"Most people believe a connection is something they earn by being “good enough” when it is really something they develop by being willing enough." #StartWithHello TRUE. (Sandy Hook Promise) But, you also can lead a horse to water. We, Sandy Hook CenTer came to Newtown having survived 9/11, and losing a beloved friend/and soon partner. We came with assistance of strong connections- heads of studios, the family behind NYC’s Highline/ $900m Starbucks infusion, heads of agencies, and heads of industry. 30yr connections actually. Start With Hello. Sandy Hook Promise was created with assistance from Barack Obama- told to me by Joe Biden’s camp as they (along with the then First Lady) helped Sandy Hook CenTer. Created in the form of Dunblane Centre and in honor of the UK’s swift and decisive action of #GunReform within a year. We also honored the 26lives senselessly taken, and wanted to support the bereaved. As you know our loss is great, and resulting Trauma/PTSD profound. Start with Hello. Start with DECENCY. Supporting the fight of #GunViolence should not require an elitist fraternity of having a dead child/loved one. It should consist of empathy and standing up to violence. But, certainly if it does require loss of life/ offering.. our helping Sandy Hook 24/7 since 2012 took us away from our own lives and away from obligatory cares. The result, a suicide attempt by one who’s since become disabled from a lack of oxygen, and an actual death of a preventable undiagnosed killer disease. Start with hello, start with decency. Our VERY existence was to prevent what happened to Sydney Aiello, Calvin Desir, and Jeremy Richman. We, at Sandy Hook CenTer have been treated without any decency and utter disregard. AND everyone of you- EVERYONE of you should’ve rallied beside us.. because if you were in Sandy Hook from the Friday Night Vigil until the memorial coming down.. you saw us caring for you all in your time of need. It’s ok to be vigilant- it’s preferred. But, we’ve published our resume- so to speak, and offered our references... We are all on the same side and should stand united. Parkland took the House. Parkland will take the Senate. Parkland stands united. And we should all be ashamed at our lack of humanity. In addition to losing my baby sister- who was considered my child. I’ve also lost her 6y/o boy, and 3y/o girl. Mark my words, their will be no empathy- only defensiveness and probable block. WE CAN change the world if WE learn from Parkland. Connection Is a Core Human Need, But We Are Terrible at ItNo person is an island, and we need healthy relationships to thrive Brianna WiestFollow Dec 4, 2018 Illustration: Hélène Desplechin/Getty Images Inhis book Lost Connections, Johann Hari talks about his decades of work in the fields of trauma and mental health and why he believes that the root of almost everything we suffer through is a severed connection we never figured out how to repair. At one point, Hari talks about an obesity clinic where patients who were overweight to the point of medical crisis were put on a supervised liquid diet in an effort to try to save their lives. The treatment worked, and many of the patients walked out of the clinic hundreds of pounds lighter and with a new lease on life—at first. What happened later was a side effect no doctor predicted. Some of the patients gained back all the weight and then some. Others endured psychotic breaks and one died by suicide. After looking into why many of these patients had such adverse emotional reactions, the doctors discovered something important: The time when each patient began overeating usually correlated with a traumatic event they had no other coping mechanism for. Hari summed up the findings like this: “What we thought was the problem was very often a symptom of a problem that nobody knew anything about.” Connection is the experience of oneness. It’s having shared experiences, relatable feelings, or similar ideas.Of course, the implication is not that every single overweight person is suffering some kind of subconscious trauma. The point is that many of the ongoing problems we cannot resolve are, in fact, symptoms of deeper problems we may not be aware of. In fact, Hari analogizes this to the smoke of a burning house: You can keep waving away the clouds, but without putting out the fire, your efforts will be futile. The biggest problem in most people’s lives is trauma, and trauma is what creates a damaged ability to connect with others. “Trauma” is not a term reserved for the most severe and unrelenting atrocities one can experience. Anytime something scares us and we do not get over that fear, trauma is created. When we don’t believe we have the resources or abilities to cope with a certain problem or stimuli, we create adaptive behaviors to deny or avoid it. It’s not the trauma itself that causes the most long-term damage; it is how the trauma wreaks havoc on the psyche and prevents reintegration into a normal, healthy life where other people and unknown situations are seen as benevolent. You’ve probably heard this before in different ways: The is not sobriety, it’s connection. The foremost is a sense of belonging and purpose. Cultures that are more mentally healthy as a whole. People who are alone and get sicker before they do. We are a tribal species. There is no way around this despite what many highly individualistic cultures may want us to believe. No person is an island unto themselves. We are born through connection, and it is through connection to others that we accomplish virtually everything else in life. We do not just prefer healthy relationships; we need them. Connection is so important, but it is so often overlooked and there are few resources available to teach people how to foster real connection in their lives. But there are a few essential ideas that can help. Understand What Connection Is Connection is the experience of oneness. It’s having shared experiences, relatable feelings, or similar