Monthly Archives: April 2014

Send Sarah Fader to BlogHer 14

What’s up pumpkins?

I’m raising money to attend BlogHer 14. This year has been a great year for me. I managed to get on The Huffington Post and I had a post or two go viral. The infamous 3-Year-Olds are Assholes and then there was Stop Calling Assertive Women Bitches . Needless to say it’s been a great year.

There have been some life challenges, however. I am now a single mom. I’m raising money to attend BlogHer because this is my year to shine. I want to be able to celebrate my success as a Blogger with the rest of the social media community.

So please take a moment to click here and donate or share my Indiegogo Fundraising campaign to attend BlogHer 14. With your help I can make it to BlogHer!

send sarah fader to blogher

Stigma Fighters - Mental Illness Series

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In February 2014 I wrote an article for The Huffington Post about living with panic disorder and depression. I wrote it because I wanted to show the world that there are people living with mental illness who are not just homeless or institutionalized. There are those of us who are living within the confines of society.

There are teachers, doctors, lawyers, psychologists, actors, writers all living with mental illness. These are the stories that need to be told; the people who seem to be “regular” or “normal” people but are actually hiding a big secret. They are living with an invisible illness. They are struggling to function like the rest of society.

I’m using my forum to raise awareness for people (like me) who are seemingly “normal” but actually fighting hard to survive.

This series is called Stigma Fighters. If you are living with mental illness and you want to share your story. Please email me the story completely edited 1000 words maximum to sarah@oldschoolnewschoolmom.com

Include the story in plain text in the body of the email. No need to attach a Word document or any silliness like that. Write a bio for yourself including your website and attach a headshot.

I look forward to fighting the stigma of mental illness one story at a time. Who’s with me? Check out the video below:

Read all the Stigma Fighter posts here!

Stigma Fighters - Jennifer W.

I’m 31 years-old and I’ve lived with depression and anxiety since I was about eight. Growing up, I was an only child. I was bullied relentlessly in school, dropped out of high school and got my GED to start college early. I cut and burned myself often as a teen, abusing myself just to feel something less painful than what was going on inside my own head. Luckily, I traded self-harm for tattoos years ago, which has been a far more positive, productive form of release.

I love animals, travel, reading, and writing. I have a 10-year-old son whom I cherish above all else. I have dived with sharks, I have given birth without an epidural, and I would do either one again.

Mental illness. It’s a term we hear in the media cycle daily, but a stigma still hangs around it, not unlike those commercials for antidepressants where a little black rain cloud of despair follows one poor, tragic soul wherever he may go while everyone around him basks in sunlight and general merriment.

I can tell you from personal experience, for people who live with mental illness, that stigma is real.

I try not to take it personally. I welcome with open arms the attempts of those who, whether they share an actual understanding of mental illness or not, at least try to say the right things and lend support where support is needed.

As with anything else in life, the way people respond to you having a mental illness will likely be a mixed bag. Think of a new haircut: if you have honest friends, some of them will say they love it, others will say they liked your hair better before and still other won’t have noticed your hair because, well, it isn’t on their own head. (We all have those friends!) At the end of the day, your hair really isn’t keeping any of them up at night.

With mental illness, there’s a difference. We do tend to keep our loved ones up at night, and in many cases, such concern is warranted. The stigma surrounding mental health disorders such as depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia come mostly from a lack of understanding, not a lack of empathy.

My disease isn’t visible unless you know what you’re looking for, and really, who you’re looking at. A person living with mental illness has likely developed various healthy and unhealthy ways of coping. If they’re too good at ‘coping’ or they isolate themselves, they could almost keep their illness nothing more then a horrible, hidden secret. Nothing - let me repeat, nothing - is worse for the depressed or anxious mind than to be isolated and inactive.

Personally, I have to fight - no, I have to battle - the urge to practice avoidance when things are not going well. When I need support more than ever, even having a conversation can seem like more effort than I’m capable of. Leaving the house? Sometimes you can’t even leave your bed.

