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Does VP Candidate Kamala Harris know about ACEs?  You bet!

[Ed. note: Elizabeth Prewitt wrote this article in August 2020. On this day, it's worth re-posting, to note that Kamala Harris is not only the first woman, the first Black woman, and the first South Asian woman elected Vice President, but also someone who's well versed in ACEs science.] Nadine Burke Harris, California’s Surgeon General, has a lot in common with the vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris—Jamaican heritage, surname, home state—and a commitment to addressing ACEs and toxic...

Advancing Parenting www.advancingparenting.org

Two more requests for sets of our parenting tips bumper stickers and two more apologies because we haven't the funds to print them. This is a colossal lost opportunity to proactively prevent the aces associated with unsupportive and harmful parenting. Just one bumper sticker will be read thousands of times for years to come. Parenting tips bumper stickers are a unique and powerful way to share parenting wisdom. Good morning, I would love to order a set of the parenting tips bumper stickers.

Amid the madness, we voted for you.

Amid the chaotic three-ring circus called a national election that may take days, weeks or months to conclude, we voted for the person best qualified to make the USA the best place to be a child. You. By voting, we don’t mean choosing who was on the ballet. Sure, we know how important our elected leaders are on the city, county, state and national levels are. In our work, devoted to ensuring that childhoods are safe from adverse childhood experiences, trauma and social adversity, our entire...

The Healing Place Podcast: Michael Broussard - Ask a Sex Abuse Survivor; Dr. Who; and Forgiveness

Childhood sexual abuse survivor Michael Broussard is a theatre artist, a speaker, and an activist in the survivor community. His organization Ask A Sex Abuse Survivor began life in 2014 as an interactive theatrical show about survival and healing. More recently Michael has broadened his mission to amplifying survivor voices worldwide.

PLAYING FOR KEEPS Festival Schedule + UCLA Health Equity Panel [kpjrfilms.co]

PLAYING FOR KEEPS The upside of downtime The latest documentary feature film from KPJR FILMS rolls into virtual festivals nationwide. Consider the official definition of play: engage in activity for enjoyment and recreation rather than a serious or practical purpose. And yet hard science and deep wisdom tell us that play is neither silly nor impractical. The desire to engage in enjoyable experiences for their own sake is hard-wired into the brains of all mammals, and humans are no exception.

Attachment & Trauma Network Announces Dr. Bessel van der Kolk as Special Guest Speaker at the 4th Annual Creating Trauma Sensitive Schools Conference

Dr. Bessel van der Kolk is an expert in the field of childhood trauma. His career, spanning nearly 40 years, has been spent dedicated to study and treatment of traumatic stress in civilian populations. Much of Dr. van der Kolk's research has focused on how trauma has a different impact at different stages of development, and that disruptions in care-giving systems have additional deleterious effects that need to be addressed for effective intervention. Read more about Dr. Bessel van der Kolk...

Why It’s Important to Identify as a “Trauma Survivor”

My clients aren’t running around town wearing “I’m a trauma survivor” t-shirts. Of course they aren’t. Who wants to announce that bad things happened to them? No one! And yet, unfortunately, many live with the aftereffects of trauma every day and don’t know it. Trauma is what happens to your nervous system after you’ve felt unsafe and scared, and powerless to escape or protect yourself. If a person can’t eventually resolve that sense of danger, that person’s nervous system is likely to...

Maternal Mental Health

Like many of you, I’m a bit out of sorts and somewhat disoriented right now. Our collective mental health is deteriorating during Covid-19. Recent stats report an increase from 20-40% of adults struggling with mental illness since the advent of the pandemic. Maternal mental health is particularly at risk. Helping children with distance learning, navigating exposure to the news, trying to keep life a bit “normal”, keeping family members fed and supplied, juggling career and income loss, all...

Childhood trauma: The kids are not alright, and part of the explanation may be linked to epigenetics [Genetic Literacy Project]

Kids are resilient. Kids bounce back. Tell that to Dave Brethauer , a performance coach in Chicago, who told Genetic Literacy Project that he spent the better part of his adult life “fighting to find” himself following the trauma he experienced as a child. “From the time I was five till 14 I had an abusive stepdad in my life,” he said. To cope, he found himself turning to alcohol, sex, overeating, and exercise addictions – anything to steer his mind away from the memories and pain that...

The Many Meanings of "Aging in Place" [housingmatters.urban.org]

By Ann Forsyth and Jennifer Molinsky, Housing Matters, November 4, 2020 It’s unclear where baby boomers, America’s largest generation, will choose to live as they age. Will they want to stay in their homes or move to assisted living facilities? Will they want to stay in the communities where they raised families or seek different types of communities and climates? Because of this age group’s size, their housing choices will have major implications for local housing markets. Already,...

How America Can Avoid Dual Cataclysms [newyorker.com]

By Paige Williams, The New Yorker, November 2, 2020 On January 13, 1919, as the third wave of the so-called Spanish-flu pandemic began, the governor of Ohio, James Cox, delivered his inaugural address. Propagandist bulletins from the U.S. Public Health Service had called the virus “a very contagious kind of ‘cold,’ ” but Cox used his speech to note the “appalling” number of fatalities—the United States ultimately lost some six hundred and seventy-five thousand people. The federal government...

Why COVID-19 Will Hit "Marjorie" Harder [cdc.gov]

From Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, October 8, 2020 If you’ve wondered why many more Black and Brown people get COVID-19 and die of it than other people in the United States, Leandris Liburd might tell you a story about someone you already know. Leandris might call her “Marjorie.” Marjorie could be that cashier you chat with or your grandfather’s favorite nursing aide in a long-term care center. Marjorie is Black, about 47, and despite following public health guidance as best...

Analysis: Is the Pandemic an Adverse Childhood Experience [calhealthreport.org]

By Christina Santiago, California Health Report, November 5, 2020 While I was on call in the pediatric emergency department of Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, three firefighters rolled in a gurney with little girl strapped in — but she didn’t look injured. Unlike most kids arriving in an ambulance, she had no obvious injuries, no cervical collar to support her neck, no signs of bleeding and she was alert. Tracy looked to be about 4 years old and was so tiny compared to the gurney. Her...

A New Hippocratic Oath Asks Doctors To Fight Racial Injustice And Misinformation [NPR]

First-year medical student Sean Sweat "didn't want to tiptoe around" issues of race when she sat down with 11 of her classmates to write a new version of the medical profession's venerable Hippocratic oath. "We start our medical journey amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, and a national civil rights movement reinvigorated by the killings of Breonna Taylor, George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery," begins the alternate version of the oath, rewritten for the class of 2024 at the University of Pittsburgh...

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