National Alliance on Mental Illness       

Illinois' Voice on Mental Illness - NAMI Illinois


Home ] Up ]

 

Up
Activities
Recovery
Meetings
CC Bylaws
Word Explosion

 

 

 

Becoming Empowered as Consumers

"Consumers" in the mental health field refers to people who have or are in recovery from a serious mental illness.  Recovery is about getting better from mental illness and reclaiming control of your life. 

Consumer empowerment is a process of recovery, hope and healing for people who have been diagnosed with a mental illness.  Consumers live personal struggles and journeys of recovery and empowerment.  

Recovery and empowerment are not the privilege of a few exceptional consumer leaders.  Instead they are a possibility for each person who has been diagnosed with a mental illness. 

You have a place where they can turn.  That place is NAMI and the Consumer Council.

 

The Recovery Corner  

Art and Recovery 

Submitted by Moe Mansur

People with mental illness and their families need some recreational therapy to brighten their day.  By focusing on something to do that is classic and fun, you tend to focus on the positives instead of the negatives.  My hope is you will focus on being creative by coloring these pictures and raising your self-esteem.

It helped me!

You can view and print Moe's pictures in PDF format with the free Adobe Acrobat Reader.

Click the Adobe graphic if you don't happen to have it already installed.

get adobe reader

 

Click the links below to access, print and color these great pictures submitted by Moe.  It may take several minutes for each pictures to load.  

Picture #1    Picture #2     Picture #3        Picture #4    Picture #5    Picture #6

 

ART AND BIPOLAR DISORDER

MOTESEM MANSUR, THE ARTIST, IN HIS OWN WORDS:

“ART HAS HELPED ME TO CALM MY THOUGHTS DOWN AND MY MOOD SWINGS. IT FEELS LIKE AN AIR CONDITIONER DURING A HEAT WAVE, IT PROVIDES SOME SORT OF RELIEF TO ME. WHEN I'M DEPRESSED, I CAN'T NECESSARILY WRITE WORDS DOWN, INSTEAD I DRAW UNTIL I FEEL A LOT MORE RELAXED AND NOT AS EXHAUSTED. WHEN MANIA INCREASES AND FANTASIES CONTROL ME I DRAW EXACTLY WHAT I'M THINKING IN A CARTOONISH FORMAT, USUALLY IT IS A FORM OF SHELTER THAT IS ECCENTRIC TO OTHERS. IT HAS MADE ME A MORE SUCCESSFUL HUMAN BEING IN A WAY AND CREATED SOME SORT OF POPULARITY. WHEN PEOPLE ASK ME TO DRAW A BUILDING, I SMILE ABOUT IT. YOU CAN SAY THAT IT IMPROVED MY COMMUNICATION WITH SOCIETY, IN A BIG WAY.”  

IN DECEMBER 2006, MOTESEM MANSUR WON SECOND PLACE IN A CHRISTMAS CARD CONTEST HELD AT A REHAB CENTER. IN OCTOBER 2007, HE HELD AN ART EXHIBIT. MOTESEM IS ALSO A SUCCESSFUL AUTHOR.  

FOR DRAWINGS, POSTERS, REQUESTS, OR QUESTIONS, PLEASE EMAIL MOTESEM AT moe8600@gmail.com.

 

By The Roaring Fire  

I remember those always-cold winter nights

By the big, roaring fire in our stone fireplace.

Even the sprinkling of heaven’s stars was cold.

We had only ourselves for warmth besides that fire.

 

A family of six--two parents, four young kids,

We would bundle up under multi-layered blankets

Of a huge, king-sized mattress on the frosty floor,

Against the dead cold of a dying central furnace.

 

Our strong father was a big bear of a man,

Our mother was pretty as a color photograph.

We three sons bore his handsome facial features.

Our little sister was as attractive as our Mom.

 

It was maple sugar time in Mom’s old-time Vermont

Which we always celebrated at home in Chicago .

We had collected purely-driven powdered snow for

Our imported New England brown maple syrup.

 

The taste of that melting snow on wooden plates

Was as sweet as the love radiating from our parents.

It just didn’t matter if our family couldn’t afford

To pay the heating bill for our central heater.

 

That day was warm enough in love for summer,

Bodies huddled and cuddled together against

The lasting cold of winter’s abiding day.

But with each other close, we all felt it not.

 

That big stone fireplace is long gone now, the

One-family house replaced by new four-flat.

No longer do we face the winter’s cold together.

But the memories still linger, raising the spirits.

 

Allen F. McNair

04/20/03  

Allen will recite this poem in the Thresholds Theater Arts production, "When I Was Little, I Believed In...Once Upon a Time."  The production, which consists of personal stories by and about mental health consumers, will be held at the Theater Building, 1225 W. Belmont (Belmont near Racine) in Chicago, IL.  "When I Was Little...." will be performed April 21, 23, 27, 28, 30, May 4, 5 and 7 at 7:00 pm as well as April 22, 29, and May 6 at 10:30 am matinees.   

 

 

My Story - Expect Recovery

As a consumer with schizoaffective disorder (for 27 years), Diana knew all too well the needs of consumers and family members. Through her employment for eight years at NAMI Texas (and much support and education), she reached a level of wellness that she is very proud of.  In October of 2007, she left NAMI   Texas to pursue her own business and reach her potential and dreams: EXPECT RECOVERY!

Read the article about Diana Kern that appeared in summer 2007 issue of Schizophrenia Digest and visit her website www.expectrecovery.com

 

 

A Journey Toward Overall Mental, Physical and Spiritual Wellbeing and Health

Even in Darkness a Light Glimmers  

First diagnosed with a mental illness in 1989, I considered, at the time, I would be serving a death sentence for life. With that in mind, I then proceeded to make my prediction come true in the many self-destructive ways of coping I used which had been a way of life throughout my childhood and adolescence, but now became even more risky.

 In 1991, I began what I call my hospital hopping years, a four-year stint of being shepherded from one hospital to another with no time on the “outside”. During this time, I began to write poetry, draw and continued journaling as a means to try to more healthfully express myself, though the self-destructive manners of coping were still prominent.

 As I have looked back upon those years of struggle to survive me, I discovered that in all the darkness there was an underlying theme of light, sometimes so dim it was barely seen, but still it was there. Thus, I have found that somewhere inside me, there was hope and that is what folk who worked with me in positive ways and pushed me and challenged me saw in me…the hidden hope.

 Thus, my belief in recovery for all in their time, in their way…just as those who worked for me and with me challenged me and waited patiently for me to find my way.

 My hope is that you find the light within you, even when the darkness seems to block out the light…

 It is always there…even if dimly lit                             -Connie C.

 

“The more light you allow within you, the brighter the world you live in will be”

-Shakti Gawain

 

 

What is your story of wellness and recovery?

Send your art, articles, poetry, and information related to wellness, recovery, and NAMI happenings that is specific to consumers and of interest to others to Connie Clark, CC Acting Chair at clarkbar1959us@yahoo.com or by postal mail to: Connie Clark, CC Recovery Corner, C/O NAMI IL, 218 Lawrence Avenue , Springfield IL 62704

Submissions can be made anytime. The deadlines for submissions into The NAMI Illinois Stateline to Connie are as follows:

May 15th for the June newsletter

August 15th for the September newsletter

November 15th for the December newsletter