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    • Your Stories
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TRAVIS AND KATHY AND ME - SO MANY QUESTIONS by Dede Ranahan

March 18, 2020 Dede Ranahan
Travis with his mom, Kathy.

Travis with his mom, Kathy.

My friend, Travis Christian, has served around seven years in prison because, in the middle of a psychotic break, he stabbed someone he thought was Satan. He was due to be released this year. Several months ago, Travis told prison management he wanted to go off his medications. The prison said that was his right and they would monitor him. As may have been anticipated, Travis’s mental illness symptoms reemerged and he was sent to the prison hospital. Before he was stable again, Travis was returned to the prison and placed in a new cell with a new cellie. With his delusions intact, he thought his new cellie was Satan. Travis tried to choke his cellie to kill Satan. Then, without his physician’s knowledge, Travis was moved to a different prison and put in solitary confinement. Last week Travis was told that the DA is going to bring charges against him for attempted murder and that he could face many more years in prison.

Why was Travis allowed to go off his meds?

Why wasn’t he monitored more closely?

Why was he released from the prison hospital before he was ready?

Why was he placed in a cell with anyone?

Why, after attacking his cellie, was Travis moved to a different prison without his physician’s knowledge?

Why is Travis being charged with attempted murder while being mentally ill?

Why isn’t the prison system being held accountable for prisoner mismanagement and neglect?

Why isn’t someone stepping up to make sure that Travis receives legal justice?

I received this letter from Travis before we knew that prison visits had been canceled due to the coronavirus.

March 12, 2020

Dede,

I hope you feel better. Not to scare you or anything, but do you think you have the coronavirus? It’s okay that you haven’t visited me. Just take care and you’ll get better. I’ll be looking forward to our visit on March 21. I’m believing you are going to get better.

So I’m excited to hear that your book is a finalist in the Excellence Book Awards. I enjoyed your book. That is great news! I like your blog. I can see why people like it. (I sent Travis a copy of my blog entry about Chico the happy dog. He’d never read my blog before and doesn’t have access to it.) I wanted to write to your readers about how nice you are. Thank you for visiting me when you can. Your support has gotten me through dark times. Although I’m still in the middle of this ordeal, in the beginning, especially, your support shined — a light in the darkness.

I will pray for you that you get rid of that cough.

Thanks for thinking of me. I sometimes get so lost in myself. I don’t think of anything else, or anyone else. Today it seems that all I have the energy for is to watch TV. I have so many books and magazines, but I don’t feel like reading them. I hope that changes soon because I like reading.

I’m feeling kind of down today. I’m not accepting my situation, that’s what it is. I’m uncomfortable with myself. I’m going to go. I hope I don’t bring you down. I’m just being hard on myself.

I love you.

Love, Travis

On March 9, 2020, Travis’s mother sent me a text message: “Dede, I saw Travis yesterday and I couldn’t sleep. He’s not doing well, again. His new med flopped, they’re raising his meds again, and he was told yesterday that the DA is going to charge him with attempted murder. Travis said, ‘I’m having thoughts of killing myself, the devil is attacking me in my dreams, and I wake up punching things thinking it’s Satan.’ If Travis weren’t constantly allowed to be taken off meds and to be changing meds, and if he’d received the right care in prison, he would have been out of prison 2 years ago. I’m afraid he’ll give up, or give in to his satanic thoughts, or someone will kill him. It’s a miracle he’s still alive after the last beating from the guards. Solitary is killing him. My daughter and I were shaken by his lifeless eye contact and his hopelessness. It was a hard visit. I wish I knew what to do.”

Travis counts on his monthly visits from his mother and sister and me. Now, with prison visiting shut down, he’s more isolated than ever. Travis is a conscientious correspondent. I was concerned that he’d feel overwhelmed trying to respond to those who write to him, but he assured me, “Letters are a blessing.”

