Author: The Fix

  • Dr. Karen Stewart

    Dr. Karen Stewart

    Dr. Karen Stewart is a clinical psychologist who provides comprehensive treatment for clients with sexual dysfunctions, disorders, sex and porn addictions, relationship problems and mental health conditions.

    Introduction and Basic Services

    Dr. Karen Stewart is a renowned clinical psychologist who specializes in the care of adults with sexual dysfunction and disorders. Stewart also provides customized care for individuals struggling with mental health conditions such as depression and anxiety as well as sex and pornography addictions. She has extensive expertise working with both individuals and couples, and provides care at two locations in Santa Monica and Beverly Hills. Stewart does not offer medication management. 

    Education and Background

    Dr. Stewart earned her bachelor’s degree at Michigan State University and both her masters and PsyD at the California School Of Professional Psychology, specializing in family and couples therapy. She has provided expertise on a number of television shows. Her appearances include Good Morning America, CNN, Bravo, The Discovery Channel and FOX Business. Stewart has also been published in Good Housekeeping and Women’s Health. Stewart is also active in the professional therapeutic community, where she frequently speaks at workshops for sexual therapists and continually educates herself on new methods and practices.

    Treatment Protocol

    Dr. Stewart creates a safe space where clients enjoy the freedom to be completely open and honest. Through her genuine kindness and expertise, true healing and empowerment are possible. While Stewart specializes in the treatment of sexual dysfunction and disorders such as a lack of desire, impotence, orgasm disorder, erectile dysfunction, fetishism and paraphilia, she also provides comprehensive care for clients with a range of personal and relationship problems like trauma, infidelity and divorce. Before beginning therapy with Stewart, clients go through an extensive evaluation that helps determine the best possible treatment plan. From there, Stewart designs an individualized strategy tailored to address the person or couple’s specific needs, goals and circumstances.

    Dr. Stewart employs a client-centered, multi-faceted approach rooted in humanistic and psychodynamic methods that explore underlying feelings and their connections to earlier experiences. Depending on the client’s needs, Stewart offers solution-focused therapy that focuses on problem-solving and goal-setting. In addition, she also utilizes holistic practices like meditation, exercise and better breathing. Her versatility benefits clients through an emphasis on empathy, understanding and practical solutions. Clients learn behavioral techniques that make a sustainable recovery possible. As a trusted therapist, Stewart succeeds in breaking down taboo subjects, strengthening relationship bonds and improving intimacy. 

    The Extra Mile 

    Stewart places a premium on accessibility and discretion. With two practice locations, flexible late hours and options for online therapy sessions, clients are given a safe space to work through sensitive issues. Clients will soon be able to connect with Stewart through an upcoming podcast. 

    Summary

    Dr. Karen Stewart is a clinical psychologist that provides comprehensive treatment for clients with sexual dysfunctions, disorders, sex and porn addictions, relationship problems and mental health conditions. A credit to the therapeutic community in Los Angeles Stewart not only treats symptoms but heals the underlying root causes, leaving individuals and couples rejuvenated and empowered. For anyone looking for a sex therapist, Dr. Karen Stewart is one of a kind.

    Dr. Karen Stewart

    Location:

    Santa Monica Office

    3201 Wilshire Blvd Suite 320

    Santa Monica, CA 90403

    424) 272-8659
     

    Beverly Hills Office

    864 S Robertson Blvd Suite 210

    Los Angeles, CA 90035

    (424) 272-8659

    Call for pricing and details
     

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  • 5 Ways To Practice Compassion Among Your Family and Friends Through the Holidays

    5 Ways To Practice Compassion Among Your Family and Friends Through the Holidays

    No matter how you give and give back this holiday season and beyond, stay mindful about those in need.

    The holidays are a time when families come together to celebrate the season of gratitude and while the season is often marked by abundance, it can also be a time of great need.

    It can be easy to assume that everyone is doing well during the holidays, but even in seemingly stable families, there exist struggling college students, extended family who may be going to the food bank for the first time, moms who are secretly going through a divorce and wondering how to get by during the coming year, and family members facing a diagnosis that will require hospitalization.

    Why not use this time together to look for and help your friends and family that could use an extra hand this holiday season?

    Here are five ways to weave compassion – for yourself and others – into the coming holidays.

