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Archive for April, 2012

Occupy Psychiatry: Women & Mental Health

Posted on: April 26th, 2012 by Nellie's No Comments

Following the development of Nellie’s Women and Mental Health position paper in 2010, Nellies has continued to be active in the advancement of a trauma-informed framework and education regarding  Women, Trauma and Mental Health.

In 2010 members of the Social Justice Committee attended the Psych Out Conference at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education here in Toronto. Rebecca Rogers and Meghan Hogg gave a presentation on how Nellie’s has developed and implemented a trauma-informed framework and how other organizations could benefit from adopting one as well. In 2011 the Psych Out Conference was held in New York City and Meghan Hogg attended to engage in a dialogue about how this model can continue to be used to resist the medicalization of women’s experiences.

On May 6, 2012 at 1:00pm, the Coalition Against Psychiatric Assault is organizing Occupy Psychiatry: A nonviolent action during which survivors and activists will occupy the front grounds of the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, where shock treatment is still occurring today.

The location is 250 College St (near College and Spadina). There will be speeches, testimonies, food and entertainment in protest of psychiatric imperialism.  We are participating in this action in solidarity with Boycott Normal: Occupy Psychiatric Association in Philadelphia in an effort to have global resistance to psychiatry. The organizers of this rally list many reasons for this day:  fraudulent diagnoses, the discredited medical model of “mental illness,” and harmful “treatments” such as ECT (electroshock or electroconvulsive therapy) and drugging (chemical lobotomies,)

For more information on Occupy Psychiatry, please visit the facebook event page here.

Meet our Wednesday Night Supper Drop-In Volunteers

Posted on: April 19th, 2012 by Nellie's No Comments

Wednesday nights, the women and children from Nellie’s Community enjoy a fresh, home-cooked meal at our Supper Drop-In Program.  This delicious meal would not be possible without the support of our wonderful and talented volunteers: Michel, Suzane, Anna, Kiki, and Nu. Our volunteers prepare and cook the food, decorate the space, serve the food, and help clean up after the program is finished.

Thanks to the amazing cooking talents of our volunteers, the menu is always filled with exciting, fresh and healthy foods such as quinoa salad, lentil patties, vegetable quesadillas, chicken a la Orange, BBQ pork, grilled zucchini and portabello mushrooms and warm pears baked with cinnamon and brown sugar. YUM! Whenever we’re celebrating a special event, special food from that culture is prepared.

(Michel, Suzane, Anna, and Kiki)
Pictured here: Michel has been a volunteer for 2 months, Suzane has been with us for 1 year, and Anna and Kiki (former placements students at Nellie’s).

Nellie’s Celebrates our Volunteers for National Volunteer Week!

Posted on: April 17th, 2012 by Nellie's No Comments

This week, April 15th – 21st is National Volunteer Week!  Established in 1994,  National Volunteer Week is an opportunity for Canadian’s to recognize the 12.5 million volunteers who graciously donate their time and energy to make our country and the world a better place.

At Nellie’s, our volunteers are an integral part of our day-to-day operations.  Whether helping us with fundraising and administrative duties or working directly with women to ensure that their experience at Nellie’s is a great one, we could not do the work we do without them.

This week we’d like to introduce you to some of our volunteers and the amazing things they do to support the women and children at Nellie’s!

Every Tuesday Clara, Jolene, Patricia and Nutu come to help Adriana with our Tuesday Supper Surprise Food Drop-In Program.  Once the food donations arrive from Second Harvest, our volunteers unload, sort,pack and handout between 60 and 70 individual bags every week for the women.

(Clara, Jolene, Patricia, Nutu, and staff Adriana)

Clara was formerly a placement student at Nellie’s and continues to volunteer her time with us.  Jolene has been volunteering for Nellie’s for 2 years, Nutu has been volunteering for 3 years, and Patricia has been volunteering for 1 year. 

Poverty Has A Woman’s Face

Posted on: April 12th, 2012 by Nellie's No Comments

1 in 7 women in Canada live in poverty. Women earn just 76% of a man’s wage. More often than not women who are poor are faced with choosing between paying their rent or feeding their children.

Nowhere else is this more evident than at Nellie’s. In 2008, Nellie’s delivered 1,331 meals through our weekly food program –“Supper Surprise”. Last year, that number hit 1,810 – a 26 per cent increase, with an average of 71 families relying on this program for weekly food supplements.

                       

What does Poverty look like for the clients at Nellies? This is what women had to say at W.E.A.V our Women Ending Violence Support Group

  • “Working everyday 2 or even 3 jobs and we don’t make enough to put food on our table every day.”
  • “Sometimes I don’t eat dinner—that way my kids have enough.”
  • “Poverty, struggling to survive, trying to stay alive.”
  • “Homeless, living on the street, trying to find something to eat.”
  • “Depressed, angry, hungry, frustrated, lonely and isolated.”
  • “You can’t get money and you can’t find a job and that’s sad.”

Many factors cause women’s poverty including: lack of access to education, opportunities, childcare and fair income, sex-role stereotypes in paid work, changes in family composition such as divorce, health, violence and abuse, leaving gainful employment to caregive, and greater risk and increased poverty for women who are Aboriginal, non-white, disAbled or queer.

Women as the face of poverty results in children who are poor. Poverty among children is strongly linked to ill-health and poor academic achievement. By keeping women poor, we are also keeping children poor, making them sick, sabotaging their futures, contributing to crime, and perpetuating the cycle of poverty and violence. We need to work together to effect change social changes that will help not just some, but all women and children to succeed.

This October Run & Walk to End Violence Against Women.

Posted on: April 11th, 2012 by Nellie's No Comments

It’s April, the sun is shining, the runners and walkers are out every morning and evening, and it’s time to start planning for the 2012 race season!

This year, Team Nellie’s is back with a bigger fundraising goal ($20,000) and we are looking for some new members to join us as we run and walk to End Violence Against Women. 

(Anna is back for her second year running the half-marathon for Nellie’s.)

Despite the fact that the most dangerous time for a woman in an abusive relationship is right before she tries to leave, in 2011 over 167 women made the brave decision to leave their homes and come to Nellie’s in search of a brighter future.  The money raised by our team members will go to support critical programs and services such as emergency shelter, counselling, support groups, educational programs, advocacy, and food access.

(Adriana running along the highway during the half-marathon.)

Last year our amazing team helped us raise over $11,000 for Nellie’s and this year we’ve almost doubled our goal to $20,000.  We would love for you to join us this year!  Please e-mail info@nellies.org or give us call at 416-461-0769 if you would like more information about the race.  Remember, if you commit to raising $250 or more, your race entry is free!

(Team Member Pedro enjoying the taste of victory at the end of the half-marathon!)

For the most up-to-date information about Team Nellie’s at the Toronto Waterfront Marathon, please visit our Charity Challenge Facebook page here or follow us on twitter here.