Archive for the ‘Mental Health’ Category
Hello Writers of Fiction and Non-Fiction,
I’ll be at these events in May and June, 2010:
This Thursday May 13, 2010 I will be attending the Effie Lee Morris Lecture at the San Francisco Main Library, 100 Larkin Street, San Francisco, CA 94102
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Saturday, May 15, 2010 11 a.m. – 6 p.m. PST
Asian Heritage Street Celebration (starts at Larkin and McAllister Streets in San Francisco, in front of the Asian Art Museum in Civic Center, leading up to the Little Saigon District)
Look for Teresa LeYung Ryan (author of Love Made of Heart), Margie Yee Webb, Frances Kakugawa and Lloyd Lofthouse at the California Writers Club booth.
The fair features Asian American artists, DJs, martial arts, today’s Asian pop culture, j-cars, a Muay Thai kickboxing ring, scrumptious food, children’s area, cultural procession, anime, free hepatitis B screenings and more! www.asianfairsf.com
The event is free and open to the public. Teresa will post location of their booth; please check: http://writingcoachteresa.com
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Tuesday, May 18, 2010 11:00am – 12:45pm PST
Blockbuster Plots Consultant Martha Alderson http://blockbusterplots.com & Writing Career Coach Teresa LeYung Ryan on Kim McMillon’s “Writers’ Sanctuary” Blog Talk Radio Show http://www.blogtalkradio.com/onword/page/3 If you miss the live show, you can listen to the archive at: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/onword/2010/05/18/writers-sanctuary-with-kim-mcmillon
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Friday June 18, 2010
Time: 11 AM PDT |12 PM MDT | 1 PM CDT |2 PM EDT
Writing Career Coach Teresa LeYung Ryan on Linda Joy Myers’s Teleseminar for The National Association of Memoir Writers (NAMW)
[June NAMW Member-only Teleseminar] Join Writing Career Coach Teresa LeYung Ryan as She Helps Memoir Writers Use What They Know to Build Fame! Fun & Simple Steps for Memoir Writers to Thrive
Not already a member of NAMW? Visit http://www.namw.org now!
How do writers thrive in the fiercely competitive industry? Find out for yourself in this delightful session with Coach Teresa who created Build Your Name, Beat the Game: Be Happily Published (the 22 minutes for 22 days workbook).
She will help you:
* understand the need to build one’s name/fame in today’s publishing arena.
* identify advocates, endorsers and fans.
* gain recognition through your words and your community.
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Saturday, June 19, 2010 2:00pm PST
San Mateo County Fair / Peninsula Festival
Four Bay Area novelists discuss their writing experiences and offer tips for aspiring fiction writers.
Teresa LeYung Ryan, author of Love Made of Heart. www.writingcoachteresa.com
Margaret Davis, author of Straight Down the Middle. www.margaretdavisbooks.com
Judith Marshall, author of Husbands May Come and Go but Friends are Forever. www.judithmarshall.net
Jon Corey, author of A Plague of Scoundrels
Moderator: Tory Hartmann http://toryhartmann.com/
Bios
Teresa LeYung Ryan uses her novel Love Made of Heart to shed light on secret agonies suffered by mothers and daughters in domestic violence. She is also a writing career coach and creator of Build Your Name, Beat the Game: Be Happily Published.
Margaret Davis (Straight Down the Middle) is a sociologist who is also the author of Families in a Working World and A Practical Guide to Organization Design. Her second novel, Katie Carlisle, will be available soon.
Judith Marshall (Husbands May Come and Go but Friends are Forever) is the owner of Kelso Books, a publishing house. Husbands has been optioned for the screen and her second novel, Staying Afloat, will be available soon.
Jon Cory (A Plague of Scoundrels). Retirement enabled Jon to return to creative writing after a career in business. His debut novel received the 2009 Independent Publishers’ Silver Medal award for popular fiction.
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Coach Teresa here.
Can you relate to any one of these statements?
* Agents and acquisition editors say publishers prefer to work with authors who are already celebrities or have established platforms (i.e. means to build fan base). How do I compete?
* I am published. There aren’t enough hours in a day to write, let alone run around and network.
* I believe in my writing and I’m committed to building my career, but, my budget is limited.
Teresa LeYung Ryan says: “You are the expert of your experiences whether you’re writing fiction or non-fiction. When you make your name synonymous with the themes/subject matters/issues in your writing, you beat the game. You too can be happily published.