    1. Check In: Don’t Assume It’s All Okay

    Do you have a friend or family member that you think might be going through something? Check in and ask. Offer to take them out to lunch, send them a card or a text. Make a phone call. You don’t have to pry into their life but be there and listen to what they have to say. The holidays can trigger all kinds of feelings and are a good time to touch base, especially amid the flurry of holiday cards and photos.

    2. Listen to Understand

    There’s a difference between “listen to talk” and “listen to understand.” Listening to understand means you’re actively listening to the other person. You’re not in the “problem solving mindset,” you’re in the “exploration” mindset. Your friend may simply need to talk. Or they might need advice or a second opinion. Whatever it is, you won’t know unless you practice listening to understand. Creating space for those story-telling family members is a great place to start – studies show that recounting stories improves self-esteem in seniors.

    3. Care for Yourself

    Maybe you’re the one who is always there for everyone and always showing up when people need it most, and maybe this year, you’re going through struggles of your own. Tell someone you need to talk and make the time to do it, whether it’s a friend, a family member, a therapist, or counselor. Your needs are valid and important and your family and friends will respect that you know how to ask for and get the help you need to live your best life. Make it the gift you give yourself this year.

    4. Find Causes That Speak To You

    Find nonprofits and causes that you can make an ongoing part of your life. Why? Because when a cause speaks to you, you’re more likely to look for creative ways to help it. When you’re actively involved with a cause you believe in, you’re more likely to talk about it with your friends and encourage them to give back in ways that are meaningful in their lives. Giving Tuesday is just one day, but a great day to start.

    5. Get Organized

    When you know someone who is going through a hardship, like a loved one in the hospital, the birth of a new baby, a sick child, or the death of a loved one, organize your friends and family to help them. This can be done with online tools like Give InKind that help you coordinate financial contributions, calendar tasks, chores, and more on a dedicated page that helps the person in need get exactly what they need. Time spent with family is a great time to pull together and make a plan for supporting someone you love.

    No matter how you give and give back this holiday season and beyond, stay mindful about those in need. May we all be lucky enough to not need, but when we do, may we all have the support of our loved ones and community to help us through.

    Laura Malcolm is the CEO and Founder of the social support network, Give InKind.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Kamala Harris Unveils Mental Health Plan With Charlamagne Tha God

    Kamala Harris Unveils Mental Health Plan With Charlamagne Tha God

    Harris calls for more treatment beds, an end to solitary confinement, and increased access to mental health treatment in her newly released plan.

    Senator Kamala Harris unveiled her new mental health plan in South Carolina this week during an event featuring radio personality/author Charlamagne tha God. Harris sat down with The Breakfast Club host to discuss the state of mental health in America.  

    A Public Policy Failure

    “Probably one of the biggest public policy failures of America is the failure to address mental health and put the resources into it as a priority. The result of that is that people are silently suffering who should never suffer. We have so many children who are experiencing undiagnosed, untreated trauma, whether it is because they’re growing up in a home where there’s violence, which crosses socioeconomic lines, or a community where there’s violence, or growing up in poverty because — let’s be clear — poverty is trauma-inducing,” Harris explained, according to Post and Courier. “All of the behaviors that result from that undiagnosed, untreated trauma are predictable. We’re failing to address it and then where we do address it is in the criminal justice system. We have basically turned jails and prisons into these gigantic mental health facilities without any mental health treatment.”

    Charlamagne then touched on the issue of trauma and how he had to unlearn stigmatizing beliefs regarding who is affected by mental illness.

    “They call it a correctional facility, but what are you really correcting? You’re taking these kids who are already dealing with so much trauma and throwing them in a situation that’s just putting trauma on top of trauma, and then you’re letting them out in the world — if they are blessed enough to come home — and they haven’t dealt with anything,” he said. “I think one of the reasons they don’t get the help they need is because we don’t look at mental health services as something that should be part of a larger healthcare initiative. I didn’t even realize anxiety and depression was considered a mental health issue until I started going to therapy. When you think mental health, you think schizophrenia, you think somebody in a straitjacket, but no, it’s people dealing with these issues every single day and they just don’t have the proper tools and resources to go deal with it.”

    Harris added, “And then we deal with it when it reaches a crisis level. You would never say that we should have a health care system that only deals with stage four cancer.”

