Archive for the ‘Mental Health’ Category

New Support Group for Parents of Children with Anxiety

***** New Support Group is starting March 20th For “Parents of Children with Anxiety”***************

 Location: Saanich Neighbourhood place (at Pearkes Rec center)

Time: 7-9 pm Date: March 20th 2013

Format: Check- in—–Group discussion on parenting tips————Discussion on ideas for the group————-Suggestions for groups for our children.

We have someone coming who has worked for Anxiety B.C. in Vancouver to add to our group discussion. Her name is Coreen Mason and she is currently training at UVIC to become a Special Education Teacher.

Please RSVP (so I have a rough idea of the number of chairs to get out)

 Lisa Tate Parent in Residence

The F.O.R.C.E Society For Kids’ Mental Health

www.forcesociety.com

Email: forc...@gmail.com

Phone:1-855-887-8004

 ’As families, we’ve been there’

Movie Monday For March 2013

Movie Monday events are by donation at the Eric Martin Theatre (Jubilee Hospital) 1900 Block Fort Street.
Parking on Lee Avenue, north of Fort St, in the “one hour” zone, is not ticketed for our events.
‘Map’ link and details at
http/:www.moviemonday.ca    info also on the MM hotline 250-595-FLIC
for weekly notices check out the Movie Monday Facebook Page


   6:30  Monday March 4   TO BE HEARD
To Be Heard is a feature documentary that follows a trio of young spoken word performers as they work through their teen angst, putting their feelings into verse.  It’s called “power-writing”, a process brought into their inner city high school in the Bronx by a trio of intense mentors. These kids know that this is their opportunity to dig deep and, through writing and performing (and being watched by the filmmakers), to re-describe themselves, turning their tumultuous lives into art. This process is part of that rewriting.   http://www.tobeheard.org/ See my full review for VIFF 2012 in Monday Magazine on our site. 104min 2010 Pg13  language

6:30  Monday March 11  THE SESSIONS
Based on the poignantly optimistic autobiographical writings of California-based journalist and poet Mark O’Brien, The Sessions tells the story of a man confined to an iron lung who is determined – at age 38 – to lose his virginity. With the help of his therapists and the guidance of his priest, he sets out to make his dream a reality. The story bravely takes on the question: Are people living with disabilities also deserving and able to have sex be part of their lives? 95min 2012 R considerable nudity and frank sexual situations.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2013/jan/20/the-sessions-helen-hunt-review
Jessica Yu’s Academy Award winning film Breathing Lessons (35min 1996) about the real Mark O’Brien.

  6:30  Monday March 18  A SUMMER IN THE CAGE is filmmaker Ben Selkow’s feature-length documentary chronicling his
friend Sam’s battle with manic-depressive illness, also known as bipolar disorder. The film follows Sam for six years as he suffers delusional manic episodes, battles paralyzing depressions, and tries to escape the legacy of his bipolar father who committed suicide when Sam was eight years old. The film features interviews with renowned Johns Hopkins University author and clinician Dr. Kay Redfield Jamison; who is also bipolar. Through intimate footage of Sam, Ben and Sam’s mother Sharon, A Summer in the Cage shows the difficult emotional impact of being bipolar on Sam, his family, all those who care about him and the filmmaker. A Summer in the Cage hopes to put a human face on an illness that affects millions of families. But as this dramatic story unfolds and heads to an explosive standoff, it also becomes a unique tale about friendship and the ethical responsibilities of a documentary filmmaker. http://cagethemovie.com/story.html  
We’ll have special guests with us:
Dr Erin Michalak heads up the CREST BD Research Team, studying ways to live well with bipolar http://www.crestbd.ca/team/
and Dr Joanna Cheek, psychiatrist at UVic. – See their bios on our website

also: 7:30pm TUESDAY March 19  Community presentation        location:  Woodward Room Begbie Hall – 2101 Richmond near Fort St        
‘Changing the Landscape of Bipolar Research and Care’                                                   
Presentation by Dr. Erin Michalak and Dr Joanna Cheek   http://www.crestbd.ca
Right on your doorstep, in Vancouver BC, Erin’s team is the only group in the world specializing in involving people with bipolar disorder and their healthcare providers in the research process itself. Want to get involved and make a difference in bipolar research? Then join us for a night of information and engagement - appies provided!


