Author: The Fix

  • Prince Harry, Ed Sheeran Team Up To Bring Awareness To Gingers, er, Mental Health

    Prince Harry, Ed Sheeran Team Up To Bring Awareness To Gingers, er, Mental Health

    Their mental health awareness video starts with a gag—Sheeran “mistakenly” believing their team-up was to bring ginger awareness.

    Prince Harry and musician Ed Sheeran teamed up to bring awareness to Mental Health Day, October 10, taking a moment to run a gag about their shared hair color. On a video shared to both of their Instagram accounts, Sheeran seems to have “mistaken” the purpose of their get-together.

    “Really excited today,” Sheeran says in what looks like a behind-the-scenes interview. “I’m gonna go and, uh, film a thing with Prince Harry. (He) contacted me about doing a charity video with him, which is gonna be good. I’ve long admired him from afar.”

    A Great Misunderstanding

    Prince Harry pushes along the misunderstanding with ambiguous comments.

    “This, for me, is a subject and a conversation that’s just not talked about enough,” said Prince Harry. “I mean, people all over the world are really suffering.”

    The two then start to write a song, but soon their misunderstanding becomes evident.

    “People just don’t understand what it’s like for people like us,” Sheeran says in the video. “The jokes and the snide comments, and I just feel like it’s time we stood up and said, ‘We’re not going to take this anymore. We’re ginger, and we’re going to fight.’”

    Prince Harry then tries to set the record straight.

    World Mental Health Day

    “Um, OK,” he says to Sheeran. “Slightly awkward. This might have been maybe a miscommunication, but this is about World Mental Health Day.”

    Sheeran tries to play it off.

    “Oh, yeah, yeah. Of course. No, no. I definitely knew that,” he says, deleting the phrase “GINGERS UNITE” from the document draft on his laptop.

    The pair get back on message after the gag, encouraging everyone to be aware of those around them who might be struggling with mental health issues.

    “Guys, this World Mental Health Day, reach out, make sure that your friends, strangers, look out for anybody that might be suffering in silence,” Prince Harry tells viewers with Sheeran sitting by his side. “We’re all in this together.”

    Prince Harry has been an advocate for mental health, struggling himself as he grappled with the sudden death of his mother, Princess Diana, as a child.

    “My way of dealing with it was sticking my head in the sand, refusing to ever think about my mum, because why would that help?” he told The Telegraph in a 2017 interview. “It’s only going to make you sad; it’s not going to bring her back. So, from an emotional side, I was like ‘Right, don’t ever let your emotions be part of anything.’ So, I was a typical sort of 20, 25, 28-year-old running around going ‘Life is great’, or ‘Life is fine’ and that was exactly it.”

    Recently, Prince Harry has set his sights on the popular video game Fortnite, which he blasts as addictive and irresponsible.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Demi Lovato In Mourning After Friend's Death: "Addiction Is No Joke"

    Demi Lovato In Mourning After Friend's Death: "Addiction Is No Joke"

    An overdose survivor herself, the singer also encouraged her fans to seek help if they or someone they know is struggling with a substance use disorder.

    Demi Lovato posted a tribute to her friend Thomas last Wednesday after he passed away following a long struggle with addiction. The “Sober” singer revealed on her Instagram Stories that she was “devastated” by her friend’s death, sharing a black-and-white photo of the young man.

    “Please hold your loved ones tight. Tell them they are special and that you love them,” she wrote. “Make sure they know it. RIP to my boo @sirtruss.”

    An overdose survivor herself, the singer also encouraged her fans to seek help if they or someone they know is struggling with a substance use disorder.

    “Addiction is NO joke,” she said. “Heaven gained this beautiful angel last night because of that terrible disease. I’m crushed and will always miss you @sirtruss. If you or someone you know is struggling please know it’s okay to ask for help.”

    Sharing Her Own Addiction Struggles

    Lovato suffered a near-fatal overdose in July 2018 after years of struggling with addiction, bipolar disorder and an eating disorder. She spoke out on these issues and her overdose on social media in the following month, thanking her fans for standing by her while she fought to regain her health.