    In her new plan, Harris calls for an amendment to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) that would protect healthcare providers who give out patients’ private information if they are acting out of “good faith.”

    Disabled healthcare advocate Kendally Brown tweeted Harris in response to her proposed HIPAA amendments. “I adore you, but eliminating the IMD exclusion would remove the ONE protection mentally ill people have from the state locking them up in institutions long-term. I love that you’re focussing on mental health, but any solution MUST be community based, not institutional.”

    Brown’s stance is a common one among recovery and mental health advocates who fight for patients with addiction and/or mental health issues to make their own healthcare decisions.

    Kamala’s Mental Health Plan

    Here is Harris’s multi-pronged plan to address mental health, according to her campaign website:

    Focus Federal Funding on Needed Mental Health Research

    Kamala will direct federal funds to seek better treatment for mental illness and research on mental health issues more broadly, including research on adults with serious mental illness (SMI) and the use of interventions that reduce homelessness, arrest, incarceration, and unnecessary hospitalization.

    Expand Coverage of and Access to Mental Health Services

    Through her Medicare for All plan, Kamala will deliver mental health on demand via telemedicine, providing care by phone or video to all Americans whenever and wherever they need it—all without deductibles or copays.

    A shortage of mental health professionals harms American families and communities. It also drives provider stress and burnout. Kamala will authorize an educational loan forgiveness program for mental health professionals that agree to practice in areas with a shortage of providers.

    Increase Access to Hospitals, Housing, and Other Care Facilities

    Kamala will double the number of treatment beds nationwide, prioritizing states with shortages, including Iowa, Nevada, South Carolina, and Michigan, so persons with mental illness can receive the high levels of care they need.

    She’ll repeal the Institutions of Mental Disease (IMD) exclusion, which precludes Medicaid funding for adults receiving care in psychiatric facilities with more than 16 beds and has exacerbated a severe shortage of acute psychiatric care beds nationwide.

    Focus on Vulnerable Populations

    Double US Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs (VA) research dollars to address and treat PTSD, military sexual trauma, and traumatic brain injury.

    Invest in evidence-based screenings for childhood trauma—including the fact that poverty is trauma-inducing—to diagnose and treat mental illness as early as possible.

    End the Mental-Illness-to-Jail Pipeline

    Kamala will expand Crisis Intervention Team training, which integrates specialized police, mental health professionals, EMS, 911 systems, and hospital emergency rooms in response to mental health crisis calls.

    You can read more about Harris’s plan here.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • The Situation Talks Sobriety, Helping Those In Active Addiction

    The Situation Talks Sobriety, Helping Those In Active Addiction

    “We want to shed light on the fact that there are positive stories out there — we do recover. Most importantly, the comeback is truly greater than the setback.”

    Mike “The Situation” Sorrentino has had an intense year. He spent majority of 2019 in prison over tax evasion charges and more recently he and his wife revealed that they suffered a miscarriage. The Jersey Shore star opened up about his rough year in a new interview.

    “Those important principles that I learned are what helped us get through prison and through the most recent situation with my wife and a bit of a complication we had, so I guess everything in life happens for a reason,” he told PEOPLE.

    Four Years Sober

    Sorrentino who is now four years sober is doing his part to give back to others by partnering with treatment centers to spread awareness about addiction.

    “We want to shed light on the fact that there are positive stories out there — we do recover,” he explained. “Most importantly, the comeback is truly greater than the setback.”

    He continued, “I was in a treatment center and I was really just sort of sick and tired. I was desperate for results. I really wanted to be able to look in the mirror again and make myself proud, I wanted to make my mother proud. So I just made a promise to myself for there to be no excuses, for me to do the best I can to absorb as much as I could in rehab and practice those principles in my everyday life, and for me to stay on the road to recovery no matter what. Ever since then, I’ve continued being my best self, and now I’m living my best life and teaching others to do the same.”

    Light At The End Of The Tunnel

    Sorrentino battled an addiction to prescription painkillers over a three-year period that culminated in two separate stints in rehab. With the support of his wife Lauren Pesce and other supporters, the 37-year-old has been able to maintain his sobriety through the extreme lows.

    “There is a light at the end of the tunnel, but don’t forget that light is you,” Sorrentino said. “The only person that can fix your life is the person in the mirror. In active recovery, there are no excuses. You never want to get off the road to recovery. It’s really about going one day at a time for the rest of your life.”