If you care about someone who struggles with mental illness, call them. Even if you know they screen their calls and don’t always return calls, call them anyway. Text them if possible, you will likely get a quicker response. Your simple text could even turn their whole mood around, at least for a little while.

If a loved one had a broken hand, you’d help them. You would cut their meat if they needed you to, you would help them dress, you would show them kindness. You would do this even if it were a pain in the ass, because you could clearly see with your own eyes they were incapable of doing it for themselves at that particular moment.

With mental illness, as millions of us know, that kind of understanding and assistance can be rare. Maybe it’s similar to childbirth, cancer, or jumping out of an airplane; if you haven’t been there, you really can’t fully grasp it. You can imagine and empathize, but your muscle memory doesn’t have that particular, life-altering experience mapped into it.

So, what can you do? Talk to people who share your muscle memory. There are numerous forms of support for those suffering mental illnesses, but there are also places family members and loved ones can turn when they feel they don’t understand the situation enough to help improve it, which is often their goal.

Family members need support, too. But just as it is often up to us as patients to seek our own care, friends and family members must realize that if they really want to help their loved one, the onus is on them to seek the information or support they need to better understand. (The National Alliance on Mental Illness can help. Get valuable resources at their website. https://www.nami.org/ )

Mental illness is not just a cartoon black cloud that follows you around. It’s not just missing out on walking the dog because you can’t get off your couch in a darkened room, until you pop the ad’s magic pill, and suddenly a beam of sunlight appears through your window and you follow it outside into the bright, shining day and your bright, shining future. (Can you imagine a commercial for a cancer treatment that showed a stick figure patient with a sad face carrying around a floating cancer cell on a string like a balloon? Then taking the magic pill, popping the balloon with a pin and just “getting on with life?” It’s really a bit simplistic and insulting.)

With any disease, with any treatment, there’s always more to it than the quick fix. The most important thing people without mental illness can try to understand is that for us, this is forever. This is who we are and we’re doing the best that we can. We are not cartoon characters chased by clouds and we do not spend our lives on the couch (though we might spend days at a time there, just as you might do if you had the flu or were recuperating from chemo). We are parents, siblings, friends, children. We are human beings with our own sets of troubles and crosses to bear, no more, no less. That is something everyone should be able to relate to.

(If you feel you or a loved one is in immediate crisis, seek medical attention or utilize the Suicide Prevention Hotline: 1-800-273-TALK. It bears stating the obvious: call 911 if you are seriously concerned for your safety or the safety of others. For more information on how to help a person in crisis, click here.)

http://www.suicidepreventionlifeline.org/

Jennifer Waite is a mother, freelance writer and photographer. She currently covers entertainment news for Examiner.com, and has written thousands of articles on current events, health, travel and parenting for various outlets since 2009. Her content has received more than five million views collectively. For inquiries, email: jennifer_waite@comcast.net

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The Semicolon Project: Survivors of Depression and Self-Harm

There was a time in my life when I didn’t want to live anymore. I was incredibly hopeless. I was afraid to wake up in the morning because when I opened my eyes I knew that I would have to face the day. If you haven’t struggled with depression, it’s hard to understand these feelings. But they are incredibly awful and real. They are debilitating.

In addition to having suicidal thoughts, I’ve also had (in the past) thoughts about cutting myself. I would have those thoughts when I felt hopeless and like my life was not going to get better. It was a manifestation of internalized pain. I would imagine cutting myself so that the pain would go away.

I never acted upon thoughts of self-harm. But I have friends who were self-mutilators. The thoughts alone were upsetting to me at the time. I can’t even imagine what it must feel like to harm oneself.

Today I found out about a brave movement called The Semicolon Project. Participants in this project are drawing tattoos of semicolons on their wrists to raise awareness about depression and self-harm.

I am here to tell you that I have lived with depression my entire life.

Photo on 4-16-14 at 9.43 AM

You are not alone. If you are scared to wake up in the morning, I have been there. If you’re afraid of the thoughts in your head, I was too once. You can make it through this. I did. I survived. You can too. You’re a good person, even if your brain tells you otherwise. Do not stop fighting. You are strong. I am with you. I am you.

So much love.