Coach Teresa’s 22-day playbook Build Your Name, Beat the Game: Be Happily Published has arrived. $22
Grab a few writer-friends or ask your writers’ club to invite me and I will conduct:
“Major League Tryouts with Coach Teresa– Build Your Name, Beat the Game: Be Happily Published”
Cheering for all writers!
Coach Teresa
I still can’t believe I was in the cast of The Vagina Monologues, the award-winning play that is performed in colleges & universities across the United States. I thank Eve Ensler for interviewing the 200+ women; I thank the women who told their stories to Ms. Ensler; I thank everyone who supports spreading awareness about and putting an end to the atrocities against women and girls in every culture on this planet. I got onto the Internet to find articles about Ms. Ensler and the play, so, I keyed in the words: The Vagina Monologues Eve Ensler in Google search and found:
http://www.ted.com/talks/eve_ensler_on_happiness_in_body_and_soul.html
Eve Ensler spoke eloquently on TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) in 2004. In 20 precious minutes, Eve talked about how The Vagina Monologues came to be; Marsha Lopez in Afghanistan; Esther Chavez in Juarez, Mexico; Agnes In Kenya, help stop female genital mutilation; her belief in Mr. Alligator who would come to her rescue when she was a girl; 1 in 3 women are beatened or raped; Susan Sarandon, Glenn Close, Whoopi Goldberg; purpose & intent; date-rape, drugs; Vagina Warriors; when we give what we want the most.

author Elisa Southard with Vagina Monologues cast member Teresa LeYung Ryan & creativity coach Mary Knippel photo by Ellen Gailing
I am so honored that I got to speak some lines from the play. For the past 8 years I’ve been working on my second novel, the story of a first-time published author who is afraid to talk about human-trafficking. I got my chance to speak out with Ms. Ensler’s script.
The performance was a benefit for Community Violence Solutions http://www.cvsolutions.org/. Caring attitude from Director Kathy McCarty, her production team, and members in the cast (women of all ages and diverse cultures from the community); audience was gracious; folks from Community Violence Solutions showed dedication.
I learned to listen for the lines assigned to a fellow actress so that I could speak mine in a seamless fashion. I learned to get into my body while listening to all the lines; creating a circle of energy was most important.
Thank you, community spirits, for stepping out to say: “Stop the violence. Stop the suffering.”
Thank you, Elisa Southard http://breakthroughthenoise.com/, for talking to Director Kathy http://galateanplayers.com/ when she announced her desire to direct the play again.
Thank you, Mary Knippel http://openuptoyourcreativity.com/, for getting me there on time on performance day, for getting me home after a long day.
Thank you, Pat Phillips, Lakshmi Kerner, Amira, Leslie, Debbie, all of Lakshmi’s friends, Joey, Joey’s sisters, Michaela, Mike (sorry I didn’t get a chance to say thanks in person). Thank you to all my friends, my sis & bro-in-law, my hubby for sending good thoughts.
I’ve met remarkable women in this production; hope to connect with them this year. I reconnected with Cynthia Peterson of CVS; what a joy. Where is our colleague and poet Shirley Phelps?
Ellen Gailing http://ellengailingphotography.com/ took vibrant photos; I’ll post more as I receive them.
Sincerely,
Teresa LeYung Ryan
I, Teresa LeYung Ryan, use my novel Love Made of Heart to:
- shed light on the secret agonies suffered by immigrant women, men and children.
- inspire understanding of mental illness/traumas of the mind.
- help survivors of violence find their own voices through writing.
Love Made of Heart, the story that sheds light on the stigmas & secret agonies suffered by a mentally-ill immigrant mother.
April is National Poetry Month
April is School Library Media Month
April is Informed Woman Month
April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month
April is National Sexual Assault Awareness & Prevention Month
Wednesday April 7, 2010 Richmond, CA
I went to my second rehearsal tonight of The Vagina Monologues.
I have lines in these 2 sections of the play:
“I Was There In the Room” The lines are beautifully poetic.
Vanessa, Vicki, Natalie, Michelle, Martha and I had a good time saying our lines.