    The Situation is not the only member of The Jersey Shore cast to get sober. Earlier this year, Ronnie Ortiz-Magro announced that he was entering rehab for alcoholism and depression.

    “I decided to go to treatment because I wanted to be a better person, a better father for my daughter,” he explained to US Weekly. “Eventually, all the bad decisions I was making were going to lead me to places I didn’t want to be. I wanted to be led to the place that I am now – that’s happy, healthy, and the best role model for my daughter.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Harry Styles Recalls Using Magic Mushrooms While Recording New Album

    Harry Styles Recalls Using Magic Mushrooms While Recording New Album

    “My thing with drugs is that if you’re taking anything to escape or to try and hide from stuff then you shouldn’t even drink. But if you’re taking anything to have fun and be creative, then great.”

    Former One Direction star Harry Styles is on the road promoting his upcomg sophomore effort, Fine Line, which is slated for release on December 13. Recently, Styles sat down with Zane Lowe for an interview on his Apple TV show, New Music Daily, where he discussed the recording process and his adventures with magic mushrooms.

    “Making this record, I just felt so much more joyous. I felt safe,” Styles explained to Lowe. Styles said that he doesn’t usually indulge in alcohol or drugs while he’s working but he felt safe among friends in Malibu. He decided that it was time to do some experimenting. 

    “My thing with drugs is that if you’re taking anything to escape or to try and hide from stuff then you shouldn’t even drink. But if you’re taking anything to have fun and be creative, then great. I was with my friends and making an album, you get in your head and you hit these bumps in the road…sometimes you take something and you don’t worry about it. It’s kind of stress-relieving in a sense,” Styles shared.

    Recording On Shrooms

    The 25-year-old hearthrob first opened up about his experience recording on shrooms in a Rolling Stone profile this past August.

    “We’d do mushrooms, lie down on the grass, and listen to Paul McCartney’s Ram in the sunshine,” he says of the Malibu location where he recorded his new album. “We’d just turn the speakers into the yard. You’d hear the blender going, and think, ‘So we’re all having frozen margaritas at 10 a.m. this morning.’”

    Styles highlights a corner of the room where a now-infamous accident occurred while he was tripping.

    “This is where I was standing when we were doing mushrooms and I bit off the tip of my tongue. So I was trying to sing with all this blood gushing out of my mouth. So many fond memories, this place.”

    Styles pointed out that he purposefully avoided drugs and heavy drinking while in One Direction because he didn’t want to destroy the band. 

    “When I was in the band, to me it felt like it was so much bigger than any of us; I felt, I’m not going to be the one who fucked it up,” Styles said. “So I was like, I’m not going to do any of that stuff. So I was like, now is the time in my life when you probably want to go out and experiment.”

    Back in 2017, Styles told The Sun, “On the first couple of tours it was so exciting as we’d have a drink and go to parties. But for me, the albums got higher so they become harder to sing so I knew if I didn’t come off stage and go to bed I wouldn’t be able to sing the next night. Also, it’s just not for me. I’d rather wake up with a clear head. I’m not straight edge or anything – I’ll celebrate and hang out with friends when it’s the right time. But I like knowing I’m not going to be stressing about having to do something the next day.”

    Liam’s Battle

    Styles’ former One Direction bandmate Liam Payne has been open about his heavy alcohol use during the height of the band’s fame. Payne spoke to Men’s Health Australia about using alcohol to deal with the stress of being mega famous.

    “It’s almost like putting the Disney costume on before you step up on stage and underneath the Disney costume I was pissed (drunk) quite a lot of the time because there was no other way to get your head around what was going on,” he said. “I mean, it was fun. We had an absolute blast, but there were certain parts of it where it just got a little bit toxic.”

    “It’s difficult when you have the level of fame that we had in the band,” he told Men’s Health. “There have been a lot of people in trouble with mental health that aren’t really getting the help that they need and I think that’s a bit of a problem in our industry. It’s the same shit that happens to everyone, that’s been happening since the ’70s. You know what the traps are and if you are lucky enough, like me, to be able to get out of that scenario and back into a sense of normality, then you know it’s a bit different.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • "Frozen 2" Star Kristen Bell Talks Depression, Anxiety

    "Frozen 2" Star Kristen Bell Talks Depression, Anxiety

    “I’m like ‘bubbles, glitter!’ No, it’s not always that way. I am someone who takes a medication for her anxiety and depression.”

