Mad in America: Rethinking Mental Health
Health & Fitness:Mental Health
The Mad in America podcast is sponsored this week by Drs Rani and Suraj Holistic Psychiatry and Mental Health Coaching. Are you Ready to make a lasting change in your life? Then join Dr Rani Bora's 12-month group coaching programme named "Beyond Diagnosis".
Visit their website drsranisuraj.com today for more information and to join this unique programme.
***
Last fall, the New Haven Register reported that a group of Yale University students and alumni filed a federal lawsuit against the university challenging its policies and practices around students with mental health disabilities. But according to our guest, a lack of access to appropriate support, as well as discrimination against students struggling with their mental health, are all too common on American campuses.
Stefanie Lyn Kaufman-Mthimkhulu is the founder and director of the non-profit Project LETS, which stands for Let’s Erase the Stigma. Project LETS is a national grassroots organization and movement focused on creating innovative, peer-led alternatives to our current mental health system. Their work includes peer support and communicative care, political advocacy, organizing, and mutual aid.
Project LETS's mission looks beyond academia, though; led by and for people with lived experience of mental illness/madness, disability, trauma, and neurodivergence, it “seeks to build a world without systems of oppression where non-carceral responses to crises are the norm.” The organization is now active on about 30 college and high school campuses across the country.
Kaufman-Mthimkhulu is a 2017 graduate of Brown University with a degree in Medical Anthropology and Contemplative Studies, and was a 2018 Fullbright Scholar. They describe themselves as a "white, queer, non-binary, disabled, neurodivergent care worker who shows up for their communities as a Disability Justice and Mad Liberation educator and organizer, parent, doula, peer supporter, writer, and conflict intervention facilitator."
***
Thank you for being with us to listen to the podcast and read our articles this year. MIA is funded entirely by reader donations. If you value MIA, please help us continue to survive and grow. To find the Mad in America podcast on your preferred podcast player, click here
Lucas Richert - Psychiatry and the Counterculture
Psychiatric Drug Withdrawal - Setting the Scene
Trailer - Online Town Hall - Psychiatric Drug Withdrawal
Thomas Teo - Fascist Subjectivity and the Subhuman
Piers Gooding - Psychosocial Disability Rights and Digital Mental Health
Jennifer White - Rethinking Suicide Prevention
Tanya Luhrmann - How Culture Influences Voice Hearing
Adele Framer - Surviving Antidepressants
Natalie Campo - Can We Move Toward Mindful Medicine?
Kirk Schneider - Leading Psychology in Existential Times
Rhonda Speight - I Found My Lion's Roar - Combining Peer Support and Open Dialogue
Stuart Shipko - SSRI Withdrawal: Shooting the Odds
Jodi Aman - Anxiety, I'm So Done with You
Nikolas Rose - Psychiatry and the Selves We Might Become
Jussi Valtonen - How to Know What We Don’t Know
Claudia Gold - Embrace the Messiness!
Ian Tucker - Mental Health and Emotion in the Digital Age
Baylissa Frederick - World Benzodiazepine Awareness Day 2020
Jim Wright - World Benzodiazepine Awareness Day 2020
Angela Peacock - Medicating Normal
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Mental Health Insights
MQ Open Mind
Speaking of Suicide
The Suicide Prevention Movement
Depression Talks Podcast