 
6:30  Monday March 25  WINDS OF HEAVEN – Emily Carr, Carvers and The Spirits of The Forest  
An impressionistic exploration of the spirit that informed the solitary life of one of Canada’s most celebrated and irrepressible painters. Emily Carr began painting in an era when women didn’t, at an age when most people shouldn’t, traveling to remote locations that few professional adventurers chose to go. Not only did she adopt the painting techniques of modernism, when such ideas were considered dangerous, Carr chronicled the extraordinary art and culture of native peoples, who were invisible to the dominant culture.  87min 2010 Pg   First in a new series of films about artists at MM.
http://www.whitepinepictures.com/all-titles/emily-carr/

  7PM WEDNESDAY March 27  SEARCHING FOR SUGARMAN
-  another Music Movie Wednesday! with Friends Of Music
Searching for Sugar Man tells the incredible true story of Rodriguez, the greatest ’70s rock icon who never was. Discovered in a Detroit bar in the late ’60s by two celebrated producers struck by his soulful melodies and prophetic lyrics, they recorded an album which they believed would secure his reputation as the greatest recording artist of his generation. In fact, the album bombed and the singer disappeared into obscurity amid rumors of a gruesome on-stage suicide. But a bootleg recording found its way into apartheid South Africa and, over the next two decades, he became a phenomenon. The film follows the story of two South African fans who set out to find out what really happened to their hero. Their investigation leads them to a story more extraordinary than any of the existing myths about the artist known as Rodriguez. This film just deservedly won the Oscar for Best Documentary – it’s terrific!! http://www.sonyclassics.com/searchingforsugarman/

Movie Monday until Feb 18th

Movie Monday events are by donation at the Eric Martin Theatre (Jubilee Hospital) 1900 Block Fort Street.
Parking on Lee Avenue, north of Fort St, in the “one hour” zone, is not ticketed for our events.
‘Map’ link and details at
http/:www.moviemonday.ca    info also on the MM hotline 250-595-FLIC
for weekly notices check out the Movie Monday Facebook Page
Please pass our info to friends. Movies are most fun shared!

   6:30 Monday Jan 21  BOBBY FISCHER AGAINST THE WORLD
(keeping with this Northern theme) Iceland figures in this amazing tale. I don’t even play chess and I was riveted. In ‘72 the Fischer/Spassky game was broadcast live, a Cold War Battle Royal, bumping “other sports” on the Wide World of Sports and in newscasts pushing aside breaking Watergate news. Here’s that exciting match, Bobby’s background and the strange story of his life after the match.  93min 2011 Pg
http://bobbyfischermovie.co.uk/

 6:30 Monday Jan 28
PEOPLE OF A FEATHER  
People of a Feather is a breathtaking journey into the remote world of the Belcher Islands Inuit people. Uniting this community’s past and present is their cultural connection with the eider duck, a species now suffering massive die-offs. Eider down, the warmest feather in the world, is essential for surviving harsh Arctic winters. But both the Inuit and the eiders are struggling to adapt to changing sea dynamics as seasons and ocean currents are reversed by run-off from hydroelectric dams that power North America’s entire eastern seaboard. Filmed over seven winters, Arctic ecologist and cinematographer Joel Heath’s debut feature employs stunning time-lapse photography and underwater footage to create an authentic and insightful portrayal of a community challenged by a changing environment. This stunning piece of visual poetry weaves past with present to powerfully acknowledge humankind’s relationship with nature and the fragility of our existence.” 90min 2011 G www.peopleofafeather.com/
(hopefully) with first-time director, full time scientist Joel Heath by phone.
He’s based at UBC but travelling through the north so we hope to link up with him
http://www.arcticamag.ca/a-documentary-for-more-than-the-birds-an-interview-with-joel-heath/
http://www.signalblog.ca/?p=12268

  7pm WEDNESDAY Jan 30 THE SINGING REVOLUTION  
                            another Music Movie Wednesday! a collaboration with Friends Of Music     
www.friendsofmusic.ca/
The Singing Revolution shares how, between 1987 and 1991, hundreds of thousands of Estonians gathered publicly to sing forbidden patriotic songs and share protest speeches, risking their lives to proclaim their desire for independence. While violence and bloodshed was the unfortunate end result in other occupied nations of the USSR, the revolutionary songs of the Estonians anchored their struggle for freedom, which was ultimately accomplished without the loss of a single life. A truly uplifting story!   94min 2006 Pg