    Kristen Bell is in a good place. Her new movie Frozen 2 debuted at number one arround the world, bringing in an estimated $350 million globally, according to The Hollywood Reporter. During a press tour for the hit movie, Bell opened up about mental health.

    In a Sunday Sitdown interview with Willie Geist, Bell got candid about living with mental illness.

    Living With Depression In The Public Eye

    “The last few years you’ve been very open about anxiety and depression and things you struggle with that so many people in this world suffer with and I think they think there’s some shame in it,” Geist said to the Veronica Mars actress, “But if they see Kristen Bell, who projects — even sitting right here — she’s happy, she’s smart, she’s bubbly.”

    Bell was quick to add that while she may appear happy all the time, it’s not always the case.

    “I’m like ‘bubbles, glitter!’ No, it’s not always that way. I am someone who takes a medication for her anxiety and depression. I am someone who has to check myself and sometimes — if I’m feeling really low — make a checklist of good and bad things in my life to see if it’s my mental state or if we really have a problem,” Bell shared. “And me talking about that actually came from — ugh, I hate to give him credit for everything, it’s so annoying that he’s so right about everything.”

    Encouragement From Dax

    Bell’s husband actor/podcaster Dax Shepard is famously open about his past drug use and subsequent sobriety. 

    “He was like ‘Why don’t you talk about your anxiety and depression?’ and I had never thought about that before. And I immediately felt incredibly irresponsible,” she said.

    Bell then began publicly discussing her struggles with depression and anxiety during interviews. 

    Bell went in-depth about her mental health in a 2016 interview with Sam Jones for an episode of Off Air With Sam Jones.

    “I’m extremely co-dependent. I shatter a little bit when I think people don’t like me,” Bell explained. “That’s part of why I lead with kindness and I compensate by being very bubbly all the time because it really hurts my feelings when I know I’m not liked. And I know that’s not very healthy and I fight it all the time.”

    She also revealed some advice that her mother gave her when she was experiencing mental health issues at age 18.

    “[My mom’s] a nurse and she had the wherewithal to recognize that in herself when she was feeling it and when I was 18 said, ‘If you start to feel like you are twisting things around you, and you feel like there is no sunlight around you, and you are paralyzed with fear, this is what it is and here’s how you can help yourself,” Bell said.

     

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • On the Other Side of Addiction, Only Love Remains

    On the Other Side of Addiction, Only Love Remains

    I knew that when we divorced I had abdicated my rights to the family. But I still loved him as I had since childhood.

    In my darker moments I’d search the obituaries for his name.

    Orlando Reyes Jimenez

    Preparing to grieve my ex-husband’s death had become familiar; a routine performed in solitude. My procedure was always the same. I’d fill his favorite silver mug with chamomile tea and type his name into a search engine. I would scroll the death notices and inhale the steam; it smelled of sunlight and grass. I would wrap my hands around his mug until the tea grew cold. After four years I still hadn’t found an obituary but I knew he could be dead. I knew he had been homeless. I knew his health was spiraling downward. I suspected he still drank heavily. I was tired of the shame and silence that surrounded loving him. Alcoholism overshadowed his life. I did not want it to overshadow his death.

    My Second Family

    At the end of our ten-year marriage I had become terrified that he’d die. Almost daily I would help him to bed after whiskey binges led him to black out. He never remembered the way he crawled down the hallway and how I turned him on his side so he wouldn’t choke on his vomit. In the mornings I’d wipe his clammy forehead and smooth his black bangs. His thick hair still curled at the ends just as it had when we met. We were just kids then, only 12 years old. 

    During our teens I spent so much time at his house that his parents and brothers became my second family. His mom fed me bowls of molé with tortillas while his dad and I discussed books and music deep into the twilight. By the time we got married in our twenties, the wedding ceremony made formal what we had known all along: we were family. In our twenties we partied, but I assumed it was just a college thing. I grew out of it and into graduate school. 

    By the time I began teaching college and seeing music therapy clients his party binges had turned into daily drinking. He began punching holes in the walls of our apartment. When I confronted him, he began to hide his drinking. A drunk driving arrest led to rehab and a year of sobriety. But he relapsed and refused help. He began verbally abusing me. I contracted my world around him until the threat of physical violence became obvious. Eventually I got counseling and spiritual advising and we divorced. I no longer sat with his mom and dad at the kitchen table.