    “I have always been transparent about my journey with addiction. What I’ve learned is that this illness is not something that disappears or fades with time. It is something I must continue to overcome and have not done yet,” Lovato wrote in an Instagram post. “The love you have all shown me will never be forgotten and I look forward to the day where I can say I came out on the other side. I will keep fighting.”

    Living With Bulimia & Bipolar Disorder

    Around the one-year anniversary of her overdose, sources close to Lovato reported to People that she was doing well, focusing on her health and spending time with friends. This was just months after she blasted reporters for commenting on her “fuller figure” in spite of the fact that she had been previously open about her struggles with disordered eating.

    “I AM MORE THAN MY WEIGHT,” she wrote alongside a screenshot of the article.

    In August, it was revealed that Lovato will be returning to acting as part of the cast of Eurovision, a Netflix original movie and comedy centered around the European song competition. She will also have a guest role on the final season of Will & Grace. At the same time, she dropped hints that she’s working on her music and a new album is on the way.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Benzos Need To Be Part Of Overdose Discussions

    Benzos Need To Be Part Of Overdose Discussions

    Even under a doctor’s supervision, benzodiazepines can be dangerous and highly addictive.

    With much of the national discourse and resources directed at the opioid epidemic, doctors are warning that people need to be aware of the dangers of benzodiazepines. 

    Dr. Chinazo O. Cunningham, a professor at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, told CNN that benzos—which include Xanax, Ativan and Kolonpin—are contributing to the overdose crisis in the country. 

    The Opioid and … Overdose Epidemic

    “It’s really not ‘the opioid overdose epidemic’ but the ‘opioid and …’ overdose epidemic,” Cunningham said. “It’s not just one substance, here. The focus has been on opioids but we need to expand the way that we’re thinking about it.”

    Dr. Sumit Agarwal, of Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital, has seen benzo prescriptions become much more widespread for a variety of patients. 

    “I think most of our attention has been on the opioid epidemic and for good reason, but I think benzodiazepines have flown under the radar,” Agarwal said.

    Cunningham has conducted research that shows that the amount of benzodiazepine medicine in a prescription doubled between 1996 and 2013. During the same period, overall prescribing of benzos increased 67%.

    ”I think many of us feel that if we don’t turn our attention to benzodiazepines, if we ignore this pattern that we’re beginning to see, we may very well find ourselves in the same position that we have with opioids,” said Cunningham. 

    Benzo Access

    Dr. Anna Lembke, medical director of addiction medicine at Stanford University, said that benzos are becoming part of the culture in a way that can be dangerous. That’s in part because of easy access to the powerful drugs. 

    “There’s increased availability and increased access, not just through prescriptions but through illicit sources,” she said. “You’ve got this popularization of Xanax in culture and in music, and the availability (of benzodiazepines) on the dark web—all of that is part of the growing problem.”

    Lembke pointed out that even when they are used under a doctor’s supervision, benzos can be very dangerous and highly addictive. 

    “The problem is in the long term, they lead to more problems than they solve,” she said. “People develop a tolerance, and they need more and more to get the same effect. They develop a dependence, finding when they don’t take them their anxiety is worse. And they think, ‘Oh, I need it because I have an anxiety disorder,’ but in many instances they’re actually medicating withdrawal from the last dose, so you can get into this vicious cycle. If they worked long term there would be nothing wrong with it, but they don’t and then they cause all kinds of harm.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • The Perils of Dating While Sober

    The Perils of Dating While Sober

    I am acutely aware of how careful I am to minimize my recovery journey when I first start dating someone.

    A few months ago, a male friend and I were talking about the frustrations and disappointments of dating. I mentioned how lonely it can be navigating this world on my own, without a traveling companion, a long-term lover, or a hiking partner, without someone with whom to Netflix and chill on a rainy Sunday.

    He said, “Dating is complicated for everyone, but for you, with your history? I can only imagine. Maybe guys are afraid of you, afraid of your intelligence and strength.” He hesitated and then continued, “Or maybe they’re just afraid to get close because of your bipolar diagnosis and…well, you’re an alcoholic. So a drink in a bar is out. Your history makes them wary. It’s going to take someone special, someone who’s willing to accept that risk and all your baggage.”