“A teenage Girl’s Guide to Surviving Sex Slavery” I can’t describe to you what this passage is; you have to see the show–Monday April 12, 2010, 7:30pm

Teresa LeYung Ryan rehearsing with fellow actresses "I Was There In The Room" in The Vagina Monologues
Director Kathryn G. McCarty said: “A cast member asked me to include a few words on why I am doing this show. Back in November, I stood with fellow teachers and friends at the Candlelight Vigil for the victim of the Gang Rape in Richmond (a student of mine). A few weeks later, a fellow teacher told me he heard another young woman at our school say ‘I don’t know what the big deal is about rape. It happens to everyone.’
“Everyone? Did I hear this clearly? I wondered what I could do. After some thought, I spoke with several friends & decided The Vagina Monologues was a show that needed to be done.
“We really need help getting the word out about the show, which is a benefit for Community Violence Solutions, a rape crisis center. We would really like to reach young people who might not go to such events – but who will learn from this show. Thanks for your help!”
Director Kathy McCarty is so good with us newbies. We’re all working hard rehearsing, spreading the word about April 12th, and making new friends.
See you at the Craneway Pavillion, 1414 Harbour Way South, in the Marina district of Richmond, CA, convenient to the 580 freeway. www.craneway.com
Tickets at: http://galateanplayers.com “Family Vagina Warrior Discount” The $30.00 online discounted ticket is available April 7 – April 10. If you can’t make it to the show, there is also the “Each One, Reach One” ticket, where you can donate $20 to help sponsor someone else’s coming to the show. $25 for students & seniors. Or https://www.goldstar.com/ for $20 tickets & $5 fee.
Thanks, Elisa Southard, for cheering me on; this newbie likes being an actress.
Thursday, April 8, 2010 third rehearsal. Tonight I remembered 90% of my lines. I had fun. I was deeply moved by the other gals’ deliveries of their lines.
http://www.goldstar.com/events/richmond-ca/the-vagina-monologues.html
“On April 12, 2010, 7:30pm Women from throughout the East Bay unite to perform Eve Ensler’s award-winning play The Vagina Monologues as a benefit for Community Violence Solutions. V-Day is a global movement and series of consciousness-raising events geared toward ending violence against girls and women worldwide. The Vagina Monologues is based on more than 200 interviews with women. The monologues help give voice to experiences and feelings not traditionally exposed in public.”
Directed by Kathryn G. McCarty a benefit for Community Violence Solutions
In an interview: “Somehow the Craneway Pavillion seems an appropriate venue,” said Clay David, who is helping to produce The Vagina Monologues. The venue is in the Rosie the Riveter National Park, he explained. “The V-Day Movement possesses a very ‘We Can Do It’ grassroots effort. It’s a movement that started small, in colleges throughout the country, and it’s done magnificent work.”
http://galateanplayers.com/THEVAGINAMONOLOGUES.html
Further information about V-Day: http://www.vday.org

Teresa LeYung Ryan rehearsing lines in "A Teenage Girl's Guide to Surviving Sex Slavery" in The Vagina Monologues
Sincerely,
Teresa
I, Teresa LeYung Ryan, author of Love Made of Heart, help survivors of violence find their own voices through writing.
Our mission statements seem to ripple outward, then circuitously flow back to us in order to give us reflection so that our messages take on larger and stronger ripples.
Dear Writers, Colleagues, Mentors, Friends, Family Members, 
Director Kathryn McCarty has asked me to ask you to help spread the word about this benefit performance. Please use Facebook, Tweeter, your blogs, emails, etc. to extend the invitation to your friends who live in the SF Bay Area. You have my gratitude.
On Monday April 12, 2010, 7:30pm Let’s pack Craneway Pavilion in Richmond, CA to support V-Day & our communities at the one-night performance of Eve Ensler’s Vagina Monologues. In spite of an already packed schedule, Director Kathryn G. McCarty was compelled to take on this project–a fundraiser for Community Violence Solutions in response to the crime of last October when a former student of hers was gang-raped at Richmond High School. Kathy said: “I am afraid we are kidding ourselves if we think violence, or apathy to violence just happens in Richmond. It’s epidemic. .. It’s going to take the entire Bay Area Community to reach out. We all have to take a stand in teaching young people how to think for themselves. There are alternatives to violence.” “V” in V-Day stands for Victory, Valentine and Vagina. Tickets through http://galateanplayers.com/ General Admission $40; Students & Seniors $25; buffet dinner & show $65 OR https://www.goldstar.com/ (for half-price general admission tickets). Tell Director Kathy (925) 676-5705 that cast member Teresa LeYung Ryan sent you (if GoldStar runs out of half-price tickets; Kathy can arrange for more half-price tickets). The show is produced by Galatean Players in association with Contra Costa College.
