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Sign Up Now: Stretch (and More) with Venus Williams! Posted: 17 May 2020 06:00 AM PDT Mark your calendar! We’re thrilled to announce an upcoming conversation and stretch session with author, entrepreneur, designer, role model, and tennis legend Venus Williams, hosted in partnership with Salesforce. Thursday, May 28th, at 12:00pm EDT (9:00am PDT)Venus will be joining Salesforce’s lunchtime series B-Well Together Wellbeing Breaks to talk about how she’s maintaining her fitness regime and overall wellness during these unusual times. She’ll be leading the audience through a Virtual Stretch session you can do every day to help keep you energized and limber. You can also look forward to advice from this iconic athlete on how even us non-Olympians can keep up daily routines that support health and wellness, with just enough room for the indulgences we all need. (Champagne, anyone?) We’ll send you a calendar invitation with the Zoom link, so you can dial into the discussion on May 28th. In the meantime, tune into Coach Venus’s daily workouts for a midday fitness break that’s sure to perk up the rest of your afternoon! About Salesforce’s B-Well Together Wellbeing Breaks SeriesThe B-Well Together Wellbeing Breaks are part of a larger Leading Through Change initiative providing thought leadership, tips, and resources from leading wellbeing experts to support our community through these trying times. The post Sign Up Now: Stretch (and More) with Venus Williams! appeared first on Zeel. |
Mental Health Awareness in an Age of Isolation Posted: 17 May 2020 02:00 AM PDT Wednesday morning I awoke to a terrible headline, which is not unusual in these unusual times, but this one was more personal and just heartbreaking. The quote came through my news feed from the iconic singer/songwriter Melissa Etheridge about her 21 year old son, Beckett Cypher. She said, “Today I joined the hundreds of thousands of families who have lost loved ones to opioid addiction.” In an undated photo, her young son's big eyes and kind smile stared out at me. I saw no indications of pain, no signs of addiction…just a beautiful young man, embraced by his family, looking out towards the full life ahead of him. That's the thing about mental illness and its sister affliction, substance abuse and addiction—it doesn't look like any one thing. Sometimes it doesn't look like anything at all. These sinister killers, still too often associated with fear and shame, claimed the lives of almost 100,000 Americans last year alone. Suicide is the second leading cause of death amongst teenagers in this country, while opioid use caused more than a million and a half people to O.D, many of them young people. As we all find ourselves focusing on a health crisis of another kind, the fact remains, mental health in this country is an urgent, ongoing crisis and one that has only deepened as a result of the isolation and anxiety caused by COVID-19 and the adjustment to a new "normal" that for even the strongest amongst us, hardly feels normal at all. In my short time as a health reporter for a small TV station in central Pennsylvania, I did a four-part series on mental illness, and as a result, interviewed dozens of people who suffered from diseases including chronic depression, schizophrenia, and bi-polar disorder. Some of those I interviewed were children, and listening to their daily, and frequently unbridaled anguish, marked me. What I learned in all those conversations is that mental illness doesn't care how old you are. It doesn't care about your race or religion. It doesn't care if you just had a baby or are a caregiver to a sick loved one, if you are a single mother, or a Hollywood star. It's an equal opportunity predator, and when it takes hold, all the resources in the world aren't always enough to hold it at bay. For those struggling right now, the struggle has gotten that much worse. I worry for my aging parents after all these months at home. I worry for my friends who live entirely alone. I worry for all the parents out there just trying to find a minute to themselves, and I worry for our children, who have no point of reference to manage a crisis of this kind. My closest childhood girlfriend told me earlier today that her 8 year old daughter isn't sleeping. At night, she's just too worried, too frightened and too anxious. Frankly, some of my grown-up friends aren't faring much better. While I'm not a doctor or a psychologist, I do have a few thoughts for managing what is easily one of the most stressful times any of us has ever faced.
Additional Mental Health Resources
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