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In Memoriam: Henry van Ameringen

Clubhouse International Board members, staff, and many of our Clubhouse colleagues around the world, are greatly saddened by the recent passing of Henry van Ameringen. Henry was an inspirational friend of Clubhouse International, whose generosity as a funder and supporter of the global Clubhouse community is unmatched in philanthropy. Through the years, as a long time Board member of Fountain House and the van Ameringen Foundation, Henry supported our vision of helping to ensure that Clubhouse communities and opportunities are available to people living with mental illness everywhere. His keen interest in our plans and work both encouraged and challenged us to continuously improve.

In addition to his generous support of the international Clubhouse community, Henry was also a benefactor to many other organizations. He was a leader in working for LBGTQ rights, and was actively engaged in many other critically important social and human rights causes.  We are forever grateful to him and will miss his leadership by example.

Click here to read more about his exemplary life please follow this link at the New York Times.

Change Minds. Move Hearts!

#MoveforMentalHealth#WorldMentalHealthDay | Lets Invest | #ClubhouseWorks

For World Mental Health Day 2020 and beyond, we are proud to announce our Change Minds. Move Hearts! initiative to harness the power of the worldwide Clubhouse community and build momentum towards creating opportunities and change for people living with serious mental illness. 

JOIN US! Take one or all of these four actions!

Action #1: Talk About It. When we speak, we can change how we and others think and act, and how we treat one another. Some useful tips:

  • Monitor your own language: become more mindful of how you speak about mental illness. Click here for a list of terms to help us change our language.
  • Start critical conversations with your friends, family, and colleagues to help change how mental illness – and those living with it – are perceived by society. 
  • Follow us on Facebook and other social media. Help share content with your personal networks. The more mental illness comes out of the shadows, the less stigma it will carry.  

Action #2: Promote Employment Parity. We know the incredible power that being a valued, contributing member of a community can have on a person’s recovery. Our goal is to empower our members by helping them rediscover their innate talents and recover their self-confidence through employment.

  • If you’re an employee: encourage your management to adopt policies of inclusion and acceptance for people living with mental illness, and/or their family members. Click here for useful employee resources. 
  • If you’re a hiring manager: establish a culture where mental illness is treated like any other disease. Click here for useful employer resources.
  • Learn more: visit the “How Clubhouses Work” page of this website to see how the Clubhouse employment approach helps people living with mental illness achieve sustainable recovery. Click here to learn about how you and your company can partner with your local Clubhouse to establish a Transitional Employment program. Click here to find a Clubhouse in your area.

Action #3: Advocate for greater investment in mental health. Sign our petition and let your voice be heard: CLICK HERE TO SIGN AND TWEET!

  • Write your legislators and representatives and tell them to keep funding for mental health services, especially programs like Clubhouses, a priority!  
  • Encourage António Guterres, the ninth Secretary-General of the United Nations, to keep access to mental health services a priority around the world!
  • Engage your friends and social networks in the cause!  

Action #4: Move for Mental Health. We are partnering with our friends at World Federation for Mental Health and United for Global Mental Health on a unified call to #MoveforMentalHealth.

  • We are challenging the world to call on governments to make a move and provide greater investment in mental health. Investment is needed now more than ever. You can participate by joining the world’s first 24-hour virtual march for mental health on Saturday October 10. Click here to learn more about #MoveforMentalHealth.
  • Run. Walk. Exercise. Whatever you choose, physical health promotes good mental health. So, LET’S MOVE and share/tag on social media!

CELEBRATE World Mental Health Day 2020 – Join us for Clubhouse International Community Week activities, October 5-10. Click here to see the schedule and RSVP!

Let’s build on our momentum to create change for people living with serious mental illness!

 

 

 

The Clubhouse International Call to Action 2020 project was funded by a sponsorship from H. Lundbeck A/S. The sponsor had no influence on the contents of this project.

#MoveforMentalHealth | Lets Invest | #ClubhouseWorks

2020 VIRTUAL USA Clubhouse Conference

Thank You For Coming!

Thank you for attending the 2020 USA Virtual Clubhouse Conference, where you were joined by over 1,100 participants from Clubhouses in the U.S. and around the world — proof that the Clubhouse model crosses geographic and social boundaries. We hope that you enjoyed your experience, were able to connect with other attendees and learned from our many speakers and workshops.

All recordings of the sessions are now available and posted to the conference platform!

Also, all attendees will receive a Certificate of Attendance. These certificates will be emailed to you in the coming week.

Thank you for attending. We hope to see you in person at the next conference!

Conference Details:

Click Here to View and Download Our Conference Program!

Our first ever Virtual conference offered exciting, inspiring and timely learning opportunities about sustaining strong, effective Clubhouse communities in the United States. Plenary sessions and interactive workshops provided a compelling forum for the exchange of information and ideas of interest to new and veteran Clubhouses, and others who are interested in our work.