    But Orlando and I stayed in touch. After all, we had been friends since seventh grade. He’d call and tell me about his homelessness, his ejection from a halfway house for being drunk. I remarried, moved, and built a healthy life. The gap between our lives widened. After a few years he stopped calling.

    A Way to Feel Connected

    I began my search for his obituary. 

    My search began as a way to feel connected to him. All typical social contact had been severed by both the divorce and his behavior. At first, acquaintances had fallen away after his violent outbursts in public. Then friends stopped calling after he borrowed money and didn’t pay it back. Even his siblings seemed to become disillusioned after he passed out during a backyard barbecue in front of his nieces. By the time we divorced his family had taken over his care and I dropped out of contact with them. United in our love for him, yet fearing for his life, we seemed to retreat from each other as if disconnecting would help us move forward. 

    When his phone calls stopped and he dropped off social media, I was shadowed by the sense of him wandering the world alone. I would picture him drunk and in constant danger of an accident or cumulation of uncontrolled diabetes keeping him a hair’s breadth from death. I could no longer turn him on his side and wipe his forehead. My search became the only way I could care for him. 

    Each time I didn’t find an obituary, it meant there was still a chance he was alive. 

    Six years after our divorce, his family sent me an email. Orlando had died from a pulmonary embolism, just four days from what would have been our eighteenth wedding anniversary. They did not invite me to the funeral or burial and I craved a way to externalize my grief. I sent a request to the Michigan coroner for his death certificate. When it arrived a few weeks later, I went into my garden and read it repeatedly as in ritual. The cause of death was listed as accidental. I tried not to imagine what had happened. I ran my fingers along the coroner’s signature as if the letters could connect me to everyone who loved Orlando.

    I Needed a Place to Put My Pain

    Most family written death notices are quite simple, and I’m not sure why his family didn’t write one. Perhaps their grief was too heavy to share publicly. Perhaps they were ashamed of him. Or maybe it just wasn’t a meaningful part of their grieving process. It wasn’t the length of the obituary I needed, nor its ability to express the complexity of his life. It was the simple and public recognition that he had existed. That his life warranted notice. The grieving process needs two things: solitude and community. An obituary would have allowed me the feeling of sharing my loss with others. I knew that when we divorced I had abdicated my rights to the family. But I still loved him as I had since childhood. I needed a place to put my pain.

    So I once again returned to brewing chamomile tea in his favorite mug, a silver travel mug that was the only thing of his I’d kept after our divorce. I would cup my hands around its rotund shape and for a moment feel his warmth again. I opened my computer, but instead of typing his name into the search engine, I typed it across the top of a new document. I wrote all the words I had searched for. I gave him an obituary. 

    Jimenez, Orlando Reyes, 42, of Waukegan died on August 20, 2016 at a hospital in Detroit. His death was ruled accidental. Orlando will be remembered for the way he loved to make people laugh and for his engulfing hugs. He is survived by his parents, two brothers, and two nieces. He is also survived by his ex-wife, his childhood sweetheart. She continues to use his favorite silver mug in which she brews tea that smells of summer and hope. In lieu of flowers please forgive the addiction and remember the soul. On the other side of addiction only love remains. 

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Amazon Customer Finds Baggie Of Drugs In Shipment

    Amazon Customer Finds Baggie Of Drugs In Shipment

    An Amazon Prime customer is outraged at the company’s response to accidentally sending him drugs in a recent shipment.

    When Vishal Solanki ordered a drawing set for his eight-year-old niece on Amazon, he had no idea what he was in for. When the gift arrived, Solanki discovered a small colorful baggie of drugs in the shipment and was taken aback.

    “The baggie of pills dropped out of the box the art set was in,” Solanki told Newsweek. “If my niece has opened the box and thought I had put some candy in there and she digested them, it would be a whole other conversation.”

    Solanki then reached out to Amazon’s customer support and explained the situation.

    “When I pulled the box out a small plastic baggie fell out of the package and to my utter shock and dismay, I picked it up and it’s a small bag of drugs!!” Solanki wrote in the email. “I want to know why this bag of drugs was in a children’s toy and secondly, what do you intend to do about it as I am extremely furious and upset!!”

