Thursday, July 19, 2007

Caramore’s Top Ten Goals

Counselor and peer relationships at Caramore work to facilitate ten practical skills or traits that can really help someone be terrifically positioned in life.

  1. In our homes and apartments, we stress being an empathetic, compassionate, and considerate housemate that can live well with other people. This includes contributing to every aspect of a functioning house (chores, cleaning (house and yourself), being helpful, and being a full-group-contributor).
  2. We teach the basics of food, nutrition, and portions. This includes having the knowledge and ability to buy, prepare, and consume appropriate foods.
  3. We stress the development of leisure activities—like exercise, going to the YMCA, reading, hobbies, education, art, classes, etc.
  4. We teach and counsel on how to constantly improve on managing illness. This includes everything from medication compliance and awareness, following doctor's orders, attending all appointments and therapies, and gaining continued insight into the nature of the disorder.
  5. We work hard to get everyone understanding their money—how much they have, and where and why they spend it—to always have a budget.
  6. From that budget, saving an appropriate amount is mandated and we do this by making it uncomplicated and easy.
  7. We work hard on facilitating organization of receipts, wage stubs, bank statements, job start dates, and employment information for the myriad of agencies that constantly need information.
  8. We teach the behaviors that employers most desire—like being on-board, eager, cooperative, communicative, and having follow-through and being responsible.
  9. We assist in the paying of close attention to appearance—grooming and properly fitting clothes.
  10. We need people who want to help us and other people—we orientate individuals to think of themselves as peers who specialize in relationships.
D. Cooley

Thursday, June 07, 2007

Brushes With Life Reception

Bill Wyatt

Panzanella, Carrboro's Community-Owned Italian Eatery, presents

Brushes with Life: Art, Artists, & Mental Illness
May 22, 2007 through July 29
Public Reception: Monday, June 11, 5:30 - 7:30pm

The name of this exhibit is also the name of a patient art gallery located on the 3rd floor of the UNC Neurosciences Hospital outside of the Psychotic disorders inpatient unit. It is part of the Schizophrenia Treatment and Evaluation Program (STEP) at UNC, which provides inpatient and outpatient care of people dealing with psychotic symptoms or illnesses such as Schizophrenia or Schizoaffective disorder. The gallery features artwork and poetry from STEP inpatients, clinic outpatients, and clients from Club Nova, a local clubhouse for the mentally ill. The initial goal of the gallery was to give our artists a permanent art space to display their creativity and art to a wider audience. Additionally we hoped to promote art and healing. We also target stigma associated with mental illness demonstrating people with serious mental illnesses such as Schizophrenia, Schizoaffective, and Bipolar disorder can be productive and creative.

"Brushes With Life" has also had numerous traveling shows around the state over the years including the NC Museum of Art and the RDU International Airport. This August the gallery is slated for an exhibit at the Carrboro Art Center. The permanent collection is on display on the 1st floor of UNC Neuroscience Hospital.

This exhibit will also include Peer Tree mirror frames handcrafted by artisans using the traditional techniques of genuine gold leafing and painted finishes. Each frame is a work of art uniquely designed, crafted, and signed by the artist.

The website is www.brusheswithlife.org and the email is stepart@med.unc.edu.

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Environment, Health, and Relationships

“Love is the selfless promotion of the growth of the other.”

Milton Mayeroff

Caramore exists specifically to aide those attempting to recover from psychiatric diseases. Our program is entirely centered on our clients, as individuals, and tailored specifically to meet the unique challenges that each requires beginning recovery. Our program centers on the value of relationships.

At Caramore, recovery means the process of gaining control over one’s illness and life and reshaping one’s own future.

It can happen at Caramore. It can happen when you are surrounded by others who care and strive for your success.

Over the past year Caramore has focused on the following key elements of our client’s lives:

Environment. We’re out to change and improve our environment to order to change the way people think about themselves (photos from program-wide renovations coming soon).

Health. We’ve increased our resources and initiatives surrounding smoking cessation, nutrition, and exercise—all essential to one’s total health and battling mental illness.

Peers. New this year will be peer orientation trainings for clients who begin to work for us. Peers play an invaluable and unique role at Caramore; they are employees who work for us, and at the same time they are friends to all. They are role models who form relationships with other clients—to mentor and guide. They are responsible for nothing short of the success of the others, and take pride in themselves according to the relationships they form.

D. Cooley

Monday, April 02, 2007

Loneliness and isolation

Bowen

A large part of mental illness is battling loneliness and isolation. The residual stigma involved with the illness has resulted in most people in society innocently identifying more with what makes someone with a psychiatric illness different, rather than being able to see what they might have in common.

Mental illness is a very unique and terrible disease. It requires those who suffer from it to admit that they are going to need a lot of help—to admit that they are going to have to rely on others. This disease requires a team of family, therapists, doctors, and friends. At Caramore, everyone is in the same situation.

Battling stigma can be as simple as ending the secrecy of the illness and saying to others “hey look, my friend here has some problems, and we need your compassion and help.” Most people, when asked directly like this, rise to the occasion. People want to help.

The community aspect of Caramore asks our clients to not only be dedicated to their own improvement, but to serve all the others in the group. We realize that our success is interconnected here; and we have to find a way to get there together. We don’t want to fix defects—we want to find unique talents and celebrate them and use them to help others with the illness.

Individuals with mental illness are people who are lonely, want relationships, and want some success in life. They want to feel needed and appreciated and loved. Success in battling this illness demands directly getting others involved, both for themselves and for others.

D. Cooley

Saturday, March 24, 2007

Deinstitutionalization

When you read story after story in the News & Observer chronically pining about deinstitutionalization and the lack of services in the community for the mentally ill, what they’re complaining about is the lack of comprehensive care.

One in four of us will experience some form of psychiatric illness in our lifetime. This statistic alone communicates how widespread and common it is for any of us to fall prey to depression, an eating disorder, anxiety, substance abuse, or a psychotic disorder.

For one in seventeen of us, mental illness will be severe. Severe psychotic illness most frequently comes early in life—in youth, when individuals are their most productive. Not only is the productivity impaired, but the nature of the brain disease also damages insight, cognition, and behavior.

A young person discharged from a hospital after being temporarily stabilized, gets released into the community with no plan, no job skills (never got a chance to learn them with the illness hitting so young), and no rehabilitation focusing on their illness and behavior, is destined to fail.

For all of the limitations of a hospital, it did provide comprehensive care. Caramore provides comprehensive care. Caramore is the community service that people wish existed for the mentally ill.

Caramore attempts to provide comprehensive assistance for as long as it takes. We centralize medication, shelter, food, therapy, and rehabilitation in one place and we do it for the length of time necessary, and to the degree necessary.

There is no cure, but almost all brain diseases can be treated, and part of the treatment requires (along with the traditional model of drugs and doctors) comprehensive and intensive support and rehabilitation. The beauty of Caramore is that it is not a hospital—it’s essentially the real world, with real jobs, real friends, and real apartments. But it provides that underling helpful and watchful guidance. We find that our clients want to be independent—not dependant, and when they gain the maturity and perspective regarding managing their illness, they rise to the occasion, attempting to achieve all that they can, while remaining aware of their illness.

Our model is worth copying in all communities.

D. Cooley