  6:30  Monday Feb 4 RUBY SPARKS
What happens when your dream-girl creation becomes real?
Calvin (Paul Dano) is a young novelist who achieved phenomenal success early in his career but is now struggling with his writing – as well as his romantic life. Finally, he makes a breakthrough and creates a character named Ruby who inspires him. When Calvin finds Ruby (Zoe Kazan), in the flesh, sitting on his couch about a week later, he is completely flabbergasted that his words have turned into a living, breathing person. But like most dreams come true, it’s a little more complicated than that…  104min 2012 R
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ehxa_pA1v5k&feature=endscreen

6:30 & 8:30 Monday  Feb 11 for FAMILY DAY – A Wholesome Family Double Feature
Kids: share with the oldsters the brilliance and awesomeness of the cutting edge games
Parents: share with your kids the video games you may have played as youngsters 30 years ago (some folks are still obsessed with them)

   
       
Indie Game: The Movie is the first feature documentary film about making video games. It looks specifically at the underdogs of the video game industry, indie game developers, who sacrifice money, health and sanity to realize their lifelong dreams of sharing their visions with the world.
After two years of painstaking work, designer Edmund McMillen and programmer Tommy Refenes await the release of their first major game for Xbox, Super Meat Boy—the adventures of a skinless boy in search of his girlfriend, who is made of bandages. At PAX, a major video-game expo, developer Phil Fish unveils his highly anticipated, four-years-in-the-making FEZ. Jonathan Blow considers beginning a new game after creating Braid, one of the highest-rated games of all time. Four developers, three games, and one ultimate goal— to express oneself through a video game.  96min 2012 Pg13 language
http://www.indiegamethemovie.com/about/      Trailer:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GhaT78i1x2M
            (You may recognize this as a past offering. We had an equipment failure at our last attempt, so rolling it out again.)
Plus at 8:30  
KING OF KONG: A Fist Full Of Quarters
A brilliantly elaborate and satisfying doc about the quest for world domination – to be best at Donkey Kong. Two diametrically different personalities; the brash, long-reigning champion, Billy Mitchell, and upstart challenger sincere, Redmond, WA science teacher, Steve Wiebe, square off like Frazier and Muhammad Ali in their heyday. Even if you’ve never touched a console, you’ll find this study of competitive human nature and geeky obsession a treat! Rotten Tomatoes and I give it top marks.   90min 2007 Pg

Trailer http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMJZ-_bJKdI
http://www.filmthreat.com/reviews/9866/

6:30  Monday Feb 18  A “Mystery Film” from the Victoria Film Fest  TBA after the fest

————————- B

Movie Monday until February 4th 2012

Movie Monday events are by donation at the Eric Martin Theatre (Jubilee Hospital) 1900 Block Fort Street.
Parking on Lee Avenue, north of Fort St, in the “one hour” zone, is not ticketed for our events.
‘Map’ link and details at
http/:www.moviemonday.ca    info also on the MM hotline 250-595-FLIC

for weekly notices check out the Movie Monday Facebook Page  We can send you a Thursday reminder so you won’t miss any in the New Year!


6:30 PM  Monday Dec 31  New Year’s Eve        CAT BALLOU                
This lovely spoof on the American Western featured the sweet, wide-eyed Jane Fonda (at 28) as the daughter wanting to avenge her father’s death and deservedly won an Oscar for Lee Marvin as washed up gun slinger, Kid Shelleen, hired to do just that. Propelled along by wandering banjo slinging minstrels, Nat King Cole & Stubby Kaye, it’s great fun. 97min 1965 Pg
http://www.emanuellevy.com/review/cat-ballou-7/   http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/cat_ballou/trailers/

==================

and coming up in MM’s NEW YEAR, as well as many other wonders:
……….Traveling To The North Country, an our comfy armchairs………..  In Jan – Feb, films about the north will be in heavy rotation at Movie Monday.
We’ll be setting the stage with the film that started it all, the incredible NANOOK OF THE NORTH, followed by PASSAGE an NFB production, a docudrama that tackles the first attempt to find the ill fated Franklin expedition, a story that continues this to this day.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/bones-artifacts-found-from-franklin-expedition-but-so-far-no-ships/article4530590/
Watch for others like People Of The Feather and Vanishing Point to follow.
6:30 Monday Jan 7     NANOOK OF THE NORTH

