Unique pop-up event connects vulnerable northern Alberta residents with social agencies
Vulnerable Peace River residents receive social supports at an innovative pop-up event that was launched in the community. Organizers hope to host the one-day event again, before the end of 2026.
#event #socialsupport #community #PeaceRiver #northernAlberta
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/peace-river-pop-up-9.7108624?cmp=rss

⚠️ Call for Fedi Help ⚠️

I know someone near Tidewater Virginia who is in desperate need of friends and support right now. If you live near there, or know someone safe who does, and you want to help save a life, please reach out. If not, you can still help by sharing this.

Thank you. I means a *lot* to me ❤️‍🩹

#FediHelp #MutualAid #SocialSupport #PleaseBoost

Mungkin saya bukan "autisme ringan" atau "mild autism". Saya rasa tahap autisme saya lebih tinggi. Memerlukan sokongan yang lebih rapi berbanding apa yang autisme ringan perlu.

#Autism #Neurodiversity #Disability #MentalHealth #SupportNeeds #Accessibility #Inclusion #HumanRights #Dignity #Awareness #Healthcare #SocialSupport #Equity

Xót xa bà Lê Thị Hường (Hà Tĩnh), người phụ nữ mắc bệnh thần kinh từ nhỏ, sống cô độc trong căn nhà chưa đầy 10 m², không chồng con, không người thân chăm sóc. Bà dựa vào trợ cấp xã hội và sự cưu mang của cộng đồng xóm làng. 🙏

#HàTĩnh #BệnhThầnKinh #CứuGiúp #TrợCấpXãHội #Humanitarian #Vietnam #SocialSupport #Solidarity

NONE

https://vietnamnet.vn/xot-xa-nguoi-phu-nu-bi-benh-than-kinh-song-lay-lat-trong-can-nha-chua-day-10m-2483531.html

Xót xa người phụ nữ bị bệnh thần kinh sống lay lắt trong căn nhà chưa đầy 10m²

Mắc bệnh thần kinh từ nhỏ, không chồng con, không người thân chăm sóc, bà Lê Thị Hường (tỉnh Hà Tĩnh) đã sống cô độc suốt nhiều năm qua trong căn nhà cũ nát chưa đầy 10m², nương nhờ vào trợ cấp xã hội và sự cưu mang của xóm làng.

Vietnamnet.vn

Two colleagues and I read "Peer Support Services Reaching People with Schizophrenia"
https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-29042-8

Overall a good read which allowed us with our different backgrounds and interests in this topic to come together to discuss, think, and develop. Brief reflections from our perspective:
https://www.linkedin.com/posts/activity-7421566841526898688-wMdy?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop&rcm=ACoAAAD0JHkBcK9LoDUuScfOpFwbt_UMALGWLV8

#RealistReview #SocialSupport

Peer Support Services Reaching People with Schizophrenia

This book provides a comprehensive view of peer support reaching people with schizophrenia. Interviews with experts in the field are presented.

SpringerLink
After three decades working in addiction recovery, I've seen a crucial pattern: social connections are key to long-term success. Society must shift from stigma to support, treating addiction as the medical condition it is. Punitive approaches hinder recovery. We need policies that support reintegration and reduce relapse risks. Check out my latest article: https://www.lifesjourneyblog.com/social-connectedness-and-addiction-recovery-why-community-support-is-the-missing-link-to-lasting-recovery/ Let's advocate for change! 📢 #PolicyChange #SupportNotPunish #AddictionRecovery #SocialSupport #MentalHealth
Did you know that age, gender & other demographic factors can impact the relationship between isolation & cognitive functioning? Research shows that gender differences may relate to cultural norms & stressors.
Watch full episode at https://shorturl.at/B1lEh
#SocialSupport #MentalHealth #CognitiveFunctioning

Một người mẹ nghèo ở Hải Phòng đang kiệt sức khi chồng liệt nửa người do chấn thương sọ não, còn con gái vừa phẫu thuật tim lại gặp tai nạn gãy tay. Gia đình đang rất cần sự giúp đỡ từ cộng đồng. 💔

#HoànCảnhKhóKhăn #GiúpĐỡCộngĐồng #HảiPhòng #TìnhNgười #SocialSupport #CommunityHelp #DifficultCircumstances

https://vietnamnet.vn/chong-liet-nua-nguoi-con-gai-benh-tim-lai-tai-nan-me-ngheo-mong-duoc-giup-do-2477534.html

Chồng liệt nửa người, con gái bệnh tim lại tai nạn, mẹ nghèo mong được giúp đỡ

Chồng liên tiếp gặp tai nạn dẫn đến chấn thương sọ não, mất hoàn toàn sức lao động; con gái mắc bệnh tim vừa phẫu thuật chưa lâu lại bị tai nạn gãy tay. Một mình chị Trần Thị Hải Hà (TP Hải Phòng) gần như kiệt quệ khi không còn khả năng xoay xở...

