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Healthy Charlotte County ACEs Connection (FL)

Our vision for a healthy Charlotte County is a safe, equitable and vibrant community in which people feel empowered to seek and obtain opportunities and services to achieve and maintain a high quality of life.

It Makes Sense

 

I felt inadequate and ill-prepared to speak to licensed mental health professionals about ACEs. But when I was asked to attend the 40th Annual Training Institute on Behavioral Health & Addictive Disorders in Clearwater, Florida to represent ACEs Connection, I was honored and eager.

My background is in health planning, not mental or behavioral health. I review health data and look for gaps and inequities. My time is spent looking for and addressing the health needs of a community. So, when I learned about Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs), I had that Aha! moment that so many of us have had. My eyes were opened up to a world full of hurt that was always there, but that I had never before fully seen. Not only was childhood trauma a health indicator, it was like a little match that could set off the entire book of matches.

I know I am preaching to the choir here, so I won’t digress further. I drove up to Clearwater on February 13th, fully expecting to be preaching to the choir there as well. However, I found that while most of the folks I spoke with that day fully appreciated what I had to say about childhood adversity and its physical ramifications, most had never heard of the ACE Study.

Knowing the science behind trauma’s connection to physical health makes all the difference. Knowing that ACEs aren’t reserved for low-income minority populations makes all the difference. Knowing that even more research is being done to combat all that we now know about childhood adversity makes all the difference.

Knowledge is power.

I had a terrific conversation with one woman from Maryland. She was particularly interested in hearing about the research behind ACEs. As I shared more and more with her, she kept nodding her head and saying, “It makes sense.”

It makes sense.

That really resonated with me. This message is not new, and it isn’t hard to believe. It makes sense. The fact that our bodies hold onto the emotional turmoil we have suffered while our minds are still developing and turn that emotional turmoil into physical ailments makes sense. That the determination of our lives is a combination of both nature and nurture (or lack thereof) makes sense. And that there is hope despite early adversity makes sense.

So, don’t hesitate to share what you know, even if you aren’t the most educated person in the room. Knowledge is power – and this knowledge makes sense.

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Jennifer -

Thank you so much for going and introducing ACEs Science to an audience that deals with the impact of Childhood Trauma 24/7!

It is good to get the word about root cause to the people who are in such a position to make a difference in getting the word to their clients: It's not "what's wrong with you and why do you do that," it is "what happened and how can I help."

As a person in recovery myself, I know the guilt and shame that come along with "unmanageability." I have seen the relief in people's faces when they learn that so much of what some believe to be moral failings are actually related to if not the result of childhood trauma.

Thanks for the great work you are doing in your community, and for taking this message "on the road" to share with the 350 mental health and addiction professionals at this conference. 

That most of them have never heard of ACEs Science -- and I heard this from the three other volunteers who attended the conference -- tells me we all have a lot of work to do to get the word out about ACEs Science and resilience research, about the need to include the greater community in the recovery of people with trauma histories and addiction. These mental health professionals are among the perfect folks to take community building into their communities, as a trauma-informed communities help people in recovery stay in recovery!

Last edited by Carey Sipp
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