Some of the many highlights in the program included: 

  • Clubhouses in the Digital Age
  • An Orientation to the Clubhouse Model
  • Social Justice and your Clubhouse
  • Effective Approaches to Working with Medicaid Funding
  • Maintaining a Focus on Clubhouse Employment in These Times
  • COVID-19 and the Work-Ordered Day –Including an Ongoing In-Person/Virtual Hybrid Approach
  • Wellness and Social Programming
  • Engaging your Local Community
  • Enhanced reach out
  • Clubhouse Boards and Advisory Boards
  • Supported Education – Successful Strategies for Helping Members Achieve Their Goals
  • Data Speaks – Learning from our Research, and Introducing Exciting New Clubhouse “Portals” to Data Collection

Individual Networking, Social and Engagement Opportunities:

  • Connect with other members and speakers through the networking function through video calls, 1:1 chats and group discussions
  • Submit questions and answer polling
  • Participate in DJ Dance Party 
  • Take notes in sessions and access any resources and on demand video
  • Create your own profile
  • Download Materials
  • Show the true number of people that are interested in this planning (this data can be used in the future to show the case for hybrid conferences)

Member Musings: Life in the Time of Physical Distancing

From Members of Austin Clubhouse, Texas USA

Change, by Kristin Thompson (pictured at right)

Life at the Clubhouse changed drastically three weeks ago. Today we are living in a time of uncertainty, social distancing and sheltering in place. Thank God I have been able to stay connected to the Clubhouse community virtually and remotely. I still get to participate in the work, and work side by side with other members and staff. It seemed strange the first week, but we hit the ground running and haven’t looked back. We’ve ramped up our connectivity so that when we can physically return to the Clubhouse, we will be stronger than ever.

I was seriously concerned with how I was going to fill my days while stuck in the house isolating with my parents. I can’t even go to the grocery store anymore because they are both over the age of 70. This puts them at great risk as they are considered more vulnerable to the Coronavirus.  Happily, we are all doing well.

That being said, life is harder than ever right now. To be frank with y’all, my anxiety had been extremely high because I was afraid my depression would worsen knowing I couldn’t go to the Clubhouse. I used to attend the Clubhouse 3-4 days a week and frequently, all day. Thankfully, I have found that I’m keeping that same schedule remotely and virtually. I was really concerned about having enough things to do, but my days are packed! My morning starts with the 9:30 Clubhouse check in and I wrap things up around 4:30 pm.

The most important aspect is keeping connectivity. I’ve spent some of my time calling members, with staff. We’ve all worked hard! In the last three weeks we have made 560 calls, just checking in to see how folks are doing and giving them the information they need to stay connected.  I’ve been on virtual wellness walks, put together the Poetry portion of the Spring Newsletter, contacted donors thanking them for donating during Amplify Austin, data entry and more. I’ve also been able to attend daily meetings.

Today via Zoom, a group of people met virtually with a group of folks from a Clubhouse in Maine.  Being on Zoom meant we could all see each other’s faces! Boy have I missed seeing faces! I’ve had very full days. Full days of laughter, work and progress.

The best part of my day is the connection.  I don’t feel so alone. All of us are experiencing the same things living in such tough times. I am feeling less anxious because I keep my therapy appointments and stay busy with the Clubhouse. I wrap things up with the Clubhouse at 4:30, and then it’s ‘me’ time. I treat the day like I’m back at work. I hope you will join me. I promise you are missed and there is much work to be done. You are valued and we want you with us!  Let’s keep each other company during this surreal time. We all make a difference in each other’s lives.


The Importance of Staying Connected, by Alizah

Staying connected with Austin Clubhouse has allowed me to nurture ideas and projects. I get the opportunity to participate in the flourishing of the Austin Clubhouse, and in turn I feel a sense of accomplishment. In the past, I hadn’t really understood the value of having this kind of connection.

Thankfully, I have learned that staying connected creates a restorative feeling of being a full human – of being seen. In the Jewish religion, this kind of connection is what helps someone regain their dignity. Austin Clubhouse provides that nonjudgmental environment where you get a sense of being a productive and a valuable member of society. People at the Clubhouse understand you, are there for you, and are in tune with helping you be a better you. The act of letting people be there for you, and you being there for others, is a kind of healing.

Having a community that supports you can mean different things to different people. For example: it can give you a sense of belonging; it can give you a sense of accomplishment because you contributed to a project; it can allow you to pull from existing strengths to develop further as a human, etc. So I hope that you are able to create wonderful moments in your life that fulfill you in being and staying connected.


