Mental Health Recovery Newsletter
Contents
Recovery Topics:
Thoughts on The Beautiful Mind
Teens in Trouble
Words that can Help
Essential Components of Any Recovery Program For People Experiencing Psychiatric
Symptoms By Ronna Keil
News from Mary Ellen and Ed including Upcoming Presentations
Resources by Mary Ellen Copeland
Free Resources
Introduction
Welcome to Mental Health Recovery Newsletter, begun in March 2000
and published quarterly from the office of Mary Ellen Copeland. This
newsletter is for anyone who wants to learn more about recovering
from uncomfortable, often disabling psychiatric symptoms. If you
would like a copy of previous issues of this newsletter or would
like to enter your subscription, please see the paragraph below.
Subscription is free to individuals, by email or ground mail. Institutional
subscriptions available: 50 copies for $25 plus mailing; 100 copies
for $45 plus mailing. Please contact us and let us know whether
we can send you the email version to save a tree. You may freely
copy and distribute this newsletter, giving credit to Mary Ellen
Copeland.
If you would like a copy of previous issues of this newsletter or
would like to enter your free subscription, please contact the office
of Mary Ellen Copeland by e-mail or click
here.
A Special Note From Mary Ellen Copeland
These continue to be very hard days for all of us. Added to the
difficulties of our daily lives, living with or supporting others
who are experiencing very painful symptoms are the pressures and
tragedies related to war and the huge disappointment and ensuing
lack of trust caused by the corruption of a major multi-national
corporation. I hope you will join me in my hopes and prayers that
our world leaders will use peaceful means like negotiation and diplomacy
to resolve the issues that are tearing the world apart--and that
their decisions and actions will be for the good of all, especially
the children.
Recovery Topics
Thoughts on A Beautiful Mind
I hope you have seen the movie A Beautiful Mind with stellar perfomances
by Russell Crowe and Jennifer Connelly. If you haven't, I strongly
encourage you to do so. We saw it twice and it was even more powerful
the second time.
Those of us who have a psychiatric diagnosis or experience symptoms
that are visible to others have been treated badly in our society
for as long as any of us can remember. Far too often, the media has
supported this stigma through sensationalizing news events and spreading
information that is inaccurate, slanted or blatantly untrue. National,
regional and local mental health agencies and organizations have
mounted educational and advocacy efforts to reduce this stigma but
it is not easy to counter the constant, but hopefully lessening,
stream of negativity. I hope that this movie is the beginning of
a major shift--where people who are having a hard time with difficult,
painful and often disabling symptoms are treated with the dignity,
compassion and respect they deserve.
This movie reinforced many of the things that those of us who are
committed to mental health recovery strongly believe. We picked up
the following.
People who experience these symptoms are some of the most brilliant
people in our society--people who can find solutions to serious
problems and whose talents enhance our lives. We can do the things
we want to do and be the way we want to be. The world will miss
out on our great potential if we don't have opportunities to recover
or if we are mistreated or badly treated--as almost happened in
this case.
Recovery is possible and, as the focus of mental health treatment
changes to recovery, it is much more likely that people will get
better and better and better instead of worse and worse (the common
prediction in the past).
There are many roads to recovery--and each of us needs to choose
our own road--the road we feel will work best for us.
Those of us who have these symptoms, even symptoms that persist,
can learn to live effectively with or without our symptoms--that
we can control our minds and sort out the difference between delusions
and reality. We can devise innovative ways to address our symptoms
and/or delusions so that they don't overtake our lives.
Being supported by loving family members, colleagues and the community,
and being treated with dignity, compassion and respect helps. It
may even be essential to, releiving symptoms. It helps us to recover
and achieve our dreams and goals.
There is great value in having something that is meaningful to
us to do.
There is a strong connection between stress and symptoms. Minimizing
and managing stress are important to recovery.
Hospitalization and other invasive treatments often are not the
best option and if we are open to using all the resources available
to us, the outcome can be amazing.
If you have thoughts about the impact of this movie, let us know
through our e-mail.