Gray

I want to believe that people are black and white. It would be so much easier that way. With the exception of murderers and real criminals, people are not all “bad” or “good.” The nature of being human means that we have good days and bad ones. We are inherently changeable.

I’m thinking of a particular person in my life right now. It would be convenient to label this person as “bad.” But I’m not going to do that to them. Yes, this person hurt me deeply. But they’re not a bad person. In fact, they have many good qualities. I don’t know how to reconcile the bad with the good. And when I start to combine the two feelings I’m confused and I start to cry.

I’ve been crying a lot lately, as my life is in transition. Someone close to me said “you’re in a transitional period in your life.” This person is right in a sense. My life is changing in a major way. However, I wouldn’t refer to it as a transition. A transition is more like the time between high school classes. This time in my life feels like an upheaval. Everything I once knew is not going to be the same.

I have to be mindful of what I say. I have to pay attention to what I write on here. I resent all that. I want to be able to freely express myself. Writing is a major form of therapy for me. I don’t want to be censored from saying what I need to say in order to maintain emotional balance.

People are not black or white. They are gray. They are complex. They are multi-dimensional. You may “know” a person for your entire life and not really “know” who they are fully ever.

There is no good and no bad. People are people.

I can’t reconcile how I feel about this significant person in my life. This person will be in my life forever. I both love and resent them. I don’t know where to go from here with those feelings.

I want to forgive them. I want to merge the two feelings. I know that this person must feel similarly about me. They probably have tremendous resentment towards me. But underneath it all, maybe there is still love there. It’s hard to tell because on the surface we do not understand each other. We are sitting at opposite ends of a room looking at each other with suspicious eyes.

It is my hope that one day we will be able to sit down and understand each other the way we once did a long time ago.

When that day occurs…I will be sure that I’m wearing a gray dress.

We’re All Crazy

I cannot count the times in my life that someone has called me crazy. There have been incidences where the individual was joking “you’re crazy.” But there are other incidences where I’ve been called crazy when the person in question was attempting to insult me.

The funny part about this is that we’re all a little “crazy.” Often when one human being calls another human being “crazy” it’s because they don’t like how that person is acting. They don’t agree with what they’re saying.

So by that rationale, everyone is crazy. It’s all relative. You might appear “crazy” to another person because you disagree with them, and the person on the receiving end of your rant looks crazy to you.

Also, the world is a crazy place. So much of what we experience on a day to day basis makes little to no sense.

We’ve established these things so far:

  1. Everyone is slightly “crazy” in their own way.
  2. The world is crazy.
  3. Crazy is a relative word and entirely subjective.

These things should make you feel better about yourself when someone calls you crazy. Because it’s not just you, you know, they’re also crazy.

The mailman is probably crazy. I mean, he spends all day with a giant bag of mail. That would make anyone a little cuckoo. There’s a reason why they call it “going postal.” The MTA conductor of the 2 train is probably insane. He spends all day driving the train and not interacting with real people. Crazy! New York City taxi drivers on the night shift are undoubtedly crazy. They are transporting intoxicated people to their destinations all night long. That breeds insanity.

The list goes on and on.

The next time someone calls you crazy, be thankful that you’re not the only crazy one.

Don’t Read This! You May Be Offended

Don’t read this. You may be offended stop right now! You’re still reading. Well, there’s something wrong with you. It appears that everything I write on here is loaded and offends someone. I could seriously write about the fact that I hate yellow squash and there would be a person out there in Minnesota who takes offense to that. Now that I mentioned the state of Minnesota, somebody will be offended by that.

I already had to delete a blog post today, because guess what? IT OFFENDED SOMEONE. And out of respect for their feelings I took it down. But it was because it was a person whose opinion I value.

Anyway, what other offensive things can I talk about.

RACISM!

I love Black people. I have so many Black friends. I love Indian people. I love Asian people. I love White people. I’m White. I love Jews.

I once got my hair done at a Black salon and they did it so well because my hair is close to the texture of Black hair. When I was leaving I told the ladies how much I loved my haircut and style. One woman said:

“You know what they say ‘once you go Black, you can’t go back!”

