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Welcome to the Leadership21 blog, an ongoing conversation on mental health, civil rights and social justice. Posting on the blog are twelve young mental health advocates who comprise the L21 commitee, and anything goes--the personal, the political, the cultural, whatever! We hope that you'll check out what's here, and make some comments, and please know that if you're concerned about anonymity, you can comment anonymously. We hope that what you read, and what you contribute, will make you want to return regularly, because to our knowledge, there really isn't anything out there that has the potential to engage people on so many levels about mental health. But we need "outsiders" like you to make it grow into a robust, contagious online blog. So thanks for coming, welcome to the conversation, and please, pass it on--L21

Saturday, July 7, 2007

Awareness at the Sandwich Shop


So--I'm on the Cape--tis lovely. And I was going to get a sandwich at this place Box Lunch which is a bit of a chain on the Cape--they make this wonderful sandwich called the gilded lily made of crab meat salad and avocado--AMAZING. So I ordered my sandwich and was schmying around the shop waiting for it to be ready, and saw that near the bathrooms, the owners had set up clipping about a local kid, college age, perhaps related to them, who knows, who was killed by cops after he, in a psychotic state, shot into a police station and led them on a chase. He was having a severe mental breakdown, and it was written up in the papers. Then his family created a little monument to him, and after a month the cops took it down, and this caused a bit of a local controversy. Point is this: next to the newspaper clippings, there was a large picture of the young guy, a totally "normal" attractive kid, and there was a poem his sister wrote about his death, and there was information about mental illness, suicide, and what to do if you or someone you know needs help. And I just thought it was so great, and brave, for the Box Lunch to take this opportunity to do some mental health awareness in their community.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

It's encouraging to read that small towns like the one on the Cape are actually taking a stand to educate and de-stigmatize mental illness. It's too bad that more communities are reluctant to behave in such positive and informative ways. Go Cape Cod!

Alison Malmon said...

You're right, it is incredibly encouraging to see something like that posted. I feel like more and more we see 'clippings' of young people who die by suicide, but rarely is the connection made between suicide and a potential mental health disorder. It leads so many suicide survivors to have even less understanding; and so many people who see their loved ones in trouble not to do anything because they don't truly understand the consequences. Public articles and postings like the one in this sandwich shop really help to educate the general public about the connections, and close that gap. Kudos to everyone willing to stand up for this issue.