Teens in Trouble
A recent issue of Psychiatric News says that even though suicide
is the third-leading cause of death among teens ages 15-19, most
people underestimate the seriousness of this problem. Most of us
do not want to think about it. It is not until it stares us in the
face--a suicide attempt or the suicide of a family member, someone
who we know or whose parents we know, that attention is paid. By
this time it is too late. What can we do to reverse this troubling
trend and prevent teen suicide?
Listen to our young people! Listen! Listen! Listen! Don't interrupt with advice,
reminders, nagging, judgments, stories of what it was like when you were a
kid, reminders of how good they have it, comparisons with their siblings or
others, etc., etc., etc. Just listen and keep your mouth shut--this is especially
hard to do when you disagree.
Don't nag. We as parents who want our kids to be presentable and do well, may
nag and nag and nag. "Wash your hair, clean your room, turn down the music,
find some decent friends, get a job, etc. etc. etc." That is all they
ever hear from us--from morning until night. How would that make you feel?
What is really important? Is a clean room so important? Why not just close
the door? Can you set aside some time when it is Ok for the music to be loud?
Does it really matter what your teen wears to school? If it's not going to
have long term bad affects, forget it. Save your fire and use it for serious
issues like drinking or using illegal drugs.
Validate their feelings. If they say they feel sad, respond with something
like, "I am so sorry you feel that way. What can I do to help?" instead
of something like, "With all the money we've spent on you, what do you
have to be sad about."
Share ideas on how they can help themselves feel better when they are feeling
badly. Things like playing ball, painting a picture, calling a friend, going
to a movie, getting some exercise--things they like to do or have an interest
in. Don't suggest taking out the rubbish or mowing the lawn when a teen is
already having a hard time.
Give them lots of unconditional love and support. It is really hard for kids,
as it is for all of us, when we are dealing with things like the break-up of
a relationship, being bullied, getting bad grades, a major disappointment of
any kind, on-going feelings of sadness, despair and desperation, low self esteem.
You may not see them as serious issues but to a teen they can be very serious.
Again, listen, listen, listen without interrupting.
Share an activity with a teen or group of teens. Take them fishing. Go for
a hike. Have a picnic. Take them out to dinner or to a movie.
Stu Copans, an adolescent psychiatrist, and I wrote and self published, The
Adolescent Depression Workbook. Because this book was found to be both popular
and effective, a revised second edition is being published by Brookes Publishing.
It is called
Recovering from Depression: A Workbook for Teens and will be available March
15. You can put a copy on hold by contacting this office and it will be sent
out to you as soon as it comes in.
A committee sponsored by the state of New Hampshire has developed a curriculum
for teens that is based on the WRAP model called ONE STEP UP: A Teen Program
for Walking into Wellness. Pilots of this project are being arranged and I
hope it will be widely available in the near future. It will be a tool for
helping young people talk about their feelings and taking action to help themselves
feel better. It is hoped that this program will give kids the tools they need
to prevent or relieve troubling symptoms throughout their lives.
Motivation: The Courage to Live Creatively
By Richard Weingarten, M.A., RPRP
Richard Weingarten is the Director of Consumer Initiatives
and Education at the Connecticut Mental Health Center in New
Haven. He wishes to acknowledge the editorial assistance of Flo
Conway and Edward Mattison on this article
In my teens and twenties motivation seemed like my strongest suit.
But when I suffered from depression in my thirties and forties, I,
oftentimes, had no energy, no will, no hope and no motivation. When
I was depression-free, I found that I was motivated and could engage
in doing things that motivated me all the more. I could and did schedule
in activities that I'd force myself to go to even if I was depressed
because I knew I'd feel better getting out of my apartment and being
around people. Nevertheless, I had to struggle constantly to pick
myself up and get my life going again after a day or two of depression.
What follows are the many ways I motivated myself and found motivation
when I wasn't totally incapacitated by my illness.
Motivation, for me, was first, wanting to live an exciting and interesting
life; second, wanting to be an interesting person; third, being dissatisfied
with my situation or myself; fourth, being willing to do the hard
work every day to develop discipline and good work habits and last,
but not least, having the courage to engage my imagination and live
creatively. These were the things that motivated me during the years
when I was ill, unemployed or underemployed. I saw each day as an
opportunity and challenge to make the best, most interesting day
I could for myself.
