I have the video of me reading this article here (but I will also be writing out the text here too):
It’s titled:
In Response to Campus Advocate Raquel Lyons
Dear Mass Media,
For over a year I’ve read the column of your writer Raquel Lyons as she chronicles her life with obsessive compulsive disorder and suicidal ideation, a personal journey she leverages to encourage wellness on campus. Besides Craig Bidiman from University Health Services, Raquel is probably the most prominent mental health advocate in our student affairs.
Significantly, she explains the counseling services specific to the University of Massachusetts Boston, thereby drafting an action plan for any student afflicted with a disorder, or stretched too thin by lack of sleep and stress of deadlines. Because Raquel shares her experience, she provides context to more comprehensively understand the nature of the different support services.
Over the course of many installments, Raquel has broadcast that recovery is a process and not an outcome; therefore, her column works to dispel unrealistic and damaging expectations. There is no permanent or total cure, but people can get better. Furthermore, she expands awareness about the treatment toolkit, crucial because an individual’s needs fluctuate according to their recovery status, and because comorbid disorders interact uniquely.
But the most powerful aspect of Raquel’s work is the simple fact that she braves the public eye to vocalize her issues, breaking with a media tradition and overall discourse that caustically vilifies this type of candidness, thereby keeping mental health in the shadows, not only preventing healing, but compromising it through the perpetuation of stigma.
Yet in this changing era when people publically identify as being in recovery, there are also new questions we must consider. When does lowering one’s filters to become a role model ever come at the cost of personal recovery? How can we as a community help keep these pioneers safe?
I’ve read Raquel’s column passively for over a year, but something I saw recently at South Station inspired me to respond. Fellow commuters flitted in every direction. A homeless woman sat against a far wall, ignored by everyone except for another crouching woman. The homeless woman’s eyes were wide and wet, and her face bore an expression of catharsis that only comes from finally being heard after living invisibly for too long. I walked closer and saw that the listener was Raquel.
The greatness of a public leader is measured by how they act in plain view, and by the good they engender when no one is looking. Because of people like Raquel, there are leaders in recovery that we now measure in both of these ways. During that moment in South Station, I realized that beyond our university, the whole city of Boston should be grateful she is here.
Sincerely,
- A Reader
*sly, slow grin spreads across my face* Now, if this doesn’t stroke my ego I don’t know what will!! XD
Truly though, I am as flattered reading over this anonymous writer’s article just as I was the first day I read it!!! It was such a pleasant surprise that I was not expecting, a true little gift for the holidays and especially during the rough times of finals. π
I’m glad to be able to fully share it with you all now. Both through the vlogging format and through the BLOGGING format, as this is my first home, for sure.
Stay tuned for some further posts about well, you know what. π
β€ Thank you everyone!!! β€ β€ β€
PS This is my congratulations twice over for this is my 200th post!! π
Reblogged this on Recovery to Wellness and commented:
Just came across a message relating to some Internet drama that reminded me of this article. It was very lovely to read again and I am still so honored and grateful for it being written and published. It’s reminded me of the power I stand in and the light I can shine moving forwards. I’m actually excited to work on new articles again (definitely doing a treatment 101 series) and maybe I’ll start that up again this week.
With love, be good to yourselves. β€
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Congrats on the letter! But even more so, thanks for setting an example by caring about the lady in the station. We need more of you!!
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Thanks! π
Aww, thank you! Yeah, her name is Valentina, I wish there was more I could do to help her. I stayed with her for about an hour that day. π And got her a hot coco ’cause it was pretty cold out! Brrr. Hopefully I can see her again soon, you know, I actually gave her one of my little positive messages before! π
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Well done! This is great! π
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π Thanks! β€ β€
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Wow! Well-done!!!
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Isn’t it exciting? π
β€ β€ β€
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It IS! So exciting. You are absolutely brilliant, nothing short of that. I respect and admire you so much. We definitely have mutual badassery here πππ β€β€β€
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Our badassery feeds off one another’s π
Thanks hun!! That makes me flattered and honored and blush with happiness π β€ I love you so much, girlie! xxxx
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It DOES! Badasses need other badasses to bounce off π I will email you today at some point ok chicken π XXX
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Cools! And yay! We’ve got bouncebackability to the extreme! π
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Wow!! Congratulations on having this anonymous letter, it is surely overwhelming. You deserve it, anyways. Keep it up because you surely inspire people! Happy New Year!! πβ€οΈ
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Overwhelming in all the best ways! π
Thank you so much! This comment has made me smile for sure π β€ β€
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You’re welcome! π
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