Craneway Pavilion is at 1414 Harbour Way South, in the Marina district of Richmond, CA, convenient to the 580 freeway. www.craneway.com
Could you email me as well if you can attend on April 12, 2010? I’d like to look for you after performance and personally thank you. I’ll be updating my website http://WritingCoachTeresa.com with photos from rehearsals.
Sincerely,
Teresa LeYung Ryan, author of Love Made of Heart
Here’s the backstory–the ripples . . . In April 2004 Poet and women’s advocate Shirley Itim Melo Phelps had invited me to Community Violence Solutions’ Evening of Awareness; Jackie Speier was the keynote speaker that night. The following year, Shirley, Cynthia Peterson and Rhonda James at CVS asked me to be their keynote speaker for Denim Day and Take Back the Night.
Yesterday April 3, 2010 after my first day of rehearsal of The Vagina Monologues, I came home and found photos from 2005 (when I had delivered those 2 speeches for Community Violence Solutions).
I am honored to be included in the cast, all empowering women, guided by Director Kathryn G. McCarty who has reconnected me with Community Violence Solutions. In Eve Ensler’s play, the section about “what would your vagina wear?” I’d say “ultra soft denim” to commemorate “Denim Day” which breaks the dress-code thus breaking the silence about sexual violence.
Here are exerpts from my April 27, 2005 speech at Pittsburg, CA. (My friend, author Elisa Southard, and columnist Clara-Rae Genser were there that day in 2005, giving me moral support.)
“The Denim Day Campaign began in 1999 with the California Coalition Against Sexual Assault (also known as CalCASA) and the Los Angeles Commission on Assaults Against Women as part of an international protest of an Italian High Court decision to overturn a rape conviction because the victim wore jeans. I am now quoting from CalCASA:
The justices dismissed charges against a 45-year-old rape suspect because his 18-year-old victim was wearing jeans at the time of the attack. The Court blamed the victim for the rape, stating in their decision that because the victim’s jeans were so tight, she would have had to remove them herself. The judgment sparked a worldwide outcry from those who understand coercion, threats and violence that come with the act of rape. The unpopular verdict became an international symbol of myth-based injustice for sexual assault victims.
Women of the Italian Legislature protested the decision by wearing jeans. As news of the decision spread, so did the protest movement. Over 120,000 people throughout Los Angeles participated on Denim Day last year.
We are wearing jeans today, along with Community Violence Solutions and the City of Pittsburg, because we want to put a stop to the kind of thinking that says: ‘A victim can prevent rape if she really wants to, including knocking a gun out of the attacker’s hand.’”
Here are some chilling statistics. I am quoting Cynthia Peterson, director for the Rape Crisis Center at Community Violence Solutions:
Approximately 1 in 4 women and 1 in 10 men are raped in adulthood………
Under the age of 18, 1 in 4 girls and 1 in 6 boys are victims of sexual assault.
We are here today to say NO to blaming victims. NO to keeping silent.
We are here today to honor Sergeant Sandra Douglas and the community.
We are here today to WEAR DENIM!
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On a sunny day in November 2009 I was running errands in Berkeley when a newspaper headline stopped me. “15-Year-Old Girl Gang-Raped” The last two words made me dizzy and sick. I stood there, staring into the newsstand. Then the anger rose and I wanted the strength of ten Hercules, to be an avenger for the teenager. Since that day I’ve been asking my angels to show me compassionate ways to help my community.
Last month, my friend Elisa Southard called Kathy McCarty on my behalf when she heard that Kathy was directing The Vagina Monologues. Thank you, Elisa, for being there for me in 2005, for being here now as I am reminded that our mission statements do take on larger and stronger ripples.