    He was dismayed at their “cookie cutter” response and apology for what he perceived as a very dangerous accident.

    “I’m sorry to hear about the problem with the item received,” said the email from Amazon which Solanki gave to Newsweek. “At Amazon, customer satisfaction is something that we take very seriously and would never compromise under any circumstances. Unfortunately, sometimes unavoidable mistakes happen.”

    “We want our customers to have a happy and trust worthy shipping experience with us, we feel so sorry that we were not able to fulfill your expectations for this level of service,” the email noted. “In this case it is with great regret for us to know that we have not met our standard.”

    Solanki then took to Facebook to tell others about Amazon’s mistake. 

    I am posting this as an AWARENESS to all people who order from @amazon as a safety precaution. I ordered an Art Set from Amazon for my 8 year-old niece. I am a paying Prime Member #AmazonPrimeMember and like always, Amazon delivered next day to my door. Normally when I order a gift, I do not open it, I just wrap it in the box and give it to the person. Since the Art Set came in an unmarked box, I wanted to ensure that it was in fact what I had ordered. I cut open the box and what fell out of the box shocked me and has me extremely disturbed and upset!!

    I slid out the Art Set and something fell and hit my foot. I thought it was a piece of styrofoam. When I looked down, I noticed a small baggie. After I looked at it for a second, I realized that it was a small baggie of drugs! Yes DRUGS!!! I was floored!! I didn’t know what to do in that moment. I asked my girlfriend to examine the baggie as I was in shock. She confirmed that it was indeed a bag of multiple kinds of pills.

    I immediately sent @amazon an email to express my concern and dismay and the only thing I got from them was a “cookie cutter” email apologizing for sending the “wrong product” and that they were shipping me a new Art Set as a resolution. I mean that’s it?! They did not even READ the email! Somehow, within Amazon’s supply chain, this bag of drugs was inserted into the packaging of the Art Set meant for a child! And again, all I got in return was a “cookie cutter” email apologizing for sending the wrong item? What if I had not opened it and my niece thought it was candy and ate it?

    What if I had not opened it and my niece thought it was candy and ate it? What if it was your child who opened it and had an overdose or worse?! I am absolutely pissed off, angry, shocked and annoyed. As the holidays are approaching just be aware to check your packages. What’s even more shocking is that @Amazon did not even care and has brushed it off. What would you do??? I am also contacting to Police to report this as well as the media. In addition, please share this with anyone you know who uses Amazon, Amazon Prime or any of Amazon’s services. #AmazonPrimeMember@ Vaughan, Ontario

    Solanki told Newsweek: “I’m not looking for fame or anything from this. Just want to spread awareness for people to be careful during the holidays. Packages are arriving from all over the world!”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Kirstie Alley Shares Hot Take On Psychiatric Meds

    Kirstie Alley Shares Hot Take On Psychiatric Meds

    The “Cheers” actress had a lively discussion about psychiatric medication on Twitter over the weekend. 

    Actress Kirstie Alley’s Twitter feed has been the topic of debate over her controversial tweets on psychiatric drugs.

    Before her Sunday hot take on psychiatry, Alley shared a heartfelt revelation on the popular app. The Cheers actress opened up about what she does with the money she used to spend on cocaine back when she was battling an addiction to the drug. 

    “For u who don’t know much about me, I used to be a coke head,” Alley who is now 40 years drug-free tweeted on Thursday. “I quit drugs in 1979 & vowed to spend the same $ weekly on flowers that I’d spent on drugs.”

    The 66-year-old added, “I buy & arrange my own flowers as a gift to MYSELF. I buy them in the grocery store.”

    Alley’s fans congratulated the actress for her four decades of being drug-free and shared their own sober tales. A couple days later, Alley upset some Twitter users when she called into question the prevalence of psychiatric drugs. 

    Hot Takes

    “Does anyone else worry about how unconscious we are being rendered by pharmaceutical drugs? Is anyone else concerned that we are the most psych drugged country on the planet? I tell you what, if I was an evil dictator & wanted to control a society, I would drug them into apathy,” Alley tweeted on Sunday. 

    Her tweet received mixed reviews from her followers, with some lauding Alley, a long-time Scientologist, for speaking out against what she perceives as an overall overprescription of psychiatric drugs. Alley’s views echo those of Tom Cruise, inarguably the world’s most famous living Scientologist.