Vietnamnet.vn
The Happiness Trilogy: 2 of 3-Part Blog Series - Zsolt Zsemba

Your physical health, immune system, and lifespan. Science-backed insights on the relationship-health connection from decades of research.

Zsolt Zsemba

The Happiness Trilogy: 1 of 3-Part Blog Series

Are You Happy?

Fascinating, if You Ask Me!

For nearly eight decades, Harvard researchers have been tracking the lives of hundreds of individuals in what has become one of the most comprehensive studies on human happiness ever conducted. The Harvard Study of Adult Development didn’t just follow people through good times and bad; it revealed fundamental truths about what makes life worth living. What they discovered challenges everything we think we know about success, health, and happiness.

The Surprising Power of Relationships

When Harvard scientists began analyzing decades of health data, medical records, and personal interviews, they expected to find that genetics, wealth, or career success would be the key predictors of a long and happy life. Instead, they discovered something far more profound: the quality of our relationships matters more than anything else.

People who were most satisfied in their relationships at age 50 were the healthiest at age 80. This wasn’t just about feeling good emotionally—close relationships actually protected physical health better than cholesterol levels, blood pressure, or family medical history. The strength of your social bonds literally predicts how long you’ll live and how well you’ll age.

Director Robert Waldinger, a psychiatrist at Massachusetts General Hospital, puts it simply: relationships are a form of self-care. While we invest time and money into gym memberships, organic food, and health supplements, we often neglect the single most important factor in our wellbeing—the people around us.

Loneliness: The Silent Killer

The research revealed a darker side, too. Loneliness isn’t just an emotional burden; it’s a serious health risk. The study found that social isolation has health consequences as severe as smoking or alcoholism. People who felt lonely experienced faster physical and mental decline, regardless of how well they took care of their bodies in other ways.

This finding takes on new significance in our modern world, where technology promises connection but often delivers isolation. We can have hundreds of online friends yet feel profoundly alone. The Harvard study reminds us that it’s not the number of connections that matters, but their quality and depth.

Beyond Genetics: What Really Determines Healthy Aging

The study identified six key factors that predicted healthy aging, and genetics wasn’t at the top of the list. Physical activity, absence of smoking and alcohol abuse, mature coping mechanisms for stress, maintaining a healthy weight, and having a stable marriage all proved more important than having long-lived ancestors.

For the inner-city participants in the study, education emerged as an additional protective factor. Higher education correlated with better health choices throughout life, including avoiding smoking, eating well, and using alcohol moderately.

Perhaps most encouraging, the research showed that our life trajectories aren’t fixed in our twenties. People who struggled early in life could become thriving octogenarians, while those who seemed destined for success could derail through alcoholism or depression. Change is always possible.

The Brain-Body Connection

One of the most fascinating discoveries was how relationships protect cognitive function. People in happy marriages maintained better memory and mental sharpness as they aged. Even couples who bickered frequently showed this protective effect, as long as they felt they could count on each other when it mattered most.

This brain-body connection works both ways. Marital dissatisfaction didn’t just affect mood; it actually increased physical pain in older adults. Those in unhappy relationships reported more emotional distress and greater physical discomfort on the same days, showing how deeply intertwined our social and physical health really are.

Conclusion

The Harvard Study of Adult Development offers a clear prescription for a good life, and it’s simpler than we might think. Invest in relationships. Show up for the people who matter. Build communities that support you through hard times. Take care of your body, but remember that tending to your connections is just as vital.

In a world obsessed with productivity, achievement, and individual success, this research delivers a counter-cultural message: happiness isn’t something we achieve alone. It’s something we build together, one relationship at a time.

https://www.weforum.org/videos/harvard-conducted-an-85-year-study-on-happiness-here-s-what-it-found

#Mentalhealth #CommunityMatters #ConnectionTips #EmotionalWellness #FriendshipGoals #HappinessHabits #HappinessJourney #HarvardStudy #HealthyAging #HealthyConnections #HealthyLiving #HealthyRelationships #HeartHealth #ImmuneHealth #LifeSatisfaction #LifeTransformation #Longevity #LongevitySecrets #MeaningfulConnections #PhysicalWellbeing #RelationshipsMatter #SocialSupport #SocialWellbeing #StressManagement #ZsoltZsemba