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How to Stop Running from, Neglecting, and Betraying Yourself

“Success is how high you bounce when you hit bottom.” ~George S. Patton Much of the difficulty and struggle that we go through in life comes from our resistance to change. At some point, we get stuck in painful circumstances, yet we fear facing our reality and doing the work required to ignite a positive change. After all, the enemy we know is better than the enemy we don’t know. “It’s not that bad”, we tell ourselves. So we settle, give up on our desires, try to make the best of what we...

Experts recommend ditching racial labels in genetic studies

By Tina Hesman Saey , SCIENCE NEWS, March 14, 2023 at 3:56 pm Race should no longer be used to describe populations in most genetics studies, a panel of experts says. Using race and ethnicity to describe study participants gives the mistaken impression that humans can be divided into distinct groups. Such labels have been used to stigmatize groups of people, but do not explain biological and genetic diversity , the panel convened by the U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and...

Rolling back SNAP Benefits Rolls back Access to PCEs [positiveexperience.org/category/blog]

Laura Gallant, 3/16/2023, https://positiveexperience.org/category/blog/ When the COVID-19 pandemic began, there were emergency increases of concrete supports to children and families to provide food security. This increase in financial resources kept 4.2 million families above the poverty line* and helped families put food on their tables. These resources contributed to the nutritional well-being and reduced financial stress of children and families. With less financial stress in the home,...

Trauma Informed Resilient Schools Toolkit - New Professional Certification from Emory & Henry College

Though now serving as both a national and international consultant, it was in 2014, shortly after my "ah-ha" moment learning about the significance of ACEs science while working for the police, that my career altering journey began. In the early days, my mindset was to "trauma inform" the region. Those adventures and outcomes I've written about in blogs published in PACEs Connection over the past 8 years along the way. Within rural Appalachia I've delivered training and coaching to thousands...

Where to Start If You Feel Burned Out at Work [greatergood.berkeley.edu]

By Jason Pohl, Greater Good Magazine, March 10, 2023 When it comes to workplace woes, Christina Maslach has heard it all. The hard-working team that’s celebrated less than the office slackers. The professionals who wind up in a soul-sucking job. The employees required to attend office BBQs but left out of workplace decision making. It’s been 40-plus years since Maslach, a psychology professor emerita at UC Berkeley, first wrote about workplace trauma and burnout. She’s since pioneered a body...

Rotted floors and mold: Coastal climate change hurts affordable housing residents the most [islandpacket.com].]

The Deep Well Project – a Hilton Hilton-based nonprofit – patches damages driven by environmental stressors. By Mary Dimitrov By Sarah Haselhorst and Mary Dimitrov, The Island Packet, March 9, 2023 There’s no longer a trace that Audrey Hamilton’s great-granddaughter fell through the kitchen floor of her great-grandmother’s mobile home. Or that the refrigerator the teen was trying to get to sank below the soggy presswood. Both were swallowed up after the floor had been weighed down and...

What Policymakers Need to Know about Racism in the Property Tax System [housingmatters.urban.org]

By Caitlin Young, Photo: Kusska/Shutterstock, Housing Matters, March 15, 2023 Most local governments rely on property taxes to fund amenities and services for their residents, including public schools, libraries, roads, parks, and other public services. Property tax rates vary significantly by locality but generally are calculated based on assessments of property values conducted by local assessors’ offices. That means that if assessed values are accurate, property owners are paying a flat...

With Supporters from Indian Country Looking on, Minnesota Lawmakers Vote to Protect Indigenous Families [imprintnews.org]

Before the Minnesota Indian Family Preservation Act went up for a vote, supporters of the law gather with Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan and Reps. Heather Keeler, Alicia Kozlowski and Jamie Becker-Finn at the Minnesota Capitol. Here, Flanagan lights sage in an abalone shell while a community member sings a Dakota prayer song and others wait to be smudged. Photo by Jaida Grey Eagle. By Farrah Mina, The Imprint, March 9, 2023 Well before she became a Minnesota state senator, Mary Kunesh’s great uncle...

Ask Your Congressmember to Support Funding to Prevent & Mitigate Trauma

By Laura Braden Quigley, Director of Communications and Outreach CTIPP CAN and other advocates are encouraged to urge their Representative in the U.S. House to sign onto a bipartisan letter (see full text enclosed*) that supports robust funding for several trauma-mitigating programs in the Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education FY 2024 Appropriations bill: New Interagency Task Force (authorized by P.L. 115-271) charged with setting a national strategy for a coordinated federal...

TOLERATING CHILD LABOR

Child labor laws are under attack in states across the country Amid increasing child labor violations, lawmakers must act to strengthen standards ECONOMIC POLICY INSTITUTE MARCH 14, 2023 States across the country are attempting to weaken child labor protections, just as violations of these standards are rising. This report identifies bills weakening child labor standards in 10 states that have been introduced or passed in the past two years alone. It provides background on child labor...

How America Manufactures Poverty [newyorker.com]

“We typically don’t talk about poverty as a condition that benefits some of us,” Desmond writes in his morally charged manifesto. “It seems we prefer more absolving theories of the problem.”Photograph by Philip Montgomery for The New Yorker By Margaret Talbot, The New Yorker, March 13, 2023 “Books about poverty tend to be books about the poor,” the sociologist Matthew Desmond writes in “Poverty, by America” (Crown). That’s true whether the motivation is to blame the poor for their...

Shootings Remain High in Philly, But City-Funded Violence Interruption Shows Promise [thetrace.org]

By Mensah M. Dean, The Trace, March 14, 2023 An unexpected knock at the door in December caught Zeem off guard. He had not been expecting the visit from a social worker, a representative from the District Attorney’s Office, a mentor — called a credible messenger — two police officers, and a mother who had lost a child to violence. They were from the city’s program for Group Violence Intervention, and they had come to offer the initiative’s services to Zeem, whose past included dealing drugs...

How one medical school became remarkably diverse — without considering race in admissions [statnews.com]

The first class at the University of California, Davis medical school, in 1972, was predominantly white and male. CHRISTINE KAO/STAT By Usha Lee McFarling, STAT, March 7, 2023 The diversity of medical school classes has barely budged in recent decades, even with the ability to consider an applicant’s race as one factor in admissions. Now, many medical school leaders fear a looming U.S. Supreme Court decision to restrict or ban race-conscious admissions policies could lead to precipitous...

‘Don’t blame the young for being moody’ - and seven other ways to nurture healthy teenage minds [theguardian.com]

By Emine Saner, Illustration: Fran Pulido/The Guardian, The Guardian, March 12, 2023 When I was studying as an undergraduate, almost 30 years ago, I was taught that the human brain stops developing in childhood. But that is wrong. Now that we have the technology to look inside the living human brain and track changes in its structure and function across a lifespan, we know that the brain continues to develop substantially throughout adolescence and into early adulthood. We define adolescence...

Can We Put an End to America’s Most Dangerous Myth? [nytimes.com]

By Alissa Quart, Illustration: Paola Saliby, The New York Times, March9, 2023 From a child's earliest age, independence is extolled as a virtue, with “doing things on your own” as proof of maturity. I celebrated my daughter when she was little for picking out her books herself. She always wanted to go on the monkey bars without help and swung and did tricks until her hands were blistered. Now that she’s 12, I cheer her for taking herself home from school on the train and for climbing by...

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