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October 31, 2008
Good News Friday
We've started a tradition in our office: Good News Friday. We try only to deal with good news and positive, affirming thoughts. There is a lot of research connecting positive attitudes to healing, good mental health, and overall life satisfaction. An artist friend recently introduced our consumers at Changing Seasons to "Healing Cards" by Caroline Myss and Peter Occhiogrosso (click here to order on Amazon). The card chosen for Good News Friday states: " A cheerful expression brings joy to the heard, and good news gives health to the bones. Here is a task: Be the bearer of only good news today. In living out this task, note whether you find it difficult to maintain. And if so, discover why within yourself."
Enjoy the power of a positive attitude and the benefits of Good News Friday!

October 29, 2008
Halloween Safety
  Everyone wants to have a safe and happy Halloween for themselves, their guests and their children. Using safety tips and common sense can help you make the most of your Halloween season and make it as enjoyable for your kids as it is for you!

Anytime a child has an accident, it's tragic. The last thing that you want to happen is for your child to be hurt on a holiday, it would forever live in the minds of the child and the family.


There are many ways to keep your child safe at Halloween, when they are more prone to accidents and injuries. The excitement of children and adults at this time of year sometimes makes them forget to be careful. Simple common sense can do a lot to stop any tragedies from happening.

Make Halloween a fun, safe and happy time for your kids and they'll carry on the tradition that you taught them to their own families some day!


For more tips on Halloween safety, visit www.halloween-safety.com


October 17, 2008
Giving to Receive
Constant motion is a physical law of nature. Nothing stands still even if it wants to. In every moment, every aspect of the physical world is moving. Electrons are making quantum leaps, thoughts are travelling beyond their origins, chemicals are recombining in our bodies keeping us alive, and planets are travelling round countless stars, in countless galaxies.

It is a ceaseless flowing, the basis of all life, life as energy travelling in waves, and it is the essence of our being. Like a river flowing or the tides of the ocean flowing, or the seasons flowing one into the other, we too are flowing, we cannot stop it, when we try, by holding on to something, or resisting something, we fail because we are resisting our true nature.

Resistance and holding on is nothing more than an expression of fear and fear is nothing more than an absence of love. Wherever there is love, there is no fear. With love, there is no holding on. With love we let go and life flows through us again. This is why when we fall in love, or are filled with love for a child, or have discovered something that we love to do, we are so totally absorbed by it and intensely happy because of it. Love is appreciation, gratitude, caring, and connection with our life force. It is something that flows through us freely, it is pure, and is happily given. The more we love, the more things flow through us, the healthier, the happier, and the more abundant we are.

If your aim is to experience more abundance, to receive more, then make your habit one of giving. But give with love. When you learn to do this, the physical laws of nature will have to respond to your flowing energy, and it will respond by flowing more back to you, it cannot help it. It is the law. Do not be afraid to give for fear of lack. When you are allowing the flow of life to move through you with love, there is no lack. Lack only exists in the closed minds of fear. If you are experiencing lack, it is a result of your fear, resistance to your flow.

The fastest way to start dissolving your resistance is to give with love. By doing this, your flow will automatically increase and so will your receiving, but you must make your giving with love a habit. The more you do, the more abundantly your life force will flow, and the more you will receive, to give even more.

This posting was taken from a discussion thread at www.stevepavlina.com
Mr. Pavlina is the author of Personal Development for Smart People.


October 8, 2008
Changing Seasons Offers Peer Support
With the grand opening of our new peer center Changing Seasons, exciting things are happening in the peer support programs in the We Care system. The Board believes that empowered consumers, family members, and communities are they key to long-term recovery. Here are 10 componants of great recovery:

1) Self-Direction: Consumers lead, control, exercise choice over, and determine their own path of recovery by optimizing autonomy, independence, and control of resources to achieve a self-determined life. By definition, the recovery process must be self-directed by the individual, who defines his or her own life goals and designs a unique path towards those goals.

2) Individualized and Person-Centered: There are multiple pathways to recovery based on an individual’s unique strengths and resiliencies as well as his or her needs, preferences, experiences (including past trauma), and cultural background in all of its diverse representations. Individuals also identify recovery as being an ongoing journey and an end result as well as an overall paradigm for achieving wellness and optimal mental health.

3) Empowerment: Consumers have the authority to choose from a range of options and to participate in all decisions—including the allocation of resources—that will affect their lives, and are educated and supported in so doing. They have the ability to join with other consumers to collectively and effectively speak for themselves about their needs, wants, desires, and aspirations. Through empowerment, an individual gains control of his or her own destiny and influences the organizational and societal structures in his or her life.

4) Holistic: Recovery encompasses an individual’s whole life, including mind, body, spirit, and community. Recovery embraces all aspects of life, including housing, employment, education, mental health and healthcare treatment and services, complementary and naturalistic services, addictions treatment, spirituality, creativity, social networks, community participation, and family supports as determined by the person. Families, providers, organizations, systems, communities, and society play crucial roles in creating and maintaining meaningful opportunities for consumer access to these supports.

5) Non-Linear: Recovery is not a step-by-step process but one based on continual growth, occasional setbacks, and learning from experience. Recovery begins with an initial stage of awareness in which a person recognizes that positive change is possible. This awareness enables the consumer to move on to fully engage in the work of recovery.

6) Strengths-Based: Recovery focuses on valuing and building on the multiple capacities, resiliencies, talents, coping abilities, and inherent worth of individuals. By building on these strengths, consumers leave stymied life roles behind and engage in new life roles (e.g., partner, caregiver, friend, student, employee). The process of recovery moves forward through interaction with others in supportive, trust-based relationships.

7) Peer Support: Mutual support—including the sharing of experiential knowledge and skills and social learning—plays an invaluable role in recovery. Consumers encourage and engage other consumers in recovery and provide each other with a sense of belonging, supportive relationships, valued roles, and community.

8) Respect: Community, systems, and societal acceptance and appreciation of consumers —including protecting their rights and eliminating discrimination and stigma—are crucial in achieving recovery. Self-acceptance and regaining belief in one’s self are particularly vital. Respect ensures the inclusion and full participation of consumers in all aspects of their lives.

9) Responsibility: Consumers have a personal responsibility for their own self-care and journeys of recovery. Taking steps towards their goals may require great courage. Consumers must strive to understand and give meaning to their experiences and identify coping strategies and healing processes to promote their own wellness.

10) Hope: Recovery provides the essential and motivating message of a better future— that people can and do overcome the barriers and obstacles that confront them. Hope is internalized; but can be fostered by peers, families, friends, providers, and others. Hope is the catalyst of the recovery process.

Mental health recovery not only benefits individuals with mental health disabilities by focusing on their abilities to live, work, learn, and fully participate in our society, but also enriches the texture of American community life. America reaps the benefits of the contributions individuals with mental disabilities can make, ultimately becoming a stronger and healthier Nation.




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