We all laughed uproariously.

I was told today that “no one can set limits with me.”

I don’t think that’s true.

I’m a reasonable person. WAIT! SOMEONE WILL BE OFFENDED BY THE FACT THAT I REFERRED TO MYSELF AS REASONABLE.

Okay, I guess I accept the fact that I offend people just for breathing and speaking my truth.

Carry on with your lives. I’ll keep on writing.

I Am Ballsy

Thomas Cantley is one of my favorite Canadians. You all know I love Canadians. He’s also an amazing person and a testicular cancer survivor. He’s an artist, which also makes me love him even more. I’ve asked him to marry me 50 times and he laughs every single time.

After he survived cancer, Thomas felt he was reborn and it was his mission to help others. He created a movement called I Am Ballsy. Thomas encourages survivors of cancer and other brave souls to share their stories on his Facebook page to encourage others who are struggling in life.

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I’ve shared my story about living with mental illness on Ballsy. You can read it here.

Thomas is featuring a new ballsy person on his Facebook page each day for 365 days. We’re over day 100 now and still going strong. You can share your story about being brave or (as Thomas says) “ballsy.” Whether you’ve struggled with cancer, mental illness, substance abuse, domestic violence, or any other life challenge that you’re open to sharing, send it over to Thomas to feature on the Ballsy page.

Write a 500 word piece on how ballsy you are and email it to beballsy@gmail.com along with a photo like this one:

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I can’t wait to read your brave stories. Let’s show the world that we’re all survivors.

 

To Be Brave You Must Be Afraid First

I’m afraid. I’m often afraid. I live with an anxiety disorder. Sometimes my fears are not based in reality. Sometimes the neurotransmitters in my brain repeatedly fire without my consent or control.

However, there are some occasions when my fear is warranted. There are real life events that occur that cause me to be be fearful and justifiably so. I fight fear. I put on my armor and I make a mean face. I tell myself that though internally I’m scared, I can beat this.

I am not going to let someone or something (however real and threatening it is) take me down. I am stronger than that someone or something. And the fact that I’m afraid makes me strong. I am aware of my fear (which is real) and I channel it through my body to become pure energy. Now I’m not afraid anymore. I’m electrified with energy and I’m ready to fight.

My friend Cheryl told me that I am brave. I’m brave in spite of being scared. I close my eyes and I jump into the water. I don’t know how deep it is. I don’t even know what color it is. But I’m going in. I’m going to find out.

To be brave you have to be afraid first. Bravery is nothing without fear. You live with the fear and you combat it. You put your suit of armor on and you fight like your life is on the line. Because it is.

Women Can Hit on Men

I have a single friend who is in love with her neighbor. We talk about him often. She tries to think of different ways to approach him and get him to notice her. She wants him to ask her out. To me this is a weird concept. I’ve never been into traditional gender roles. Whenever I’ve liked a guy in my 34 years, I’ve told him as much.

Usually, this has a poor effect on men. They get all weird and don’t know how to handle an assertive woman. I (on the other hand) don’t have time for games. I find them tiresome and I’m bad at the rules.

My advice to my friend was this: “Ask the guy out for coffee.”

I see no problem with a woman hitting on a man. Society has no problem with the opposite. Men are encouraged to tell women that they’re attractive and ask them out to dinner or drinks or what have you. However, women are told that they mustn’t tell a man that they’re interested in him.. Oh no! Don’t do that. You’ll look crazy and desperate. I’m here to tell you that I don’t play by those rules. And you can feel free not to also.

If a guy doesn’t like you because you told him that you like him, perhaps he’s not the sort of person you want to be with after all. If I tell a guy I like him (and I’ve done this historically) and he responds poorly, oh well, his loss.

Women, we do not need to hold back our sexuality or our desire towards the opposite sex. If you want to ask a man out for coffee or drinks or hot fucking chocolate, I have three words for you: go for it.

I don’t care that society says it’s wrong. I don’t mind that some guys will think I come on too strong. The right man is not going to care about all that. So ladies, if you like a guy: tell him. You’ve got nothing to lose.