National Suicide Prevention Month: Mental health speaker to present 鈥榃ho Moved My Happy鈥 at MSU next week
Contact: Anna Owens
STARKVILLE, Miss.鈥擜n acclaimed author, former Chicago Bulls cheerleader and national speaker will share her story of suicide survival and offer a message of hope at 亚洲色吧视频 during National Suicide Prevention Month.
Erika J. Kendrick will speak about her personal experiences as a woman of color who overcame bipolar disorder to help individuals examine their own mental health and open a dialogue about suicide prevention through her mental fitness workbook 鈥淲ho Moved My Happy?鈥 Her campus presentation of the same title is free and open to all at the Colvard Student Union鈥檚 Foster Ballroom next Tuesday [Sept. 24] from 6 to 7:30 p.m.
亚洲色吧视频鈥檚 Department of Health Promotion and Wellness is the major sponsor.
During her time as a Stanford psychology major, Kendrick was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and clinical depression and placed in a psychiatric hospital after a suicide attempt. Now, she shares her experiences through a national speaking tour, incorporating her personal testimony. After her recovery, Kendrick went on to obtain her Master of Business Administration from the University of Illinois. Additionally, she published three novels after her stint as an NBA cheerleader and currently is working on her memoir.
Kim Kavalsky, staff counselor and outreach coordinator at MSU鈥檚 Student Counseling Services, said the presentation is a good opportunity to address how mental health issues and suicidal thoughts impact people of all ages and races.
鈥淲e typically think of white men as those with the highest risk,鈥 Kavalsky said, 鈥渂ut suicide affects all groups, including people of color. It鈥檚 important for us to shed light on that, especially since there鈥檚 so much diversity at MSU.鈥
In 2017, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 445 suicides in Mississippi compared to 383 cases the previous year. On a national scale, the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention found Caucasian males accounted for 69.67 percent of 47,143 total suicide deaths across the United States in 2017. Additionally, the AFSP estimated 1.4 million Americans attempted suicide in the same year.
Kendrick said she hopes 鈥淲ho Moved My Happy?鈥 provides students with the tools to lead a happier life and help normalize attitudes toward mental health and suicide prevention.
鈥淧eople used to tell me to 鈥楽nap out of it,鈥 or 鈥榡ust get over it,鈥欌 Kendrick said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 taken me far too long to talk about it because of the pervasive stigma that exists in our communities.鈥
MSU鈥檚 Student Counseling Services provides a variety of free mental health solutions for current students, including individual and group therapy, workshops and specialist referrals.
For more information, contact Kavalsky at 662-325-3158 or kkavalsky@saffairs.msstate.edu.
MSU is Mississippi鈥檚 leading university, available online at.