Coming Together, by Ashley Leonard

These are very strange and uncertain times. This is very new to us all, and nobody really knows what to expect.  A lot of you may be riding this out with friends and family, or you might be alone. It’s perfectly normal to feel anxious and fearful. It is also important to find hope and stay positive. Stay in contact with your loved ones. If you are by yourself, take this opportunity to have quality alone time. Find reasons to laugh. Discover your own strength. Remind yourself that you can handle this, and anything that comes your way. Find something wonderful, out of something unnerving. We don’t know what the long-term outcome of all this might be, but take solace that we will come through on the other side together.


I Am Struggling, by Trisha Beasley

I am struggling.
Not that old kind of struggling
Where every fiber of my being is trying
To destroy me.
It’s the beautiful struggle that comes from
A flower fighting its way out of the
Darkness of damp soil,
Or a butterfly, wings still wet from
Making way from a cocoon.
It’s the painful struggle of a baby
Way out of a womb
That no longer served as a safe place.
It’s the struggle that comes from all of
Those things but wanting
Down to my core that I could go back to
That safe place.
But I still struggle.
Not to bathe in what I want but
To baptize myself in my need
For change.


The San Angelo Clubhouse in the Covid-19 Shutdown:“Know that you are not alone! We are here with you and for you.”

by Ruben Gallegos

May 25, 2020. At the beginning of March, with the 24 hour news cycle continually discussing the Covid-19 pandemic, I began to wonder about the type of shutdown policy, that my clubhouse, the San Angelo Clubhouse (SACH) would adopt.

Then, in Mid-March, we had a SACH House meeting that told all members that we needed to close the SACH. Members that were not at the meeting were called and told the next day. 

The message from the SACH was: “Due to the Corona Virus, the San Angelo Clubhouse will be closed until Friday, March 20. We will be posting lots while we are closed. Please stay with us!!” 

On March 19th, news reported that schools in San Angelo would be closed through April 10.  Since the Clubhouse typically follows the San Angelo School district’s closure policy, SACH would also be closed through April 10, and potentially many months of closure.

I felt confusion, depression, worry, and anxiety all at once.

For approximately the last fifteen years, I isolated to the point that I had no friends or even acquaintances.  I saw doctors, the occasional therapist, the pharmacist, and checkout clerks at Wal-Mart.  It had gotten very bad at the time I was introduced to Clubhouses.  The Clubhouse was a lifesaver and is helping me in defeating Isolation and providing me a road to recovery. 

And now I felt I was losing the SACH and being forced to isolate by the government?

But, soon I was being invited to a meeting, as a member, with our director,

Ami Mizell-Flint, and staff.   There we were told that while the SACH was closed there would be staff and a few key members to help keep the Clubhouse operating, and also keep in contact and engage shuttered members. 

As a member and “mentor” of the Cultivation Unit, I would help in keeping our vegetable garden, indoor plants, and outdoor flowers alive.

Our first task was for each of us to call SACH members, to check on them, and let them know they were not alone.

The SACH also quickly posted much information on agencies, that could help with specific COVID-19 issues that could affect members, e.g., COVID-19 drive-thru screening and testing, lists of restaurants that provided free meals, and hotline numbers, etc.

It’s here that my personal fears began to be alleviated.  It seems without missing a beat our Director and staff had began planning for a “virtual clubhouse.”  A virtual clubhouse experience that would closely mirror our physical clubhouse, so members would be engaged and continue to be needed. 

And then the ZOOM meetings began.  I remember at our first meeting and how it was a happy event.  Everyone glad to see each other, everyone talking at once!      

The online ZOOM meeting agenda was born with two conference calls a day. 

We also used ZOOM to discuss The International Standards for Clubhouse Programs and current clubhouse topics.  With ZOOM, we attend mental health webinars and webinars from the San Antonio Clubhouse and Fountain House.  We discussed many topics on wellness and topics on isolation.  We continued our Ambassadors meetings.  SACH also began offering on-line socials, like painting, and Karaoke.

Last year, the SACH created Mental Health Awareness Spirit week, which we did again this year, and started the SACH on-line Book Club. We did an on-line Talent show social, and one where members read poetry.

The entire SACH also worked together to cook and deliver a weekly hot cooked meal to members isolated because of Covid-19.

And then on May 3, finally this Face Book Message: “Good Afternoon Clubhouse Members!  Today we have had the pleasure of reopening our doors at 25% capacity. We all have missed seeing each other and working together as a Clubhouse Family.  Everybody is working hard while being safe.”

Yes, progress in reopening! Clubhouse doors reopened on May 10, with some changes, including wearing masks and social distancing, but at least we could be together in person.

This whole ongoing experience gives me such satisfaction to be a member of the SACH.  A community of Director, staff, and members who daily show commitment to one another’s success through the Clubhouse Model, even through the extraordinary difficulties of the Convid-19 pandemic.

“Know that you are not alone! We are here with you and for you.”