More about Community Violence Solutions: Since 1974, CVS has served as the umbrella organization for Rape Crisis of Contra Costa and Marin Counties, while providing a wide range of services to child and adult victims of sexual violence, their families and the community. http://www.cvsolutions.org/
V-Day Until the Violence Stops is a global movement to stop violence against women and girls. V-Day is a catalyst that promotes creative events to increase awareness, raise money and revitalize the spirit of existing anti-violence organizations. V-Day generates broader attention for the fight to stop violence against women and girls, including rape, battery, incest, female genital mutilation (FGM) and sexual slavery. www.vday.org
I had seen The Vagina Monologues 10 years ago when playwright and children’s book author Kim McMillon invited me. Marga Gomez, Rita Moreno and Vicki Lawrence delivered powerful performances in San Francisco. I remember seeing Patrise, owner of Gaia Books of Berkeley, and her friends, wearing red boas for V-Day.
As an author and a community spirit, I, Teresa LeYung Ryan, use my novel Love Made of Heart to:
• shed light on stigmas suffered by immigrant women, men, and children
• advocate understanding of mental illness/traumas to the mind and spread compassion
• help survivors of violence find their own voices through writing
www.LoveMadeOfHeart.com
Powerful Women Inspire Me.
Olga Malyj, my first healthy role model, orchestrated the lovely party today.
A month ago, I had told Olga that I wanted a women’s networking, wish-making, potluck gathering. She made it happen; the women who showed up brought beautiful foods, their powerful spirits, and their wishes for the year. I will be adding to this post in the days to come.
Sincerely,
Writing Career Coach Teresa LeYung Ryan
“When you make your name synonymous with the themes / subject matters / issues in your writing, you are building your name / career / platform. Be happily published!”
Kim McMillon’s “Writers’ Sanctuary” Blog Talk Radio Show Helps Writers Everywhere
Writers’ Sanctuary is sponsored by the Moe Green Poetry Hour
On Tuesday, March 16th 2010 , in celebration of Women’s History Month, Writers’ Sanctuary presents visionary author Mary Cox Garner; award-winning author Luisa Adams; author and writing career coach Teresa LeYung Ryan; and international plot consultant Martha Alderson. This program is aimed at people that have a love of words, a book in their head, and are seeking methods of putting their ideas on paper, and developing a story with the potential to become a publish book.
I had fun today!
Kim McMillon creates interesting programs for the literary community. Her latest creation is “Writers’ Sanctuary” a blog talk radio show. Today she interviewed:
Mary Cox Garner, author of The Hidden Souls of Words: Keys to Transformation Through the Power of Words http://www.hiddensoulsofwords.com/ In 1995, Mary Cox Garner established a foundation, HOPE, INC., which continues to address both the material and spiritual needs of children and their care givers. She lives with her husband in Washington, D.C., and has three grown sons.
Luisa Adams, author of Woven of Water http://rp-author.com/Adams/ Luisa Adams is an award winning writer, educator, workshop leader, and Licensed Brain Gym® Consultant. She is the mother of five, grandmother of eight, and resides with her husband, Dave, in San Mateo, California when not living by the enchanted lake.
Teresa LeYung Ryan, author of Love Made of Heart http://LoveMadeOfHeart.com/ As community spirit, Teresa LeYung Ryan uses her novel to shed light on stigmas suffered by women, men, and children who have mental illness/traumas to the mind. She speaks out for those who cannot speak for themselves. [ On the show today, I focused on what I had learned from writing Love Made of Heart, why I need to speak openly about mental illness and the toxic stigmas, Glenn Close’s mission and http://www.bringchange2mind.org/]
Martha Alderson, M.A. is an international plot consultant for writers. Her clients include best-selling authors, New York editors, and Hollywood movie directors. She can help you, too. http://www.blockbusterplots.com http://plotwhisperer.blogspot.com/ Plot tools that Martha has created include: Blockbuster Plots – Pure and Simple; The Seven Essential Elements of Scene; Scene Tracker Kit; DVDs for many genres; and free monthly Plot Tips eZine: http://www.blockbusterplots.com/contact.html
To listen to “Writers’ Sanctuary” blog talk radio show hosted by Kim McMillon, click on: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/onword/2010/03/16/writers-sanctuary-hosted-by-kim-mcmillon Mary Cox Garner, Luisa Adams, Teresa LeYung Ryan, Martha Alderson shared insights and posed questions; the show was aired on March 16, 2010 11:30am-1:30pm and is now archived.
