, Rachel Allen shares some exciting information regarding what you can expect at the upcoming Conference! Register for the Conference Conference Overview: The Peace and Justice Institute at Valencia College, the Early Learning Coalition of Orange County, the Creating a Resilient Community Network and Title Sponsor, Orlando Health, are excited to invite you to register for the Third Annual Creating a Resilient Community (CRC): From Trauma...

CALIFORNIA ACES ACADEMY - Session 8 with Robert Sege, MD, PhD | April 22

CALIFORNIA ACES ACADEMY LIVE WEBINAR with FREE CME/CE Educate, Inspire, Connect HOPE: Healthy Outcomes from Positive Experiences presented by Dr. Robert Sege Thursday, April 22, 2021 | 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm (PT) This interactive session will describe how ACEs screening can be enhanced by also considering HOPE: Healthy Outcomes from Positive Childhood Experiences. Children’s brains develop in response to their experiences, both adverse and beneficial. Just as adverse childhood experiences can...

Pioneers of a Northeast Tennessee Trauma Informed System of Care

(Becky Haas and Dr. Andi Clements) Since 2015, I’ve been a regular contributor in PACEs Connection providing updates on the growth of the Northeast Tennessee Trauma Informed System of Care with the hopes that these updates would serve to encourage others doing this work in their communities. By keeping the message simple, urgent and conveying an expectation of use by the hearers, thousands of cross sector professionals in Northeast Tennessee have received training resulting in many of them...

Spreading HOPE registration ends today (now including Continuing Education Accreditation)! [positiveexperience.org]

Chloe Yang, 4/5/21, positiveexperience.org/blog Registration for our HOPE Summit on April 9th closes TODAY at 5:00 PM ET! REGISTER TODAY! We are happy to announce that we will now be offering Social Work Continuing Education Accreditation (CEU, 4.5 hours of credit) for those who attend both the morning and afternoon portions of the Summit! You must attend both the morning and afternoon to receive credit. Those who have already signed up for both the morning and afternoon will receive more...

'Healing hikes': How one Oakland organization is making Black lives matter in nature [sfchronicle.com]

By Jessica Flores, San Francisco Chronicle, April 4, 2021 Hopeful. Alive. Connected. Joy. Those were all words used to describe how a group of Bay Area residents felt during a closing circle after kayaking in Richmond’s Marina Bay on a recent Saturday. Some attendees had kayaked before. For others, like Marisa Brown, it was their first time. The group was part of a local meetup hosted by Outdoor Afro , a national organization founded in Oakland that connects Black people to nature and...

Stress can be good for you, and here's why [cnn.com]

By Sandee LaMotte, CNN, April 1, 2021 How's it going in that boiling lobster pot of stress? The last year of living in a pandemic has stretched human coping skills so thin that experts fear many of us may soon snap, leaving people around the world coping with a mental health crisis of catastrophic proportions. In the United States alone, a recent analysis by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found reports of anxiety or depression climbed from 36% to 42% in the six months...

Man Previously Experiencing Homelessness Is the First To Live in a 3D-Printed Tiny Home [mymodernmet.com]

By Samantha Pires, My Modern Met, April 1, 2021 A new project by ICON combines two things that tend to interest architecture lovers: 3D-printed buildings and tiny living. The firm has created a 3D-printed tiny home and is doing some good for the community at the same time. Tim Shea, a 70-year-old man who has struggled with housing insecurity, is the first to benefit from this cost-effective construction technique. He is also the first person to live in a 3D-printed tiny home in the United...

Pediatric ACES assessment within a collaborative practice model: Implications for health equity. [doi.apa.org]

By Sabrina R. Liu, Katherine E. Grimes, Timothy B. Creedon, et al., American Psychological Association PsycNet, April 2, 2021 Abstract It is now well understood that exposure to Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) is negatively linked to health and well-being across the lifespan. In an effort to disrupt ACEs exposure and its effects, there is a nationwide movement to screen for ACEs in primary care, despite a lack of well-established guidelines for assessing and responding to risk within...

It's OK to be scared.

Today is an opportunity for you to live on your terms. You are the person in control of your life. No one but you is going to be the HERO of your story. It's OK to be scared. IT'S NOT OK TO QUIT ON YOURSELF. Think about all the times in your life that you have been terrified of something you knew would make your life better. Why is that? Why do we get so scared of the idea that we can live on our terms, be the hero, and do things we want to do because WE WANT TO DO THEM? For many of us, it's...

Peggy Green - Life After Child Loss; Surviving Suicide Loss; Grief Survival Program; Plus a Message from the Other Side

Peggy Green is a mother, teacher, survivor, speaker, and leader who has overcome the odds. She is an Amazon bestselling author who has experienced the loss of not just one child but two. Her first child by accident in 1991 and her son by suicide in 2018. Her mission is to make an impact and help others grieving the loss of their child.

"I'll be here again next week." - Because if one person stays, that will be enough.

When a child welcomes you into their life, honor that. Hold that in the highest regard because on that day you have not only become a friend, but a glimmer of hope. You represent a world where people don’t make empty promises, tell lies, or disappear without a warning. In the eyes of a child who is more familiar with grief than joy, you very well could be the key to the elusive stability they have always heard about, but never known.

Call for inputs from the Special Rapporteur on the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of association for his report to be presented at the 76th session of the General Assembly [ohchr.org]

From Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights, April 1, 2021 Background Climate change is today’s greatest threat to life on earth. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has unequivocally stated that in the absence of effective climate action, the world is on a pathway to temperature increases between 3°C to 5°C by 2100, which would simply devastate humanity’s future. The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet , has warned that “the human implications...

Cumulative risk of compromised physical, mental and social health in adulthood due to family conflict and financial strain during childhood: a retrospective analysis based on survey data representative of 19 European countries [gh.bmj.com]

By Ziggi Ivan Santini, Ai Koyanagi, Sarah Stewart-Brown, Bruce D. Perry, et al., BMJ Global Health, March 29, 2021 Abstract Background Childhood adversity (CA) has previously been linked to various health problems in adulthood. Investigations into the differential impact of distinct types of CA on a wide range of outcomes are scarce. This study aimed to assess the impact of self-reported childhood family conflict and/or financial strain on health and social functioning in adulthood among...

The Push to Vaccinate 20,000 Holocaust Survivors in New York [nytimes.com]

By Liam Stack, The New York Times, April 1, 2021 A year spent hiding at home from the coronavirus has given Anne Bertolino, 96, a lot of time to dwell on the past: the anti-Semitic abuse she suffered on the streets of Hamburg as a child; the grandparents who pushed for her and her sister to leave the country for their own safety; and her mother, a widow who was killed in Auschwitz. She has ached to return to a more normal life, when she socialized at a senior center instead of sitting in her...

Childhood Trauma Is Not a Mental Illness [madinamerica.com]

Laura's note: This story is not an easy read, but in the end it's about a triumph over "the system" and is a textbook example of how children often receive diagnoses, treatment, and punishment instead of help and intervention when they are being abused. I've often wondered how my own experience growing up would have diverged had I "acted out" instead of internalizing by way of "freeze" and "fawn" -- this account below is how. I'd bet there are thousands of others who can say the same. I was...

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