I've always liked people and helping people except for the early,
reclusive years of my illness. Helping someone gave me a good feeling
about myself. So taking an elderly neighbor to a medical appointment
even when I wasn't feeling that great helped me feel connected to
my neighbor and to myself. I was also motivated to take care of my
personal needs (food, exercise, adequate rest and sleep, hygiene
and grooming) as I had developed these into habits since high school.
In the process of taking care of my basic needs, I made friends
with people. At the supermarket where I shopped for example, I made
friends with the produce clerk, the girl behind the fish counter
and the cashier at the check out counter. So shopping was a pleasant
experience for me, and I looked forward to going there. I did the
same thing at the health club where I worked out. When depressed
I forced myself to go for a workout knowing that I'd feel better
afterwards.
I love to write. When I was struggling to get myself going in the
mornings, I wrote letters to friends. With each friend, I had a "thing" to
write about. With one friend it was the movies, with another it was
things of a spiritual nature. I also love knowledge, and I went to
lectures whenever I could. Asking a question of the lecturer was
also a motivator, giving me a good feeling about myself that often
lasted a day or two.
Sundays were my best days. I experienced spiritual uplift at morning
church services and with my friends during the Fellowship Hour. After
lunch I went to the art museum and went on their "Gallery Walks." A
regular group of people went on the "Walks" each Sunday,
and we became friends and often had tea or coffee after the tour,
with the docent from the museum sometimes joining us.
Before I became ill I was a news reporter for a wire service agency.
This experience, and my interest in current affairs, made me a voracious
reader of newspapers and magazines. I suppose if I were a cat fancier,
I'd read magazines and books about cats. But I read The New York
Times cover to cover every Sunday. I'd done this religiously since
I was an undergraduate. Sometimes when I read a book review, I'd
write down a quote that
appealed to me, or I'd go to the library in search of a book that had gotten
a good review. Like an actor or a singer - or a writer -I learned where to
find motivation and I went looking for it.
Motivation, then, is definitely not genetic or automatic like many
people think. Rather, it is a way of thinking about your personal
resources - what inspires you, what you like in yourself and others
- and building on those strengths. Motivation comes from reaching
out and connecting with people. It means tackling the hard problem
of motivating yourself one day at a time. It means learning to initiate
things in your life. Like a leaf riding an eddy in a stream, I followed
my interests until I was picked up by the mainstream.
The desire to be an interesting person with an exciting life requires
steady habits and good discipline. All of this, I know, is part of
the secret to being motivated and living creatively.
WELLNESS TOOLBOX
Personal responsibility is key to using any wellness
tool. It is up to you to notice how this tool is making you feel,
to decide whether or not you want to use it, and how much use of
this tool is best for you.
Changing our Attitudes and
Habitual Responses
by Mary Ellen Copeland
"The last of the human freedoms -to choose one's
attitude in any given set of circumstances." (Victor Frankl: Man's
Search for Meaning) I found this quote to be very meaningful
to me at this time. While tragedy may take away much of what you
have, you are in charge of how you think.
In the past when I started to notice symptoms or early
warning signs--things like feeling a bit anxious, forgetting more
than usual, having a hard place in my chest or not feeling like getting
up, my usual response was to "catastrophize". I would say
things to myself, like "Oh no, not again". "You are
going to get so depressed you won't be able to go to the wedding". "You'll
never get that job now". "This is just going to get worse
and worse and worse". "This is all my fault because I ate
junk food all day yesterday". "Everyone will think I am
a failure and desert me".
Now I have realized that this response--my attitude--rapidly worsens
my symptoms and perhaps even causes my worries to become reality.
Through practice, I have learned to respond in a different way. First,
when I notice symptoms, I do just that. Notice them. No catastrophizing.
Next, I check out my Early Warning Signs action plan in my WRAP and
do the things on it. In addition, if I have time, I check my list
of Wellness Tools to see if there is anything else I can do to help
myself. Things like work on my quilt, go birding or chat with a friend.
Then I stay with the symptoms for as long as I have them without
being anxious for them to go away--just being patient and giving
myself a chance to heal. I know that it is OK to be uncomfortable
for a while. It's no big deal. And that's it. It really works.