ideas. It is the feeling of belonging to something greater than oneself. When you’re watching a sporting event with your friends, you’re experiencing connection. When you gather with your family for dinner or open up and express your authentic feelings to another person or find you have something in common with someone, you’re experiencing connection. We’ve developed a world designed to create more connection than ever before, yet somehow, much of the digital age has severed connection or fostered inauthentic connection—which does not work. You cannot feign oneness. It is not something you intellectualize. It’s something you feel. Learn How to Connect With Others AuthenticallyAuthenticity is required for connection. The internet and social media do not disconnect us because we are glued to our phones at the dinner table but because they increase our ability to be inauthentic. They allow us to gloat, edit, filter, and post a highlight reel. We can construct a façade of our lives that may or may not be an honest reflection of reality. In this, we breech connection. People who have authentic connections over social media report having a largely positive view and experience of it. People who use it as a genuine way to stay in touch with others don’t report the same levels of anxiety and depression associated with its use. The reason people try to fake their way into being liked is that they confuse attention for connection—and they are not the same thing. Focus on Giving Connection, Not Receiving ItInorder to connect with others, we have to give them our time and honest feelings and ideas and have shared experiences and openness. We do not connect with others by trying to earn approval, awe, compliments, appreciation, envy, or superiority. In the process of restoring a connection with others, we can realize that we actually create a connection with ourselves.Most people believe a connection is something they earn by being “good enough” when it is really something they develop by being willing enough. If healing is a return to wholeness, then healing from trauma is remembering that we can trust others, we can trust ourselves, and we can trust life. It is the reintegration into easiness, calmness, and the willingness to allow life to be as it is rather than trying to control how it’s perceived. It is not waiting for others to initiate or sustain that connection. It is our own willingness to try again, be vulnerable again, show up for others, reach out, and make ourselves an active part of our communities and families and friend groups. Inthe process of restoring a connection with others, we can realize that we actually create a connection with ourselves. In being seen and loved for who we are, how we think, and what we feel, we learn it’s okay to be as we are. If our core human need is to connect with others, then the most important part of healing our emotional wounds is allowing ourselves to open up again. It is simply our willingness to show up as we are, and our trust that we will be taken care of. It is our discernment to give our time and energy to those who respect and cherish it back. And, most importantly, it is the knowledge that even if we do have to go through the fires of life—as all of us do—we come out the other end stronger, clearer, and more ready to appreciate what we have. Not unlike the Japanese art of "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px); background-repeat: repeat no-repeat;">kintsugi, where broken items are repaired and displayed with pride, our connections and reconnections are often strongest where we had to forge them ourselves. TRUE.
But, you also can lead a horse to water. We, Sandy Hook CenTer came to Newtown having survived 9/11, and losing a beloved friend/and soon partner. We came with assistance of strong connections- heads of studios, the family behind NYC’s Highline/ $900m Starbucks infusion, heads of agencies, and heads of industry. 30yr connections actually. Start With Hello. Sandy Hook Promise was created with assistance from Barack Obama- told to me by Joe Biden’s camp as they (along with the then First Lady) helped Sandy Hook CenTer. Created in the form of Dunblane Centre and in honor of the UK’s swift and decisive action of #GunReform within a year. We also honored the 26lives senselessly taken, and wanted to support the bereaved. As you know our loss is great, and resulting Trauma/PTSD profound. Start with Hello. Start with DECENCY. Supporting the fight of #GunViolence should not require an elitist fraternity of having a dead child/loved one. It should consist of empathy and standing up to violence. But, certainly if it does require loss of life/ offering.. our helping Sandy Hook 24/7 since 2012 took us away from our own lives and away from obligatory cares. The result, a suicide attempt by one who’s since become disabled from a lack of oxygen, and an actual death of a preventable undiagnosed killer disease. Start with hello, start with decency. Our VERY existence was to prevent what happened to Sydney Aiello, Calvin Desir, and Jeremy Richman. We, at Sandy Hook CenTer have been treated without any decency and utter disregard. AND everyone of you- EVERYONE of you should’ve rallied beside us.. because if you were in Sandy Hook from the Friday Night Vigil until the memorial coming down.. you saw us caring for you all in your time of need. It’s ok to be vigilant- it’s preferred. But, we’ve published our resume- so to speak, and offered our references... We are all on the same side and should stand united. Parkland took the House. Parkland will take the Senate. Parkland stands united. And we should all be ashamed at our lack of humanity. In addition to losing my baby sister- who was considered my child. I’ve also lost her 6y/o boy, and 3y/o girl. Mark my words, their will be no empathy- only defensiveness and probable block. WE CAN change the world if WE learn from Parkland.
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