Teresa LeYung Ryan is also known as Writing Career Coach Teresa. She is the creator of Build Your Name, Beat the Game: Be Happily Published (a 22 minutes for 22 days workbook for writers to build their platforms before and after publication). Coach Teresa says: “You are THE expert of your experiences. Whether you’re a fiction or non-fiction author, make your name synonymous with the themes / subject matters / issues in your writing.” http://WritingCoachTeresa.com
Tonight I Googled the phrase “1 in 6″ and these results showed up:
1 in 6 Americans go hungry
1 in 6 Americans in poverty
1 in 6 Americans swine flu
1 in 6 traffic fatalities is a pedestrian
1 in 6 h1n1
1 in 6 hungry
1 in 6 men prostate cancer
1 in 6
http://www.bringchange2mind.org/
1 in 6 adults and almost 1 in 10 children suffer from a diagnosable mental illness. Yet, for many, the stigma associated with the illness, can be as great a challenge as the disease itself. This is where the misconceptions stop. This is where bias comes to an end. This is where we change lives. Because this is where we Bring Change 2 Mind.
911 in-crisis support 800-273-TALK (8255) • 411 mental health information and resources 877-726-4727
One of the best ways you can help someone with mental illness is by understanding what it is – and what it isn’t. After all, myths about mental illnesses contribute to stigma, which often prevents those who are living with it from seeking help.
The fact is, a mental illness is a disorder of the brain – your body’s most important organ – And 1 in 6 adults suffers from brain-related illness including depression, bipolar disorder, PTSD and schizophrenia.
Like most diseases of the body, it has many causes – from genetics to other biological, environmental and social/cultural factors. And just as with most diseases, mental illnesses are no one’s fault. The unusual behaviors associated with some illnesses are symptoms of the disease – not the cause.
But most importantly, mental illnesses are treatable through medication and psychosocial therapies – allowing those who suffer from them the opportunity to lead full and productive lives.
BringChange2Mind.org is a not-for-profit organization created by Glenn Close, the Child and Adolescent Bipolar Foundation (CABF), Fountain House, and Garen and Shari Staglin of IMHRO (International Mental Health Research Organization).
The idea of a national anti-stigma campaign was born of a partnership between Glenn Close and Fountain House, where Glenn volunteered in order to learn about mental illness, which both her sister and nephew suffer from.
Sincerely,
Teresa LeYung Ryan www.LoveMadeOfHeart.com
As an author and a community spirit, I, Teresa LeYung Ryan, use my novel Love Made of Heart to shed light on stigmas suffered by women, men and children with mental illness/traumas to the mind. I speak out for those who cannot speak for themselves.

author Teresa LeYung Ryan uses Love Made of Heart to inspire adult-children of mentally-ill parents to speak openly about the stigmas and gain resources for their families
Other resources:
National Alliance on Mental Illness www.nami.org
Stamp Out Stigma http://www.stampoutstigma.net/ Carmen Lee, founder
Today I learned how to identify a hazardous tree situation and how to estimate the falling distance of a tree. Also I learned that severe wind and saturated soil can fell a tree, even a healthy one. I see a metaphor—sometimes under a combination of circumstances, anyone can get mental illness (falling of the mind).
I thought about what Glenn Close said in the commercial with her sister that was filmed at Grand Central Station in New York City. “1 in 6 adults suffer from a diagnosable mental illness.”
www.BringChange2Mind.org 1 in 6 adults and almost 1 in 10 children suffer from a diagnosable mental illness.
Sincerely,
Teresa LeYung Ryan www.LoveMadeOfHeart.com
As an author and a community spirit, I, Teresa LeYung Ryan, use my novel Love Made of Heart to shed light on stigmas suffered by women, men and children with mental illness/traumas to the mind. I speak out for those who cannot speak for themselves.
Other resources:
National Alliance on Mental Illness www.nami.org
Stamp Out Stigma www.stampoutstigma.org Carmen Lee, founder
Actress Glenn Close and Author Teresa LeYung Ryan Share Mission Statement About Stigmas & Mental Illness
Saturday, March 06, 2010 My dear friend author Lynn Scott http://lynnscott.wordpress.com/ fed me a lovely meal today; then she critiqued my letter to Ms. Glenn Close and said exactly what I needed to hear. Lynn reminded me to speak from my heart. Thank you, Lynn!
Dear Ms. Close,
You and I speak the same powerful mission statement.
Your riveting article “Mental Illness: the Stigmas of Silence” for The Huffington Post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/glenn-close/mental-illness-the-stigma_b_328591.html, especially revealing the truth about the original ending of Fatal Attraction, and your comment about how “certain words have power over us” in your Aha! Moment for Oprah http://www.oprah.com/spirit/Glenn-Closes-Aha-Moment touch me deeply.