Sleep
by Jill McGann
(Description of how Jill learned to sleep on her own
after fourteen years on sleeping medication)
Two years ago I ran out of medication options for management
of mania and depression. I decided to take full responsibility for
my health. My psychiatrist was wonderfully supportive but now I was
on my own searching for anything and everything that might provide
the right management tools for me to achieve wellness. I took daily
inventory of my emotional, physical, intellectual, and spiritual
state. I began to make progress using the very management tools you
describe in your books.
As I slowly gained control of my waking hours I was inspired to
reclaim my sleeping hours as well. My sleep was not refreshing because
I was so drugged. I wanted to be free to sleep like the rest of the
world.
By this time I was really working on balance through exercise, yoga,
and stress management techniques.
I started by reducing my medication by very small increments over
the course of eight months. If I ever went without good sleep for
three days I would go back up to the previous dose and try again
to reduce the dose after I was well rested. Since I was taking so
much medicine this was indeed a slow process. As I reduced my medicine
to minimal amounts I really hit a wall. I pushed through this with
pure determination. I was "soloing" but it was not a pretty
sight. I just couldn't get the signal to my brain to gracefully "turn
off".
I consulted with a psychiatrist that takes a more natural approach
to mental wellness and he started working with my specific chemistry
issues. I changed my diet and the supplements I was taking. By increasing
my seratonin levels in the evening I can now get to sleep most nights.
Sure, I have the normal sleepless nights that other people experience
but most nights I am in bed and asleep by nine and wake up refreshed
at five. Voila!! This has been a great lesson for me to learn. Just
because things have been a certain way for a long time doesn't mean
that things can't change. Change is always possible. It just may
take some time.
Help Wanted
Are you gainfully employed? Too many mental health consumers are
told they'll never work again. Let's challenge this disheartening
stereotype. I am putting together a book of "Consumer Voices
in the Workplace." I wouldlike to hear from other consumers
who have managed to maintain their careers while coping with psychiatric
symptoms. Please e-mail me, Ellen Alderton, at
elalists@hotmail.com or call
me at (703)548-1968. Thank you!
A note of apology
A person e-mailed me and said that he found my title Keeping Well
When the World has Gone Crazy in the special edition of the newsletter
to be stigmatizing. I was so overwrought about the world situation
when I wrote that article (and continue to be) that the word crazy
seem to really fit. But if even one person finds it to be stigmatizing,
I will not use that word again in any context. My apologies to anyone
who was offended by it.
Quotes in the New Zealand native Maori language
Carolyn Doughty from Christchurch, New Zealand came to Vermont in September
to attend the Mental Health Recovery Training for facilitators. She said in
the native Maori language "Tangata Whaiora" means a person seeking
wellness.
And from another New Zealander, Gwen Fuergeson from Auckland,
Akakoa he uaua , kia kaha, kia toa, kia manawanui
Although there may be difficulties, be strong, be brave, be patient and take
heart.
NEWS from Mary Ellen and Ed
After a very busy fall with travel to New York City,
Indiana, Connecticut, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Arizona and New
Zealand, we plan to limit our travel to the northeast region in the
next several months to recoup and catch up. Our current schedule
for the next few months includes:
Upcoming Presentations
-
March 23--recovery presentation at the Institute for Living
in Hartford, CT.
-
April 2-4, Refresher Course for Mental Health Recovery educators
here in Brattleboro, VT. If you are currently teaching Mental
Health Recovery and Wellness Recovery Action Planning, we encourage
you to attend. Last year's event was very exciting, filled with
mutual support for the important work we are all doing, innovative
ideas and discussions of the challenges we face in doing this
important work. Of particular focus will be new ways of dealing
with crisis and post crisis planning. Richard Hart, A Recovery
Educator from West Virginia brought the issue of post crisis
planning to my attention. He said the issue of recovery from
a crisis was important for people in a group he facilitated.
It is so easy to relapse at this time when of "post crisis" when
everything feels so fragile.
-
April 16-18, Mental Health Recovery and Wellness Recovery Action
Planning Facilitator training in Michigan.
-
April 20, Six hour institute on Wellness Recovery Action Planning
as part of the three day conference of National Artists for Mental
Health, Inc., in Schenectady, NY. We are delighted to be presenting
at this conference as it is so clear that recovery and feeling
well support artistic expression. If you are interested in attending,
call 1-866-866NAMH or check the website at www.namh.org.
