Glenn and Jessie on CBS This Morning Discussing RESILIENCE

Two Women Commit The Same Crime: One Is Legally Insane But The Other Is Not. Huh?

NEWS ABOUT RESILIENCE: Jessie Close and I will be speaking at a book party Tuesday, January 13th, at Fountain House in Manhattan beginning at 6 p.m. Fountain House is a fabulous clubhouse program whose roots date back to the 1940s. If you would like to attend, please send an RSVP via e-mail to Ashley Womble at awomble@fountainhouse.org. Unfortunately, Glenn Close will not be there since she is appearing in a Broadway play.

Glenn and Jessie will be featured on the CBS Morning News that Tuesday morning and will be on the Dr. Oz show on Wednesday. 

How Can One Defendant Be Legally Insane And The Other Not Insane When They Both Commit The Same Crime?

Monifa Sanford

Monifa Sanford

Washington Post reporter Dan Morse has been covering a horrific case that raises thorny questions about our criminal justice system and defendants suspected of having mental disorders.  

Zakieya Avery

Zakieya Avery

 

Two Washington D.C. area women are about to go on trial in Maryland for stabbing four children, two fatally, as part of an exorcism.

A psychiatrist has told the court that Monifa Sanford, age 22, was legally insane when she participated in the stabbings. However, a different psychiatrist told the court that Sanford’s cohort, Zakieya Avery, age 29, was not insane when the stabbings happened.

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Cooperation and Communication Often Are Missing In Mental Health!

 

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1-8-2015  From My Files Friday:  More than four years ago, I wrote about how a lack of communication frequently prevents persons with mental disorders from getting meaningful help. Unfortunately, this continues to be a major problem in many communities. In a recent conversation, Judge Steven Leifman, who is featured in my book, CRAZY: A Father’s Search Through America’s Mental Health Madness, told me there are more than four dozen different mental health providers in Miami/Dade County and everyone one of them has a different way of handling patients. There is no sharing of information so a client may be diagnosed by one provider and given a prescription and then go across town to another, get a different diagnosis and a different prescription.

In this earlier blog post, I describe how Judge Leifman has been trying to bring order out of chaos.

WE NEED TO BEGIN TALKING TO EACH OTHER IF WE WANT TO FIX OUR SYSTEM  (First published 7-26-10)

During my travels, I’ve visited many communities where there is little or no communication. The police don’t talk to local providers who take care of persons with mental disorders and substance abuse issues. These providers don’t talk to each other. Because of HIPAA, no one wants to talk to parents. Oftentimes, patients and their advocates are not properly informed or asked their opinions.

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First Look at RESILIENCE — Jessie Close’s Memoir About Mental Illness, Addictions & Recovery

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RESILIENCE: Two Sisters and A Story of Mental Illness, the memoir which I helped Jessie Close write, will officially go on sale January 13rd, but can now be found in many bookstores and, of course, can be ordered online.

I suggested that Jessie write a memoir after hearing her speak in 2012 at a National Alliance on Mental Illness event about her recovery from mental illness and co-occurring drug and alcohol addictions. I was deeply moved by her story and by how her family, especially her famous sister, the actress Glenn Close, supported her through a series of crises. It was Jessie who first asked Glenn to help fight stigma, a request that sparked the creation of  the advocacy group, BringChange2Mind.

Our literary agent, David Vigliano, notified publishers and we were fortunate enough to secure Deb Futter, a Vice President and Editor and Chief of Hardcovers at Grand Central Publishing, as the book’s editor.

I believe Jessie’s brutal honesty and RESILIENCE will inspire and help others.  I hope after reading the PROLOGUE, you will want to continue reading her amazing story.

RESILIENCE: Two Sisters and A Story of Mental Illness

By Jessie Close with Pete Earley

“She is not an ordinary or ‘run-of-the-mill” human being…” from an analysis of my handwriting when I was seventeen.

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The More Sensitive, the More Susceptible: A Son’s Words

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As we celebrate the holidays and coming new year, I am drawn to what Sander Pick, the son of Jessie Close, said during a speech a few years ago.

“I’ve always thought that the more sensitive a person is, the more susceptible they are to mental illnesses. A sick joke in our universe is that the more it allows a person to see its beauty and deep connectivity, the more difficult it becomes for that person to maintain good mental health.

     “In our culture, we tend to treat this tradeoff with a fierce double standard. As long as they are sharing with us beautiful insights into humanity, we will love and cherish them as heroes, but if they fall into substance abuse, depression or any other form of mental illness, we tend to say, ‘It’s not our problem.’

     “Classically, these are artists, musicians, writers, etc., but, of course, they come in all sorts, unsung or not. These people tend to add value and meaning to our lives. At their best, they are the types who make us laugh and cry, to learn and to take risks and to love. They are brave and it angers me that as a society, we abandon them when their skies darken.”

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

Rep. Tim Murphy, Sen. Creigh Deeds, Philanthropist Ted Stanley: Impact Players in Mental Health 2014

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Pennsylvania Congressman Tim Murphy gets my nod as the Impact Person of 2014 in Mental Health.

Whether you agree or disagree with the Republican from Pittsburgh, his relentless attempt to radically change how the federal government oversees the delivery of mental health services has focused a national spotlight on our current broken system.

Murphy launched his crusade two years ago after he met with the parents of children murdered at Sandy Hook Elementary school by Adam Lanza, who had a mental disorder. He recently told a reporter from CNN that he keeps photographs of those children in his Capitol Hill office as a reminder of his pledge to their parents that he would introduce wide sweeping changes.

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