Share the poster: HV Group Toronto Poster -Sep 2016
We start our 7th Year in September 2016. In a new Place.
We’re grateful to Houselink for use allowing us of their space to find our feet, and for offering us a new space to grow…
We’re moving !
More accessible. More More.
805 Bloor St. West
Toronto
TTC: Christie Station.
You don’t need a referral – because we don’t take them.
What we mean by Hearing Voices
We hear voices you don’t- voices you might think are not there to be heard.
- 75% Three-in-four humans will hear a voice no one else does at least once- often around challenging life events, like loss of a loved one
- 50% of people in long term marriage heard, saw, otherwise sensed the presence of their deceased spouse
- 22% of young people
- About 10% of all people hear voices regularly
- Two thirds of world leaders at the 1943 Quebec Conference did
- Even 38% of Doctors do it…
The majority of people who hear voices never need seek help- they find the experience valuable, useful, even enjoy it, and find it helps them in their life or work – eg many, many writers do.In fact, if you don’t then maybe you’re missing out.
As for those who do struggle… it is often because they feel disempowered and disconnected from others , isolated.
- About 80% have experience adverse experiences like abuse neglect, bullying in their youth
- A person given a diagnosis of “psychosis” is fifteen times more likely to have been abused as a child than a person with no psychiatric diagnosis.
The last two alone suggest how much this Sh!t is f#cked .
…and how much we need find our compassion.
Difficult voices always make sense in context of the life of the person who hears them- so long as we make time and allow ourselves to really listen.
Hearing Voices is not just about “voices”…
If you sometimes hear voices, hear other things, see things, smell things, feel things, think things that others don’t and when you try to talk top them about it they get their freak on, then give us a try because we do to.
We talk about “hearing voices” because it’s descriptive of the most common of the kind of experiences that get called names like “psychosis”. I hear voices [you don’t], its that simple.
It also tends to be the one that scares more people shitless so they want to control and treat us like crap because they do.
Why do some people struggle? people who feel disempowered by their experience of voices are often disempowered in other aspects of their life. If we work on those, the voices can change. if we work with our voices, it can get easier to change things in our life we need and want to change.
If you want to come, come.If you’re only coming because someone else told you to come, then try asking them
“say, have you realised how much you sound like a ‘command hallucination’?”
We’re totally non medical, non-diagnostic.
We’re a full charter hearing voices group –
for voice hearers
by voice hearers,
of voice hearers.
The voices are real
The voices are real
– as real as real gets.
We know that you don’t make ’em up
and we know it can be a pain in the ass.
We also know it can be valuable and funny and sad and insightful and scary and everything else that life can be.
If you’re struggling we can share some stuff that you can try – some is really simple, some bloody hard, some might work for you, some might not. Nothing works if you don’t try it.
The only way to find out what works for you is if you try it .
Voices change, you can, if you want, change what you experience.
The Hardest Thing…
The hardest thing people who hear voices have to deal with…Our Hearing Voices group is one place you can find we don’t treat each other that way…
We choose not to …
use diagnostic or medical language
tell you what’s wrong with you, what to call yourself, or who you are
We choose instead …
to listen
to share what works for us, how we make sense of our own experience
We envision and enact a society that understands voice hearing, supports the needs of individuals who hear voices and views them as full citizens.
This type of society is not only possible it is already on its way.
We believe all human experience is meaningful and understandable – if only we make time to listen, and to figure out what it means to us.
We believe the hearing voices approach is emancipatory…
Emancipatory for people who hear voices…
If I hear voices they are “my” voices: mine because it’s…
- me who gets to hear them
- me who gets to choose what they mean to me
- me who gets to choose what I do about what they say
Emancipatory for people who support loved ones who who hear voices and emancipatory for workers and clinicians too…
Free yourself from the nonsense that says the people you care about hear voices because they haven’t taken enough tablets, or had enough chemicals injected into their buttcheeks,
that they cant do anything for themselves, and that that your role is confined to sneaking around their back and checking up on them.
Hearing Voices is not about “mental illness”
Hearing Voices is not about “mental illness” – whatever that is.
It’s not even really about illness.
It is a global emancipatory human rights movement, in 35 countries on all continents…
but mostly it’s about being human.
Heck, Canada even has a voice hearing former Prime Minister on its money…
Here’s our charter – what we’re about.
Print pdf: hvn-toronto-group-charter
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