    All Your Baggage

    All your baggage. My old shame rose up, and his words fell on me like a one-hundred story building collapsing, cinder block by cinder block, The only words I could say in clipped retort? 

    “It’s called alcohol-use disorder now,” I said. “Update your vocabulary.”

    For days I replayed his assessment in a loop, an auto-play rumination and in self-defense, even wrote out a bulleted response:

    • Men afraid of me? Seriously? Maybe he’s afraid of my brain, but I’m afraid of his brawn. I’ve been sexually assaulted twice by two different men. Statistics show that women are more likely to be harassed and assaulted and raped—their lives endangered—by men than vice versa. 
    • I’m on a low dose of lithium now, and eight years stable and on an even keel since my divorce. My psychiatrist thinks I may not really be bipolar, or that maybe my bipolar instability was triggered by the conditions of my marriage.
    • And on dating apps, so many men post pictures swigging beer, wine, and booze and list beer, wine, and booze as hobbies. Almost always the first message they send is, “Do you want to get a drink?” And when I suggest a walk, a museum, non-boozy meetup? They disappear.
    • No drama, no crazies, no baggage: an oft-repeated list of No’s on dating profiles, but then these men (perhaps women do this, too?) indicate that they are married and looking for discretion, no strings attached; they also like to post photos of bloodsport: bare chested with AK-15’s and dead animals. But no drama!
    • And finally, too risky to love me? I’m a safe bet now! Look at the evidence: Sober, stable, all my s*** sorted!

    Doth the lady protest too much? Might my bulleted explanation be my armor against latent shame? Because what I am admitting to in my list is that I am lovable only now that I am well, and that when I was unwell? I was unlovable. 

    Love Is an Inherently Risky Proposition

    “I stopped loving you when you got sick,” my ex-husband told me when we decided to divorce, and it’s what I have secretly believed for so long. Hence, my adamant insistence that I am well, well, well and have been now for years, years, years. 

    But this narrative—I am such a scary person to love that it will take someone with extra-special love powers to love me—is one that no one with any diagnosis or at any stage of recovery should ever buy into. Love is an inherently risky proposition. We are at our most vulnerable when we love, trusting our hopes and fears to each other. And there is always the risk of love’s end, but, too, always the possibility of love’s beginnings, its growing and expanding.

    And yet, finding our way to a beginning of love with someone can be daunting and terrifying as we have to negotiate our commitment to honesty, open-mindedness, and willingness. We must reconcile that old shame that rises up, sometimes in ripples, sometimes in waves, when we summarize our histories or share how we still struggle with one day at a time with a new partner. I am acutely aware of how careful I am to minimize my recovery journey when I first start dating someone.

    “Oh,” I might say, “I stopped drinking because I wanted to live a healthier life, and for a few years I struggled with depression, but it’s all good now. Really, all good now.” Again that adamant insistence, again that background noise in my head: If he can fall in love with me now in all my lovableness, then none of my previous unlovableness will matter. Of course, even for those who have not struggled with mental illness or alcohol or substance use disorders, it is impossible for “all” to be forever good.

    “Really Crazy”

    I recently ended a relationship with someone after two months of mostly happy, breezy fun but I realized I’d been dodging my shame. When we first met, he mentioned early on that his ex-wife was bipolar. “Really crazy,” he said, and gave me a look that put me on notice.

    So I casually mentioned to him that I had bipolar as well, but “Stabilized!” I said, with a giant calm smile plastered across my face, and I even fluttered my eyelashes in flirty dismissal.

    He said he could see I was in a “good place” and not at all like his ex. And because I want the world to believe that I am in a good place (and most days I am), I nodded in enthusiastic agreement. 

    But then, a few weeks later, he mentioned that my town was known for the State Psychiatric Hospital, opened in the 1840’s and now shuttered. 