  Robert Flaherty’s classic film tells the story of Inuit hunter Nanook and his family as they struggle to survive in the harsh conditions of Canada’s Hudson Bay region. In 1975, The Flaherty restored the most complete and authoritative print of Nanook of the North, closest to the original 1922 version, with a new score by Stanley Silverman performed by Tashi (Peter Serkin, Ida Kavafian, Fred Sherry, Richard Stoltzman).
http://flahertyseminar.org/distribution/nanook-of-the-north/      65min 1922  Pg with extras!
http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050925/REVIEWS08/509250301/1023
http://www.criterion.com/current/posts/42-nanook-of-the-north
  6:30 Monday Jan 14  NFB’s PASSAGE
It was news that shook the English-speaking world. Celebrated British explorer Sir John Franklin and his crew of 128 men had perished in the Arctic ice during an ill-fated attempt to discover the Northwest Passage. More shocking, they had descended into madness and cannibalism.
The report came in 1851, from John Rae, a Scottish doctor working for the Hudson’s Bay Company. Travelling thousands of miles on foot and in small craft, Rae had done what six years of searching by the British, Americans, French and Russians had failed to do – discover the fate of Franklin and unlock the final link in the Passage – a 300-year-old dream.
But Rae’s horrific news did not sit well with Sir John’s widow, Lady Franklin, nor with many others in British society….  
With Passage, filmmaker John Walker employs an innovative approach to structuring the incredible multilayered story of John Rae and brings it to vibrant life.     108 min  2008  Pg 13
http://www.onf-nfb.gc.ca/eng/collection/film/?id=54861

   6:30 Monday Jan 21  BOBBY FISCHER AGAINST THE WORLD
(keeping with this Northern theme) Iceland figures in this amazing tale. I don’t even play chess and I was riveted. In ‘72 the Fischer/Spassky game was broadcast live, a Cold War Battle Royal, bumping “other sports” on the Wide World of Sports and in newscasts pushing aside breaking Watergate news. Here’s that exciting match, Bobby’s background and the strange story of his life after the match.  93min 2011 Pg
http://bobbyfischermovie.co.uk/

 6:30 Monday Jan 28
PEOPLE OF A FEATHER  
People of a Feather is a breathtaking journey into the remote world of the Belcher Islands Inuit people. Uniting this community’s past and present is their cultural connection with the eider duck, a species now suffering massive die-offs. Eider down, the warmest feather in the world, is essential for surviving harsh Arctic winters. But both the Inuit and the eiders are struggling to adapt to changing sea dynamics as seasons and ocean currents are reversed by run-off from hydroelectric dams that power North America’s entire eastern seaboard. Filmed over seven winters, Arctic ecologist and cinematographer Joel Heath’s debut feature employs stunning time-lapse photography and underwater footage to create an authentic and insightful portrayal of a community challenged by a changing environment. This stunning piece of visual poetry weaves past with present to powerfully acknowledge humankind’s relationship with nature and the fragility of our existence.” 90min 2011 G www.peopleofafeather.com/
(hopefully) with first-time director, full time scientist Joel Heath by phone.
He’s based at UBC but travelling through the north so we hope to link up with him
http://www.arcticamag.ca/a-documentary-for-more-than-the-birds-an-interview-with-joel-heath/

  6:30  Monday Feb 4 RUBY SPARKS
What happens when your dream-girl creation becomes real?
Calvin (Paul Dano) is a young novelist who achieved phenomenal success early in his career but is now struggling with his writing – as well as his romantic life. Finally, he makes a breakthrough and creates a character named Ruby who inspires him. When Calvin finds Ruby (Zoe Kazan), in the flesh, sitting on his couch about a week later, he is completely flabbergasted that his words have turned into a living, breathing person. But like most dreams come true, it’s a little more complicated than that…  104min 2012 R
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ehxa_pA1v5k&feature=endscreen

Have You Heard About WRAP?

“WRAP”- Wellness Recovery Action Plan is being introduced by BC Schizophrenia Society.

Achieve your own dreams and life goals whether they be school, volunteering or work.

Check out the link. If you are interested or know somebody who may benefit from this program, please call 250-384-4225 or contact adm...@shaw.ca

A waiting list is being taken.

Have you heard about