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Can't Remember Much Of Your Childhood? A Therapist Shares Why [huffingtonpost.co.uk]

By Amy Glover, Photo: Artmarie/Getty Images, Huffington Post, May 7, 2023 Ever experience hearing someone talk about their sixth birthday or the Christmas they had when they were eight and think, wait – how can you remember that? Some of us have a better recollection of our formative years than others. This can be because some of us “lose” those early recollections to sort of free up space – “Having few childhood memories is common. As time passes, your brain has to free up space for new...

Five key takeaways from the Supreme Court’s anti-LGBTQ decision [lgbtqnation.com]

A crucifix in front of the U.S. Supreme Court. Photo: Shutterstock By John Gallagher, LGBTQ Nation, July 5, 2023 The Supreme Court’s 6-3 decision to allow a homophobic website designer to discriminate against gay couples because it violated her faith was hardly a surprise. The conservative majority on the Court has made it loud and clear that its role is to fulfill the fantasies of the right. It may draw the line at some of the wilder dreams, like the idea that legislatures can overturn...

How climate change harms children’s health [yaleclimateconnections.org]

Visitors at Summit One Vanderbilt look out at a smoke-shrouded Manhattan as wildfires in Canada continue to blanket the city on June 7, 2023 in New York City. (Photo by David Dee Delgado/Getty Images) By Neha Pathak, Yale Climate Connections, June 29, 2023 The fondest times of my childhood were the annual burst of flowers each spring. Not so for my kids, who sniffle and sneeze their way through pollen season. With average temperatures growing warmer, trees here in Atlanta are flowering...

10-Minute Trauma Training

One Reason Kids Today Are So Defiant is that they are experts at pushing their parent's buttons. Here is the Top 10 List. Please join me live tomorrow, July 6 at 12 Noon EST for: 10-minute Family Trauma Tools to see how Button Pushing works to enable kids to be defiant as well as other reasons. Just click on this Zoom Link: https://gopll.zoom.us/j/82520409977?pwd=dnNUN25KSmpESThCKzV4VFAwRytFdz09

A Special Invitation for the PACEs Community: La Maida Project Experiential Workshop Series

La Maida Project (LMP) is hosting three upcoming experiential workshops aimed to create a trauma-responsive and ACEs-aware culture in all the communities and settings where you engage. We are inviting the PACEs community to sign up free of charge using the promo code PACEsTogether . LMP is working to address the mental health crisis by healing our connection to self, community, purpose, and the natural world. Our experiential education workshops emphasize the participant's felt experience in...

Community gun violence: How to reduce it?  Join Encore episode of History. Culture.Trauma. with educator and social justice proponent Timothy Hughes Thursday, July 6 at 1 p.m. PT; 4 p.m. ET

Graphic from a May 8, 2023 report on ABC News. While news of mass shootings, such as the July 3 shooting deaths of five men in Philadelphia, mirror the rash of shootings in 2022 and dominate media feeds, community gun violence takes more lives and impacts more people in the United States. This week the PACEs Connection podcast History. Culture. Trauma, again focuses on gun violence in America, with a conversation departing from the focus on mass shootings, to instead look at community...

America Had More Than One Founding and More Than One Set of Founders (nytimes.com)

The cabin of John and Priscilla Hemings, who were enslaved at Monticello, Thomas Jefferson’s plantation in Charlottesville, Va. Credit... Damon Winter/The New York Times By James Bouie, opinion columnist, The New York Times, Tuesday, July 4, 2023 — Read today, the Declaration of Independence is a freedom document. It stands for absolute human equality and represents the highest ideals of the American republic. On July 4, we celebrate it as much as we celebrate independence itself. But as...

Resilience: An Essential Ingredient in Building Health and Well-being

The Trauma Informed Health Care Education and Research (TIHCER) Collaborative presents: L aurie Leitch, Ph.D. has been a practicing psychotherapist, clinical trainer, consultant, social entrepreneur, and researcher for over 25 years. She is Director of Threshold GlobalWorks ( www.thresholdglobalworks.com ), dedicated to cultivating and amplifying resilience in individuals and within communities, organizations, and systems. Committed to promoting workplaces and communities in which principled...

Screening for Depression and Suicide Risk in Adults, US Preventive Services Task Force Recommendation Statement

The US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) uses the most strict criteria and expansive view of impact and outcomes to make recommendations. They just published: "Screening for Depression and Suicide Risk in Adults, US Preventive Services Task Force Recommendation Statement " June 20, 2023 JAMA . 2023;329(23):2057-2067. doi:10.1001/jama.2023.9297 For asymptomatic adults 19 years or older, including pregnant and postpartum persons (Older adults are defined as those 65 years or older.) The...

Whose fault is obesity? Most of the blame rests with one culprit. [washingtonpost.com]

By Tamar Haspel, Illustration: Cece Pascual/The Washington Post/iStock, The Washington Post, June 29, 2023 There’s a scene in the 2002 movie “Real Women Have Curves” where the heroine, Ana (America Ferrera), who struggles with her weight, is in a restaurant with her mother, Carmen (Lupe Ontiveros). Dessert comes, and Carmen looks daggers at Ana, whom she habitually belittles and criticizes about, among other things, her body. “Don’t eat the flan,” Carmen says. Ana takes a defiant bite and...

GW Professor Wendy Ellis’ Work on Systemic Racism Leads to Municipal Apology (gwtoday.gwu.edu)

Wendy Ellis, left, with Cincinnati councilmember Scotty Johnson. (Courtesy Wendy Ellis) June 29, 2023 — By Ruth Steinhardt — GWTODAY Her research on the deliberate destruction of Black communities in Cincinnati was recognized as key to the formal apology. Cincinnati’s lower West End neighborhood was a thriving enclave of middle-class Black family life when it was effectively obliterated by the construction of Interstate 75 in 1956, with 2,800 buildings leveled and nearly 26,000 residents...

Constipation nation? Damndemic guts and PACEs science. Anybody else on the john at 5 a.m. being hypnotized by their IBS App?

This is the first in a series of blogs about what I believe to be some of the consequences – “negative” and “positive” – of positive and adverse childhood experiences (PACEs) across my lifespan. I share this as my healing journey takes another twisty turn for the better. I’d love to know if and how you believe your positive and adverse childhood experiences have affected your health. I’ll post other installments as we at PACEs Connection continue to share the latest science, and stay focused...

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