    “Have you ever been there?” I asked, because it is now a tourist stop—The Walking Dead once filmed a scene at the mostly abandoned grounds and there are historical markers describing the troubling treatment of the mentally ill across its almost 150 year history.

    “No,” he said, immediately and with a laugh. “I’m not one of the crazies.”

    Of course, during a period of my own instability, I was once one of those “crazies,” in and out of a psychiatric hospital. He knew this by now, though maybe because I “presented” as so very very well, he couldn’t believe that was part of my history.

    To be fair, he made these comments casually, without malice, the kind of talk that generally surrounds those of us who suffer from mental illnesses or who are on a recovery journey. They were the kind of comments I often hear because most people assume, by looking at me and my “got it all together life,” that I am one of them, i.e., “not crazy.”

    But even if his comment was thoughtless, I felt that old shame rise up and stayed silent because I didn’t want him to suddenly see me as sick, and hence unlovable, and consequently maybe leave this beginning of us. So I made a silly remark about ghosts who must surely haunt those grounds. 

    No bulleted list at the ready but here’s what I should have said:

    “It’s hurtful to hear you call someone with my diagnosis ‘really crazy,’ and to call those in treatment ‘crazies.’ We all have our baggage, don’t we? We live and stumble and get up and try to live better, always. All of us.”

    But his remarks and my silence unsettled me. How easy it is for me to talk the talk, but how hard it can be to walk the walk. A few weeks later, I ended this beginning because, yes, I have baggage, and it is not just a free carry-on roller bag, but one of those $20K vintage Louis Vuitton trunks that have drawers and a hanger rod, room enough for my pain and my joy, my mistakes and my amends, my shame and my wisdom. 

    That is, a trunk big enough to carry all my necessities for this continuing journey.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Woman Arrested After Asking Cops To Test Her Meth

    Woman Arrested After Asking Cops To Test Her Meth

    It’s not the first time that a person has contacted law enforcement to test their drugs.

    A woman from Alabama is in jail after she called police requesting that they come test her meth for purity. 

    When officers arrived, the woman pulled a bag of meth from a container of baby wipes and told the officers, “I want this dope tested,” according to The News Courier

    Stephen Young, public information officer for the Limestone County Sheriff’s Office, said that the officers then talked to the woman’s neighbor, who described her as “acting strangely.” The landlord believed she may have been on drugs. 

    The woman, Jennifer Colyne Hall, 48, confirmed that she had taken the drugs in the bag, but she didn’t know when. Police arrested her and charged her with possession of a controlled substance. Her bail was set at $2,500. 

    Florida Man Tried To Press Charges Against Dealer For Bad Reaction To Drugs

    The story might seem unbelievable, but it’s not the first time that a person has contacted law enforcement to test their drugs. Last year, a Florida man was arrested after he called police asking to have his meth tested. Douglas Peter Kelly had a bad reaction to the drugs and wanted to “press charges” against the dealer who sold it to him. 

    “In an effort to ensure the quality of the drug the suspect purchased, detectives told Kelly if he came to the sheriff’s office they could test the narcotic he purchased,” the Putnam County Sheriff’s Office later wrote on Facebook.

    Kelly was charged with possession and set at $2,500 bail. The sheriff’s office then posted this tongue-in-cheek message: “If you believe you were sold bad drugs, we are offering a free service to test them for you. Our detectives are always ready to assist anyone who believes they were misled in their illegal drug purchase.”

    Police Department’s Offer To “Test” Drugs Met With Criticism

    Earlier this year a Pennsylvania police officer received backlash for posting an offer on Facebook to “test” people’s drugs. The post from the Wilson Borough State Constable’s Office read:

    “If you have recently purchased meth in Northampton, Monroe, Lehigh or Bucks Counties, it may be contaminated with the Influenza Virus… Please bring all of it to your local Police Department and they will test it for free,” the post read, according to The Morning Call. “If you’re not comfortable driving to your local Police Department, You can contact my Office and an officer or deputy will be glad to come to you and test your Meth in the privacy of your home.”

    The post was later removed, in part because of outcry about it being inappropriate. 

