the notebook
Untitled Document
Anne Michaud: editor & senior writer

Posts Tagged ‘Youth’

We need better involuntary commitment rules for mentally ill

Thursday, January 3rd, 2013

Tomorrow will mark three weeks since the Newtown, Conn., school massacre. The wretchedness of that day has touched off a national debate about preventing mass murders — as it should. But lately the conversation has narrowed to gun control.

In a year-end interview, responding to a question about the political fights ahead, President Barack Obama voiced his support for banning assault rifles and high-capacity clips, and for better background checks for gun buyers. What I didn’t hear from the president was a vow to strengthen our mental health system to treat people like Adam Lanza before they descend into madness. Whatever Lanza’s technical diagnosis — schizophrenia? — executing two classrooms of first-graders is by definition mad.

Gun control is easier to discuss, because there is an identifiable, organized opposition in the National Rifle Association. But mental illness is harder to recognize, reach and heal. (more…)

We can no longer ignore need for gun control, care for mentally ill

Sunday, December 16th, 2012

Make it stop.

That’s how I react to yet another horrible mass killing. Like the third-grade class at Sandy Hook Elementary School that huddled into a corner – “squished,” as one student described it – and the gym students hidden in a closet, I just want to shrink into a defensive posture. Don’t tell me any more.

Don’t offer any explanations or reasons. We’ve heard too many. There is no good reason why, when I talk to my children about mass murder, they’ve heard it all before in their 14- and 15-year lifetimes. As a country, we should not be resigning ourselves to this reality.

We need to face up to two facts we’ve been avoiding: that we have permitted an outrageous access to guns and level of gun violence. And we are pitifully inadequate at dealing with people in mental and emotional crisis. (more…)

Embracing the new normal

Thursday, November 22nd, 2012

There’s nothing like a life-shaking storm to make people appreciate normal. Usually, normal is ho-hum. But when life is turned upside down, normal is the most welcome feeling.

Normal didn’t return for me, after superstorm Sandy, when we got our power back or refilled the refrigerator. It was when I saw faces I hadn’t seen since before the storm – about two weeks after it knocked our Island around. There we were, smiling, most of us showered, and whole. Normal returned when I realized that people in my community were, for the most part, going to be OK.

That’s not the same as saying life will be the same as it was before the storm, or before this long recession. Instead, we’re living with a “new normal” – a sense that we must permanently lower our material expectations. Maybe the new normal will define our moment in history.

Some day, years from now, we may think of these times the way people recall the Great Depression. People who lived through it went on to stash away money – sometimes in places far away from banks they no longer trusted. They hoarded food; waste became a sin. Our recollections of 2012 may be that this was the year we acknowledged how much we depend on each other. (more…)

Less homework is a good thing

Thursday, August 23rd, 2012

As school doors swing open, it will be time once again to engage the homework battles.

A major front, every year, is the parents’ complaint that schools give too much homework. This campaign has received recent reinforcement with the publication of “Teach Your Children Well” by Madeline Levine, a psychologist who treats adolescents in affluent Marin County, Calif. Levine says that high-pressure parenting with Ivy League goals can leave kids feeling empty inside. Family rituals that generate enthusiasm and contentment are being lost.

Canada has gotten this message. The nation’s education minister has directed schools to make sure students are not overloaded. Toronto schools, with nearly 300,000 kids, have limited elementary school homework to reading, eliminated holiday homework and adopted language endorsing the value of family time. (more…)



Untitled Document
Bookmark and Share feed



©2009 Anne Michaud. All rights reserved.

Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

[ Website Design by Optipop ]