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Published:
May 30, 2024
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Throwback Thursday: Celebrating Our Founder, Clifford Beers

#LetsFaceIt

This year, we’re thrilled to partner with the Connecticut Historical Society for #ThrowbackThursday, sharing stories of how people have faced life’s challenges throughout history. 

“Each person’s mind and experience are unique. But mental health has a history, shared by those in the past and in the present. You are not alone.” – from the Introduction of Common Struggle, Individual Experience: An Exhibition About Mental Health at the Connecticut Historical Society. 

At Mental Health Connecticut (MHC), our roots in advocacy run deep, thanks to our founder, Clifford Beers, often called the “grandfather of recovery.” 

In the mental health and recovery field, Beers is a well-known figure, but his story isn’t as familiar outside of this community. We’re sharing his powerful story this Mental Health Awareness Month because it deserves to be known by all. 

In the early 1900s, Beers experienced symptoms that might today be diagnosed as Bipolar Disorder. After a suicide attempt, he endured ineffective treatments and cruel conditions in Connecticut’s mental health institutions during three years of hospitalizations. Upon recovery, he vowed to reform the mental health system. His autobiography, A Mind That Found Itself, detailed the harsh treatments he faced and his journey to recovery. 

Beers didn’t believe his fate was to live and die in an institution. He promised to share his experiences of inhumane treatment and advocate for change. He garnered the support of the medical community and others to reform the treatment of people living with mental illness. In 1908, Beers founded the “Connecticut Society for Mental Hygiene,” now Mental Health Connecticut. In 1909, he founded the “National Committee for Mental Hygiene,” now Mental Health America, and in 1913, he started the Clifford Beers Clinic in New Haven, the first outpatient mental health clinic in the U.S. 

Fast forward 111 years from the founding of MHC, and the system has evolved. Community-based programs like MHC’s support individuals of all ages across the U.S. However, our work, and the efforts of many leaders in this field, is often hindered by stigma, discrimination, lack of funds, and misunderstandings about mental health. 

Your support not only fuels our awareness campaign but also supports MHC’s life-changing mental health services, education, and advocacy efforts.

Together, we can make a lasting impact on mental health awareness in Connecticut. Donate or start a fundraiser here.

Join us for the last few days of May to hear from community partners, staff, and MHC participants on how they #FaceIt. View past posts here.  

Looking for resources or support in CT but don’t know where to start? Visit MHC’s Resource Directory at https://www.mhconn.org/education/resources/

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Time is running out to support our Winter Wellness Campaign! Your donation helps us provide essential mental health resources and expand access to care for individuals in need.⁠ Let’s come together to ensure no one has to face winter’s challenges alone. 

While our Winter Wellness Campaign is coming to a close, our toolkit will be available on our website all winter long as we continue to embrace warmth, connection, and wellness.⁠

Across the country, nonprofits are being stretched to their limits. But the need? It hasn’t gone anywhere. Your donation today, may be the housing referral that helps someone get through another week. The in-home mental health support that keeps someone safe. The only meal they’ll eat all day. The difference between crisis or care. Every dollar changes lives. Every dollar is a lifeline.

Your donation will enable us to provide mental health services, including therapy, in-home support, and case management, to low-income individuals and individuals experiencing homelessness.