    “The field doesn’t need misguided information or misguided attempts to change what is going on,” said Timothy Munsch, who works as executive director of the Lehigh Valley Drug and Alcohol Intake Unit.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Arizona Backs Out Of Purdue Settlement

    Arizona Backs Out Of Purdue Settlement

    Arizona’s attorney general indicated that in light of new information, the $3 billion that the Sacklers had agreed to pay is not enough.

    States have been split on whether or not to accept a $12 billion opioid settlement with Purdue Pharma. Now, Arizona has become the first state to switch positions, backing out of the deal that it had previously agreed to.

    Major Withdrawal Triggers States To Rethink Settlement

    The move comes after court documents emerged indicating that the Sackler family, which owns Purdue, withdrew as much as $13 billion from the company. The family says that the withdrawals were used to pay taxes and were later invested in companies that the family will sell as part of the settlement.

    However, Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich indicated that in light of the new information, the $3 billion that the Sacklers had agreed to pay is not enough, according to Reuters

    “It’s in everyone’s best interest to secure a just and timely settlement. Purdue and the Sackler family need to take responsibility for their role in the opioid crisis,” Brnovich said in a statement.

    Other States May Follow In Arizona’s Footsteps

    Arizona’s change of position means that the majority of states now oppose the settlement. Two states—Kentucky and Oklahoma—have reached their own settlements with Purdue, but of the remaining 48 states, 25 are not in agreement about the settlement. 

    Last month, when the settlement was announced, Brnovich said that it was “was the quickest and surest way to get immediate relief for Arizona and for the communities that have been harmed by the opioid crisis and the actions of the Sackler family,” according to CNN

    However, the new revelation that the Sacklers’ profits was more than triple the amount initially reported made him second-guess the settlement. The family “sought to undermine material terms of the deal,” Brnovich said in court fillings on Monday. 

    Although Arizona is not a state typically associated with a high rate of opioid overdose, Brnovich has been aggressively pursuing both Purdue and the Sackler family. In August, he announced a lawsuit that goes directly to the Supreme Court, in which the state alleges that the Sacklers took money from Purdue in order to avoid paying out damages. 

    “These transfers all took place at times when company officials, including the Sacklers, were keenly aware that Purdue was facing massive financial liabilities and that these transfers could prevent it from satisfying eventual judgments,” the suit argues

    “We want the Supreme Court to make sure that we hold accountable those individuals who are responsible for this epidemic,” Brnovich told The New York Times in August. “We allege that the Sacklers have siphoned billions of dollars from Purdue in recent years. They did this while knowing the company was facing massive financial liabilities.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Netflix's "The Politician" Criticized For Its Depiction Of Suicide

    Netflix's "The Politician" Criticized For Its Depiction Of Suicide

    Mental health advocates worry that the way the show handles suicide could lead to imitative behavior amongst the vulnerable.

    The new Netflix series, The Politician, is receiving backlash from mental health organizations because of how the show depicts suicide.

    The Politician, starring Ben Platt, is the latest series from Ryan Murphy (Glee, American Horror Story, Pose). Platt plays a high school kid who wants to become president of the United States one day, and his ambitions begin when he tries to become student body president. In the first episode, one of Platt’s political rivals takes his life.

    Trigger Warning

    The show includes a trigger warning, which reads: “The Politician is a comedy about moxie, ambition, and getting what you want at all costs. But for those who struggle with their mental health, some elements may be disturbing. Viewer discretion is advised.”

    Yet the Mental Health Foundation has openly criticized this warning to the media. Chris O’Sullivan, an executive at the UK-based Mental Health Foundation, told The Telegraph, “TV dramas naturally want to explore and sometimes to dramatize distress. Trigger warnings can be part of such programming but they should be sincere. They don’t provide a license to then show gratuitously distressing content, content that presents a stigmatizing view of distress or content that romanticizes suicide, shows details of methods, which can increase the risk of copycat behavior.”

    Concern Over Life Imitating Art

    Ged Flynn, an executive at the PAPYRUS anti-suicide charity, is also concerned about the show, feeling that its graphic depiction of suicide “can, and often does, lead to imitative behavior. People who produce such imagery must weigh up the consequences before putting their work before the public, particularly young people and those who may be vulnerable.”

