Media Topics
Howard: states must match mental health pledge Print E-mail
Written by Annabel Stafford   

By Annabel Stafford
April 6, 2006

NINE hundred new personal helpers and mentors will be employed to assist the mentally ill with everyday tasks such as paying the rent as part of $1.8 billion in new Commonwealth funding to fix Australia's mental health system.

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Victoria won't match mental health cash Print E-mail
Written by AAP   

The Age
April 6, 2006 - 11:18A

Victoria won't match its share of the federal government's $1.8 billion pledge to tackle the mental health system crisis, the state government says.

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Mental health boost 'inadequate' Print E-mail
Written by The Age   

The Age
April 5, 2006 - 1:09PM

The federal government's $1.8 billion mental health package is disappointing and inadequate, Labor's health spokeswoman Julia Gillard says.

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Editorial: Better mental health Print E-mail
Written by The Australian   

The Australian
April 06, 2006

The states must pay up to help fix the mental health crisis

FIXING Australia's woefully inadequate and neglected mental health system is not going to be easy by any measure. For decades the mentally ill have languished in a political wilderness as successive federal and state governments engaged in buck-passing and empty rhetoric. In the meantime, the failed policy of deinstitutionalisation has seen the country's prison population explode as homeless, disturbed and sometimes dangerous mentally ill people with nowhere else to turn are swept up by the criminal justice system. Nationally, the number of beds in psychiatric hospitals has declined by 60 per cent since the 1980s as seriously sick people have been ejected in line with the orthodoxy that they will do better in a community which, tragically, often has nothing to offer.

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Featured Articles

The 'Forgotten People'

by Anna Malbon from the Progress Press October 22, 1996

WHEN nine-year-old "Tom" was asked to draw a picture of himself with his mother be drew her trying to strangle him.

Tom entered the world of adults too early. If he was ever immune to the complications and pain of life that adults try to shelter from children, he says he can't remember.
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Bulletin Board

Narcistic Parents x 2 and Bi Polar Mother

“ I learned to give up on trying to reason or help my mom see what was real ”
“ I often felt lost, without feedback to help me define how I felt or who I was ”

My mother had an un-diagnosed (until I was 18) bipolar disorder. She also has a narcissistic personality disorder. My father’s “dry drunk” behavior included frequent unpredictable rages and criticism. My parents separated when I was 6 weeks old, but my dad stayed close with calls, letters, and visits, even though he usually lived in another state. Visits with my dad were always a mixed bag, and although I do believe he did the best he knew how, I spent a lot of time honing my survival skills while trying to fend off his anger about something I’d done or some other family member had done. His intelligent criticism was brutal and often cruel. I grew to count on at least one extended tirade each visit during my school years (an almost violent rant about my mother’s impossible behavior, during which nothing I could say or do would appease the rage), which ended in my having a disabling migraine for most of a 24-hour period. I often felt anxious and extremely insecure. My mom's narcissism rendered her largely incapable of authentic interactions. She had difficulty reflecting genuine, appropriate emotions in daily life. It made me feel unseen, unheard, frustrated, and sometimes lost. I learned to give up on trying to reason or help my mom see what was real, as it was an exercise in futility - and I often felt lost, without feedback to help me define how I felt or who I was. Even 25 years after having moved out of my mom’s house, I still find it difficult to know what I am feeling, and still find it nearly impossible to ask people for things with any confidence, or to even just tell someone no. My sense of fear and insecurity persists. When family life feels out of control, my husband says I micromanage or over-control situations. I look for healing and peace through meditation, talking to good friends and occasionally a therapist, and in group classes of various types. I'm still figuring it out but feel as if I'm making progress toward a more secure sense of self. I reach for my own healing by paying attention, journaling, asking for help, and being grateful for the joy and peace that are all around me in daily life.

Lisa