-
May 6-10 and 20-24 Mental Health Recovery and Wellness Recovery
Action Planning Facilitator Trainings in Brattleboro, VT. The
fall training will be September 9-13.
Educational Opportunities
Mental Health Recovery Correspondence Course
The four-part Mental Health Recovery Correspondence Course is a great way to
learn mental health recovery and how to develop a Wellness Recovery Action PlanT for yourself and/or to share with others. It meets the prerequisites for
attending Mental Health Recovery Seminar II: Facilitator Training. If
you want to attend the Facilitator Training in the spring, this is a good time
to begin the Correspondence Course.
In areas where several people are taking the correspondence course, participants
are gathering, usually once a week, to discuss and work on the assignments
together. I have found that this works very well. If several people in your
area are taking, or considering taking the Correspondence Course, you might
consider this option.
The course includes reading and written assignments, projects, activities and
phone discussion with the instructor. The three texts for the course are: The
Depression Workbook, Living Without Depression and Manic Depression,
and Wellness Recovery Action PlanT. The cost is $200 per participant,
plus the cost of any texts you need to purchase.
Mental Health Recovery Seminar II: Facilitator
Training
May , 6-10 2002, Brattleboro, VT
May 20-24, 2002, Brattleboro, VT
September 9-13, 2002 Brattleboro, VT
It's time now to begin making your plans to attend the 2002 Spring facilitator
training. Over 250 people have attended these training in the last several
years. The training has given them the skills and strategies they need to teach
mental health recovery skills and strategies including Wellness Recovery Action
Planning to individuals and groups.
Anyone who has met the requirements for the training is welcome. You can meet
the prerequisite for this training if you have taken a basic Mental Health
Recovery including WRAP training or have completed the Correspondence Course
described above. Contact Mary Ellen's office to see if you qualify or have
questions about your qualifications.
The cost of this seminar is $900, including the new Facilitator Training Manual.
Add your travel and personal expenses.
Mental Health Recovery Seminar III Refresher
Course for Facilitators
April 2-4 2002
Anyone who has completed Mental Health Recovery Seminar
II is encouraged to come to Brattleboro for an intense three days
of problem-solving and strategizing to 1. increase your knowledge
and skills, and 2. to plan strategies for educational opportunities
and career building. Topics to be addressed include quality assurance,
responding to disasters, working with people with special needs,
advanced directives and post-crisis planning, networking and program
administration.
The cost of this training is $450.
Information on Resources by
Mary Ellen Copeland
Resources are important because they help you discover
new skills and strategies for addressing problems and issues and
for working on recovery. They can also reinforce things you already
know. In addition, they can be a lifeline if you can't or choose
not to go to a group or be involved with an agency, and you are working
toward recovery on your own. Given the range of options available,
resources are a very inexpensive option that are widely available.
Often agencies and hospital programs purchase the resources we have
developed for the people who use their services.
In our first newsletter, two years ago, I included a complete list
of the resources Ed and I have developed to support the Mental Health
Recovery and WRAP Program. I wanted to repeat it, adding several
new resources, for your easy reference. There are many other resources
that may be useful to you as well. I have included an extensive list
of resources that others have found to be helpful on the website
at www.mentalhealthrecovery.com.
The following resources are available through our website at www.mentalhealthrecovery.com
or by contacting our office by mail, e-mail or phone. Many of them
are also available at bookstores.
2nd Edition The Depression Workbook: A Guide to Living with Depression
and Manic Depression has been extensively revised to reflect
new thoughts and information on mental health recovery. This easy
to use workbook that will guide you through the process of beginning
recovery from all kinds of psychiatric symptoms. It includes directions
for developing a Wellness Recovery Action PlanT.
Living Without Depression and Manic Depression: A Guide to Maintaining
Mood Stability is the perfect follow-up book to The Depression
Workbook. It is based on a study of people who had gotten well
and stayed well for several years--meaning that they didn't have
any hospitalizations and that symptoms did not significantly interfere
with their day to
day activities.