    Digital Spy reports that Netflix consulted with the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention when the show was in production.

    The streaming service also came under fire for the depiction of suicide in the series 13 Reasons Why.

    In 2017, Netflix added a trigger warning at the beginning of 13 Reasons Why after the show received negative feedback from people who thought the show could cause a “contagion effect” and potentially inspire teens to take their lives.

    Netflix told BuzzFeed that they used the trigger warning “as an extra precaution for those about to start the series,” and that they also “strengthened the messaging” on their trigger warnings as well.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • School Districts Sue Juul

    School Districts Sue Juul

    “We’re tired of companies that just want to make money at children’s expense,” one superintendent told The Boston Globe

    Educators and administrators in school districts across the country are scrambling to help prevent and respond to the use of e-cigarette use among students, often on school premises. Now, three school districts are suing the largest maker of e-cigarettes, alleging that the manufacturer should pay damages for affecting young students. 

    Olathe Public Schools in Kansas, Three Village Central School District in New York, Francis Howell School District in Missouri and La Conner School District in Washington state are suing Juul. The lawsuits were announced Monday and Tuesday (Oct. 7-8). 

    Juul Accused Of Marketing To Teens

    La Conner School District superintendent Whitney Meissner told The Boston Globe, “We’re tired of companies that just want to make money at children’s expense.”

    The lawsuits allege that Juul intentionally and illegally marketed its e-cigarette pods to teenagers. One of the lawsuits argues that Juul is “taking a page from big tobacco’s playbook” by developing “a product and marketing strategy that sought to portray its e-cigarette products as trendsetting, stylish and used by the type of people teenagers look up to,” The New York Times reported.

    Jonathan Kieffer, of the law firm Wagstaff & Cartmell in Kansas City, Missouri, is representing three of the school districts. He expects to see many other districts filing similar lawsuits. 

    The First Of Many Lawsuits

    “The lawsuits that we filed… were the first in what we fully anticipate will be many, many more to follow in the coming weeks and months as many school districts have decided to go on the offensive to combat the epidemic of youth vaping in the nation’s schools,” said Kieffer. “America’s schools are truly on the front lines of this epidemic, which has crossed all geographic and demographic lines and is increasing at an alarming rate in all regions of the country and impacting urban, suburban and rural schools.”

    Forty percent of high school seniors in New York state have used nicotine vapes, according to 2019 data. More than a quarter of high schoolers have used vapes within the past 30 days. Kieffer said that schools have had to install new technology, hire staff and spend money educating parents and students about the dangers of vaping. 

    Superintendent Blames Vaping’s Popularity On Marketing

    The massive popularity of vapes is in part due to the marketing of companies like Juul, which controls the vast majority of the U.S. e-cigarette market, said John Allison, superintendent of Olathe Public Schools.

    “As smart as our students are, they don’t understand the long-term ramifications of vaping and the amount of addictive chemicals they are dealing with,” he said. “It’s our role to protect our students today and in the future.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Sesame Street Tackles Addiction With Help From New Muppet Karli

    Sesame Street Tackles Addiction With Help From New Muppet Karli

    Karli was introduced this year as a muppet in foster care who is living with her “for-now parents” while her mother is in treatment.

    It’s not easy explaining substance use disorder to a child. But in the upcoming season 50 of Sesame Street, the children’s show approaches the sensitive subject with Karli, a new muppet who is in foster care.

    Karli was introduced in May as part of the Sesame Street in Communities initiative, which is aimed at helping families navigate difficult subjects with kids like autism, divorce and homelessness.

    Karli was introduced this year as a muppet in foster care who is living with her “for-now parents” Dalia and Clem while her mommy is away. “Karli’s mommy has been having a hard time, so we are her foster parents or her for-now-parents,” Dalia explained in a video titled “You Belong.”

    “We will keep her safe until her mommy can take care of her again.”