    Cruise caught a wave of backlash from mental health experts and patients after proclaiming his disdain for psych meds in a now-infamous 2005 interview with Matt Lauer.

    “I’ve never agreed with psychiatry, ever,” Cruise said. “Before I was a Scientologist I never agreed with psychiatry, and when I started studying the history of psychiatry, I understood more and more why I didn’t believe in psychology.”

    Prior to the Lauer interview, Cruise had taken Brooke Shields to task with accusations that she was “promoting” antidepressants by saying that the medication Paxil helped her deal with postpartum depression.

    “As far as the Brooke Shields thing, look, you have to understand, I really care about Brooke Shields – she’s a wonderful and talented woman, and I want her to do well, and I know psychiatry is a pseudoscience,” Cruise stated. “The thing that I’m saying about Brooke is that there’s misinformation, okay. And she doesn’t understand the history of psychiatry. She doesn’t understand in the same way that you don’t understand it, Matt.”

    “There’s No Such Thing As A Chemical Balance”

    Cruise went on to denounce the prescription of Ritalin to children and suggested that “vitamins and exercise” could resolve personal issues. 

     “Drugs are not the answer,” said Cruise. “I think there’s a better quality of life.”

    Shields responded to Cruise’s comments in an interview with People

    “I agree with him about his feeling on prescribing drugs to kids. We are in accord,” she said. “I don’t think Ritalin should be prescribed to kids. Postpartum depression is a different matter. I think I’m more qualified to talk about that (than he is).”

    According to Shields, Cruise offered her a “heartfelt apology” in 2006 for bringing her into his psychiatric debate.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Ex-Kiss Guitarist Ace Frehley Details Phone Call That Made Him Get Sober

    Ex-Kiss Guitarist Ace Frehley Details Phone Call That Made Him Get Sober

    “She goes, ‘Dad, it’s time to stop.’ She goes, ‘You better call your sponsor and tell them to take you to a meeting tonight.’”

    In an interview with Eddie Trunk, ex-Kiss guitarist Ace Frehley opened up about getting sober and the unlikely phone call that helped him realize it was time to get help.

    Frehley, who has been sober for 13, revealed on SiriusXm’s Eddie Trunk Live!, that he first used alcohol at the age of 13 and didn’t stop until he got a life-changing phone call in 2006.

    The Call That Changed His Life

    “I ended up with five girls in my room in Vegas. I think I kept it going for another month. And then I got a phone call from my daughter, Monique, and she was living in Florida at the time,” he detailed, according to Ultimate Classic Rock

    “A lot of alcoholics talk about how they had that moment of clarity… Monique called me up and she goes, ‘Dad, I heard you been drinking again.’ I go, ‘Yeah, but I haven’t done anything else bad, you know? I haven’t done any coke yet, I haven’t done any pills.’ She goes, ‘Dad, it’s time to stop.’ She goes, ‘You better call your sponsor and tell them to take you to a meeting tonight.’”

    Frehley took her words to heart and after a few beats he relented.

    “I looked in the mirror and I looked like shit. I just said to her, ‘Alright, honey, I’ll give Jimmy a call.’ … he came and picked me up right after dinner, he took me to my first meeting, and that was 13 years ago,” Frehley said. “He’s like my guardian angel on earth; I got a lot of them floating around me – after 10 car accidents, someone’s got to be helping me!”

    His fans have expressed their gratitude to Frehley for being so forthcoming about his sobriety.

    “[E]very time I perform a concert I usually have meet-and-greets after the show… at least one person comes up to me and says, ‘Ace, I’ve been sober two years,’ ‘Ace, I’ve been sober five years,’” Frehley shared. “I’m helping people live longer lives, more fruitful lives, because I’m a power of example. Go figure!”

    Other Kiss Members

    Back in 2017, Frehley’s former Kiss bandmate Gene Simmons, who’s no stranger to controversy, said in an interview with the Chicago Tribune that he attributres his success to the fact that he does not imbibe.

    “I’ve never done drugs or alcohol, never smoked cigarettes, so my soul is intact,” Simmons told reporter Allison Steward. Drummer Peter Criss battled cocaine addiction during the band’s peak and beyond but hasn’t taken drugs since 1984

     

    View the original article at thefix.com