Your delivery of Iris in The Natural has inspired me to be “a good woman.” Picturing you as Iris (a calm tower of strength) and reading about your confronting mental illness in your family gave me the inspiration to present my book Love Made of Heart to you.
Since the publication of that story, I have spoken openly about how my mother suffered terribly as an immigrant woman with a mental illness. As a young girl, I had learned from relatives to blame my own mother for “bringing on craziness upon herself” and “not being able to let go of grief like everyone else.”
I was 27 years old when my mother came to visit me and my sister (we were sharing an apartment). She moved in without any discussions. In our apartment, our mother plotted her way to end her misery.
Please accept my book as my expression of gratitude to you for speaking openly and unabashedly about the suffering that your loved ones and you endured.
I can see your face when I read the lines spoken by Dr. Gloria Thatcher, the compassionate psychologist in Love Made of Heart.
I’m dedicating this week to writing posts on my blog about you and your work with www.BringChange2Mind.org
The video of you and your sister is most inspiring. “Words are powerful.”
Sincerely,
Teresa LeYung Ryan www.LoveMadeOfHeart.com
As an author and a community spirit, I, Teresa LeYung Ryan, use my novel Love Made of Heart to shed light on stigmas suffered by women, men and children with mental illness/traumas to the mind. I speak out for those who cannot speak for themselves.
Other resources:
National Alliance on Mental Illness www.nami.org
Stamp Out Stigma www.stampoutstigma.org
www.BringChange2Mind.org 1 in 6 adults and almost 1 in 10 children suffer from a diagnosable mental illness.
Actress Glenn Close and Author Teresa LeYung Ryan Share Mission Statement About Stigmas & Mental Illness
Yesterday February 2, 2010 turned into a strange yet motivating day for me as a writer.
A dear friend said yes to driving down to Palo Alto with me to attend the 7:00pm Other Voices TV “Why Did Haiti Collapse? More Than an Earthquake” at Community Media Center. I got onto North 101 instead of South 101, so, lost 15 minutes there. Then, relying on MapQuest wrong directions, we lost another 20 minutes. Asking people for directions to 900 San Antonio Road [Community Media Center] led us to the Jewish Community Center instead.
So we did “follow the numbers.”. I drove to the 800 block of San Antonio and got onto the side of the street with even numbers and headed in the direction of higher numbers than 800. 900 San Antonio Road was tucked away in a strip of buildings partially hidden behind a sound wall.
We made it! 20 minutes late but we made it! Paul George of Peninsula Peace and Justice Center http://www.peaceandjustice.org was moderator. His articulate speech on KZSU 90.1 FM http://kzsu.stanford.edu/ on February 1, 2010 had propelled me to attend this program.
The 2 panelists gave compelling eyewitness accounts and the audience learned how we can really help Haiti right now (right now to help lessen the suffering).
Seth Donnelly, a longtime Haiti solidarity activist, has visited Haiti many times, assisting grassroots projects and documenting human rights abuses by the UN occupation forces, was a calm eloquent speaker.
Walter Riley, a longtime civil rights attorney, peace activist, and Haiti Solidarity activist, was in Port-au-Prince when the devastating earthquake struck Haiti. For three days, he and his family aided in the frantic rescue efforts and witnessed the scope of the devastation. Walter is the Chair of the Haiti Emergency Relief Fund.
What did I learn from Mr. Donnelly and Mr. Riley? Many organizations are raising money. Great. Is that money really going to the Haitian grassroots agencies? Is the money to buy food, medical supplies, and building material waiting for red tape (supplies and materials sitting on tarmacs while Haitians are dying)? Apparently, Haiti’s grassroots (women’s groups being a huge component) are the ones who can help most effectively because they’re right there helping neighbors; they know their infrastructure. What else did I re-learn? Natural disaster on top of abject poverty = brutal suffering. Medical personnel, disaster relief workers, and compassionate souls are all heroes.
Channel 27 Mid-Peninsula, California http://www.communitymediacenter.net/
Haiti Emergency Relief Fund http://www.haitiaction.net/About/HERF/HERF.html
I don’t have the means to write big checks; I do have a big voice as a writer though.
Writers, keep on writing!
Sincerely,
Coach Teresa