    Karli’s Mom Returns

    In a clip from September, we learn that Karli’s mom is back. “Elmo knows that Karli’s mommy was away for a while. But now she’s back,” Elmo says, sitting next to his dad on a park bench. “Karli’s mommy looks and acts different than she did before.”

    When Elmo asks why she had to go away, his dad replies, “Karli’s mommy has a kind of sickness. And she had to get some help.” He continued, “Karli’s mommy has a disease called addiction. Addiction makes people feel like they need a grown up drink called alcohol or another kind of drug to feel okay. That can make a person act strange in ways they can’t control.”

    Elmo pauses, then asks, “But, why doesn’t she just stop?”

    His dad explains, “It’s not something you can just stop doing. Not without help from the right grown ups.”

    Karli’s Mom Goes To Support Meetings

    We learn more about Karli’s mom in a recent clip, where she and Chris (the nephew of Gordon and Susan, two original residents of Sesame Street) explain to Elmo that her mom goes to meetings to talk about her problems.

    Chris says, “Karli’s mom has been having a hard time, so in order to help her get better, she goes to a meeting with her group. They all sit in a circle.”

    Karli adds, “They talk about grown-up problems. She goes every day so that she stays healthy. You see, well, my mom needs help learning to take better care of herself so she talks to people with the same problem.”

    Resources For Parents, Guardians

    Karli reveals that she also goes to “a special kids only meeting. Our parents all have the same problem.”

    The Sesame Street in Communities website offers a range of resources covering other topics like traumatic experiences, self-care and community violence.

    Check out their resources about Parental Addiction here.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Dax Shepard & Kristen Bell Talk Sober Parenting, Wine Memes

    Dax Shepard & Kristen Bell Talk Sober Parenting, Wine Memes

    The celebrity couple discussed “mommy juice,” vacationing with others who imbibe and wine memes in a recent interview. 

    Celebrity couple Kristen Bell and Dax Shepard spoke of parenting without relying on alcohol to relax and making the “wine mom” memes work for them while living mostly sober lives in an interview with HuffPost.

    Shepard himself has been totally sober since 2004, and while Bell still has an occasional drink, she doesn’t imbibe as much as her friends. Shepard does get jealous sometimes, though.

    “We vacation almost exclusively with three other families who all have kids, and certainly at night, I’m super jealous of them because I’m like, f**k yeah I would love to drink something that turned down the volume of everyone in this house,” Shepard explained. “So I’m a little bit jealous in the evenings.”

    But then the hangover-free morning comes.

    “At 6:45 when we’re all up, I’m like, Oh I’m crushing right now. I feel great. And they’re miserable. And those voices are three times as loud with a hangover.”

    Shepard is trying to focus on the positives, such as those high-energy mornings with his young kids Delta Bell and Lincoln.

    Wine Memes In Online Parenting Communities

    Kristin Bell, meanwhile, may not drink every day, but she’s found a way to relate to the “mommy juice” memes that online parenting communities love.

    “So, the wine memes, for me, they’re all-encompassing in the fact that they represent, ‘Remember that you’re an adult. It’s OK if your kids are stressful and annoying. It’s OK to take time for yourself,’” she said. “But to me, that doesn’t necessarily ever mean alcohol.”

    Instead of always turning to alcohol, Bell finds comfort and stress relief in her husband.

    “I personally don’t have wine every day, but my wine is Netflix and cuddling with my husband or our date night.”

    Dax Doesn’t Mind Being Around People While They Drink

    Embracing a sober or mostly-sober lifestyle has spread into something of a trend, with an increasing number of celebrities trying it out. Bell and Shepard have been at the forefront, often speaking out about the benefits and challenges. Thankfully, their friends have been supportive and Shepard doesn’t find it difficult when others drink around him.

    “Dax has never been triggered by people drinking around him,” said Bell. “In fact, our friends are usually sensitive to it, and they look to me like, ‘Is it OK if I pour myself a drink?’ And Dax will notice and say, ’Oh no listen, I lost my privilege of drinking, but you didn’t lose your privilege. I think you should have a drink.′ So I’m very lucky there.

    View the original article at thefix.com