Tag: kelly burch

  • The Lumineers Explore Alcoholism In Jarring Music Video

    The Lumineers Explore Alcoholism In Jarring Music Video

    The storyline for the video was inspired in part by frontman Wesley Schultz’s own experience with a loved one living with alcoholism. 

    The newest music video from The Lumineers shows the heartbreak and destruction brought about by alcoholism, as it follows the path of fictional Gloria Sparks, a woman whose alcoholism destroys her family

    “Gloria” is the first song released from The Lumineers’ upcoming album III, which follows three generations of the fictional Sparks family. In the music video, Gloria is seen drinking around her infant, fighting with her spouse, and ultimately leaving the scene of a car accident that she caused.

    The storyline that plays out in the “Gloria” video was inspired in part by frontman Wesley Schultz’s own experience with a loved one living with alcoholism. 

    “Gloria is an addict,” Schultz told Variety. “No amount of love or resources could save her. She’s now been homeless for over a year. Loving an addict is like standing among the crashing waves, trying to bend the will of the sea.”

    Schultz didn’t specify what his relationships was with the addict in his family, but he did mention that he had intimate experience with addiction.

    “So many people are touched by addiction, way more than is talked about,” he said. “It’s a lot like cancer in that it is this way too common thing in our culture.”

    Through dealing with his family member, he realized how powerful addiction is, he said. 

    “Trying to love an addict out of drinking, or put them in rehab, or using any resource you have to get them through it, everything we tried failed miserably,” he said. “We tried to put her in rehab almost a half dozen times overall, and nothing worked. We tried all of these spots for her to succeed in and ‘beat this addiction,’ but it’s become a really humbling experience. That whole willpower thing was thrown out the window really quickly.”

    When Schultz opened up about his experience loving someone with alcoholism, he connected with other people with similar stories, which helped him create the storyline for “Gloria.” 

    “I get a lot of common ground with people that I never knew were dealing with anything like that, so that part has been eye opening,” he said. “It does feel like there’s this force beyond you and beyond the person you care about that is at work and at play, and no matter what you do, it seems like the disease is going to do what it wants to do and takes over this person you really care about. You’re with them through the ups and downs.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Presidential Candidate Seth Moulton Wants Mental Health Screening To Be Routine

    Presidential Candidate Seth Moulton Wants Mental Health Screening To Be Routine

    Moulton, who served in Iraq, has been open about his own mental health struggles.

    Presidential candidate Seth Moulton wants to make annual mental health screenings part of routine care, both for active duty military members and American high schoolers as part of his plan to prioritize mental health care. 

    Moulton, who served in Iraq with the United States Marine Corps, has been open about his own mental health struggles.

    “There is still this stigma against mental health care,” he said in March. “Post-traumatic stress is very real. I have had post-traumatic stress and I have a lot of friends who have had it. And I have lost two Marines in my platoon since we have been back.”

    Because of his personal experience, he knows how important proper treatment of mental health is. 

    “Post traumatic stress is a great example of a mental issue that is curable,” said Moulton, who currently represents Massachusetts in the House of Representatives. “I know a lot of vets who have gotten through post-traumatic stress, including myself. So we can fix this, but we need to be investing in it and we are not.”

    This week, Moulton formally released his mental health plan. It calls for making annual mental health screenings standard for military service members and high school students. It would also introduce mindfulness training for both of these groups. 

    “Mindfulness training is preventative medicine as pioneered today by the special operations community and other elite units,” Moulton wrote. 

    In addition, Moulton would establish 511, national mental health hotline. 

    “Mental health is a core component of overall health: it strengthens our economy and country,” Moulton wrote. “Serious mental illness costs America up to $193 billion in lost earnings per year, and touches everyone in America directly or indirectly. We must do everything we can to protect mental health coverage in this country, and that means protecting this coverage from the current administration’s efforts to undermine these essential health benefits.”

    Although his plan focuses heavily on service members and veterans, Moulton said that it’s important to remember that mental health affects all members of society. 

    “We must recognize that mental health matters to everyone. We all have personally dealt with mental health challenges, or have a family member, friend, or co-worker who has dealt with them, whether we know it or not,” he wrote. “High schoolers today are particularly at risk; in addition to the traditional anxieties of being a teenager, they face scrutiny on social media and live in a time of school shootings—all of them should get the support and care they need.”

    That starts with talking openly about mental wellbeing. 

    “We need to make sure that we all can discuss our mental health and get whatever help we may need,” Moulton said. “That is why I am telling my own story, encouraging others to tell theirs.”

    View the original article at thefix.com