COVID-ID: Clubhouse Community Joint Statement #2

Click here to view and download this message.

Dear Clubhouse Friends and Colleagues,

As we all know, the ground is shifting under our feet, in massive tectonic movements.

What was ‘normal’ for us and our Clubhouse communities only a few weeks ago, has almost instantaneously been dismantled by the rapid sweep of the coronavirus across the globe.

But – despite this unprecedented worldwide upheaval – we want to share with you the astonishing reality that the Clubhouse community has quickly mobilized. The physical distancing required to stop this virus poses real challenges to the traditional Clubhouse model – but together we have pivoted to a combination of virtual connection and direct outreach that keeps our membership connected – and is even breaking new boundaries. It is a testament to the power of this movement that the Clubhouse community is up and running, together. 

As the leadership of our phenomenal worldwide Clubhouse community, we want to say THANK YOU. We are profoundly proud of the resiliency, creativity, passion, dedication, and unshakeable connectivity of our Clubhouse network across the world.

The heart and soul of our Clubhouse movement has always been in our relationships with each other – and as we all know – relationships transcend physical proximity. Our deepest values are anchored in our belief in the power of a genuine caring community to bring healing, hope and opportunity. In this ‘new normal’ of physical distancing, the resilient webs of care and authentic relatedness that have been woven among the members and staff of our Clubhouses, are continuing to bind us together in a strong community of powerful mutual support.

Within days of having to close our physical buildings, Clubhouses around the world rallied to quickly establish new structures to address our new circumstances. These include member and staff collaboration on: virtual and mobile connectivity; daily online meetings; food delivery; assistance with obtaining medicine and all other necessary community supports; assistance with employment and educational related concerns; production of newsletters and videos; reach out efforts; leadership of meetings; social programming; health and wellness goals and initiatives; and most other aspects of typical daily Clubhouse operation.

Collaborating on virtual connectivity and best practices for digital integration of the Clubhouse Model allowed us to quickly create “Virtual Clubhouse (Beta)”. This virtual gathering space for members mimics much of the Clubhouse social practice, as well as provides information for members and staff about how to obtain support services. We are working together on a more designed version to launch in the next couple of weeks, and also working on training Clubhouses on the tools. And we’re building for the future. Long term, after the coronavirus is over, Virtual Clubhouse will draw new membership worldwide as well as sustain membership, by offering a way for people to connect with Clubhouses even when they cannot physically attend, or prefer a digital experience. It will, as well, connect Clubhouses with each other – creating a powerful global network that supports a global movement.

As we move forward into this uncharted territory, we encourage all Clubhouse members and staff to lean into the safety and support of their local Clubhouse community, their regional coalitions and/or neighboring Clubhouses, and the large international Clubhouse community. We are all in this together. As our founders understood more than 70 years ago: WE ARE NOT ALONE!

We hope to maintain ongoing connection with all of you as this crisis unfolds. We deeply appreciate your work, your care, your support, and your commitment to our extraordinary way of working together as local Clubhouse communities, and as a large international Clubhouse movement.

Take care of yourselves and one another,

Sincerely,

Joel D. Corcoran, M.Ed., Executive Director, Clubhouse International

Wander ReitsmaChair, Clubhouse Europe

Ashwin Vasan, M.D., PhD, President and CEO, Fountain House
Assistant Professor, Mailman School of Public Health and Vagelos College of Physicians & Surgeons at Columbia University

Remember, the music is not in the piano.
– Clement Mok

World Seminar 2019 Recap and Speeches

It was a highlight in my life that I will cherish foreverMeeting new people from around the globe and knowing first hand we have more in common than differences. I have learned so much from other Clubhouses and shared as well. I have made new friends and hope sometime in my future I can attend another Clubhouse International World Seminar.” – Clubhouse colleague

Over 400 people from 20 countries and over 100 Clubhouses gathered in Norway, September 28 – October 3, 2019 for the Clubhouse International World Seminar 2019. The opening address was given by Tone Wilhelmsen Trøen, who is the current President of the Norwegian Parliament (Storting).

Clubhouse International World Seminar 2019 Program

Key speakers included Gro Harlem BrundtlandShekhar SaxenaElisha London and other global mental health leaders.

Innovations in the Clubhouse Model for helping people living with mental illness get their lives back were shared in plenary sessions and institutes. In addition, fundamental best practices relating to the Clubhouse Model were presented in 44 workshops. The broad array of presentations and multiple networking opportunities provided a rich learning opportunity for our global colleagues.

Click on the links below to access the Plenary speeches:

We would like to thank all who participated, and especially our hosts, Fontenehuset i Oslo and Fontenehus Norge/Clubhouse Norway, and our Sponsors, Lucy Høeghs Stiftelse, Sunovion, Alkermes, and Delta Airlines, for partnering with us to carry out this memorable event.

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