Both the video Coping with Depression, co-produced by Mary
Ellen Copeland with William Hood, the Strategies for Living with
Depression and Manic Depression audio tape reinforce the information
in The Depression Workbook and Living Without Depression
and Manic Depression. It is hard to remember how to help yourself
when symptoms are most severe. These resources provide reminders
in ways that are easy to assimilate.
Winning Against Relapse: A Workbook of Action Plans for Reoccurring
Health and Emotional Problems is a detailed description of
the Wellness Recovery Action PlanT process for staying well, for
identifying and responding to symptoms and for developing an intensive
crisis plan. It includes information on working with groups and
on developing these plans for people with special needs.
WRAP: Wellness Recovery Action PlanT is a simplified users
guide for developing a Wellness Recovery Action PlanT. This book is
being used by individuals and in support groups, mental health programs
and hospitals around the country. It is now available in a Spanish
Version, WRAP-Spanish Version- Plan de Accíon para la Recuperacíon
del Bienestar and a version for people who have a dual diagnosis, WRAP:
Wellness Recovery Action PlanT for People with Dual Diagnosis.
Two other formats for learning about and developing a Wellness Recovery Action PlanT- Winning Against Relapse Program, a step by step
WRAP audio tape which is great for individual or group use and for
people who would prefer to hear rather than read the instructions,
and WRAP on CD-ROM so you can easily download both the instructions
for developing WRAP and forms you can fill. The CD-rom includes instructions
and forms for a teen version of WRAP as well.
I had originally hoped that everyone facilitating a recovery group,
workshop or seminar based on my work would attend a Mental Health
Recovery Facilitator Training. However, I have learned that this
is very impractical and that limiting the spread of this information
is not in anyone's best interest. Therefore I have revised the Facilitator
Manual: Mental Health Recovery including WRAP, the manual we
use at the facilitator training, into a curriculum, so that anyone
who likes to teach and work with people can easily teach mental health
recovery and Wellness Recovery Action Planning. It comes with a CD-Rom
for making all of the transparencies I use in my workshops and lots
of hand-outs that can be copied and distributed.
The Adolescent Depression Workbook which I co-authored with
Stu Copans is still available. However, on March 15, a revised version, Recovering
from Depression: A Workbook for Teens is coming out.
Mary Ellen Copeland co-authored the book Healing the Trauma of Abuse: A
Gentle Woman's Guide with Maxine Harris of Community Connections in Washington,
DC. It describes a weekly lesson process that women can use to relieve the
effects of trauma in their lives, either when working closely with a counselor,
or when - as many women must do - working on their own.
The Loneliness Workbook gives you the tools you need to cope
with and relieve loneliness and develop a strong system of supports.
The stress created by worry is often a trigger that leads to a worsening
of symptoms. Worry is a constant companion for many of us. The
Worry Control Workbook is full of ideas on how to relieve the
worry in your life.
The second edition of Fibromyalgia and Chronic Myofascial Pain
Syndrome: A Survival Manual that I co-authored with Dr. Devin
Starlanyl is now available. It is filled with the most up-to-date
information on how to deal with these chronic pain conditions.
People who suffer from these debilitating conditions consider this
book to be their "wellness bible".
Free Resources
The booklet, Recovering Your Mental Health: A Self-Help Guide,
is available free from the Center for Mental Health Services. We
developed this booklet with the assistance of a focus group of ten
people from around the country--people who are working on their own
recovery. The first 18,000 copies have been distributed and the second
printing of 35,000 copies is now available. People are really hungry
for mental health recovery education. You can get free copies from
the Knowledge Exchange Network (KEN) by calling 1-800-789-2647 or
through www.mentalhealth.org. Refer to booklet SMA# 3504.
There are many helpful and supportive articles and resources on
the website at www.mentalhealthrecovery.com or www.maryellencopeland.com.
Join the egroup "mentalhealthrecovery" . Share your experiences
and get ideas, advice and support from others with similar problems
and issues. Go to www.yahoogroups.com. Then do a search for mentalhealthrecovery.
It will pull up two sites--one that is the Mary Ellen Copeland group
and one that is in the UK. You may want to join both. Then follow
the instructions to register and participate in the group. There
have been many lively discussions over the last few years.
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