Travis Christian
BB8099
C-12-242
Mule Creek State Prison
PO Box 409060
Ione, California 95640


From the oldest
Tags Sooner Than Tomorrow - A Mother's Diary, soonerthantomorrow.com, SMI, serious mental ilness, treatment not incarceration
4 Comments

WHAT DO I DREAM OF NOW? by Leslie Carpenter

March 11, 2020 Dede Ranahan
Leslie and her son.

Leslie and her son.

Today I’m sharing a photo of me holding our son at my older sister’s wedding. So, this must be from February 1992. Wow, it feels like that was so very long ago...

As we were watching her wedding, held in the same Presbyterian Church in Gouverneur, New York, where my husband Scott and I got married, I can remember imagining our son growing up and getting married as well. So many things we imagine for our children, the hopes and dreams most of us share: for them to find someone to love, to find a career that makes them fulfilled, and for health and happiness.

Well, when our son became so very sick with his serious brain disorder, our dreams and hopes changed dramatically. Ever so sadly, one comes to accept that many of our dreams for our children will likely never happen. And, eventually, we process our grief, let go of those dreams, and, if we’re lucky, we begin imagining new ones. 

So, what do I dream of now for our son and so many others like him? Oh my, I have so many dreams.

I dream of money being put into research to help find more effective treatments and cures for serious brain disorders.

I dream of creating wonderful psychiatric assisted living campuses with multiple levels of care from acute care hospitalization, to sub-acute units, to independent living apartments — with actual collaborative care and engagement with a team of compassionate and skilled mental health professionals and social workers and vocational rehab counselors and so much more.

I dream of establishing state-of-the-art treatment campuses that we would be proud to bring a family member with a brain disorder to for help. A place where we would be proud to work, and visit, and volunteer.

I dream of collaborative community care of all sorts, including assisted outpatient treatment teams working with civil mental health courts, so that people don’t have to get so sick they end up committing a crime before that level of care can be provided.

I dream of no person with a mental illness ending up in a jail or a prison, just because they are sick and haven’t been able to get medical treatment.

I dream of no person ending up homeless and untreated on our streets.

I dream of our son being able to live as independently as possible and being engaged in some activity that he enjoys — whether that be his art or volunteering or even working part-time.

I dream of our son living with as little suffering as possible, with friends, family, and a caring treatment team who are invested in his well being. And after Scott and I are no longer living, I dream that our son will be okay when we can no longer advocate and support him.

I dream of him finally having the ability to have peace within his mind and for the voices to go away.

I dream of these things, now, because of the restoration of my ability to hope, because of my NAMI family, and attending NAMI’s amazing signature program, “Family to Family.”

For this reason, Scott and I are participating in our NAMI’s largest fundraiser, the NAMIWalk, on May 2 here in Iowa City. There are numerous NAMIWalks across the country. Hopefully, many will support them.

From the oldest
Tags Sooner Than Tomorrow - A Mother's Diary, soonerthantomorrow.com, serious mental illness, SMI, NAMIWalk
2 Comments

WHY? by Robin Lynn Duffey

March 4, 2020 Dede Ranahan
Earl, a few months before he died.

Earl, a few months before he died.

I want to share this personal story of my friend Earl. He became ill at the age of 22-years-old with schizophrenia. None of us knew, at the time, that he had schizophrenia nor did we even know schizophrenia existed.

Earl came home from work one day and told his pregnant wife Renee that he’d quit his job. He had cashed his last check and given their money away.  He started reading the Bible obsessively, but would change the meanings of each verse to how he perceived it. He started writing his own bible. His young wife was desperate for help, and turned to county mental health services.  She was scheduled for a C-section, and it had been arranged for a local psychiatrist to be at the hospital during that time to observe Earl. The psychiatrist never showed up.

When their new daughter was only a few weeks old, Renee was getting ready to go to her mother’s house and was taking the baby with her. Earl tried to persuade her to leave the baby with him. She refused (because she did not feel it was a good idea) and left with the baby. Thank God she took her because the baby would have lost her life along with her Daddy.

Shortly after Renee left, a man who worked in a shop behind Earl’s and Renee’s house, noticed flames coming out the back door, flames that were shooting high above the house. The fire department was called thinking the house was on fire, but it wasn’t the house. It was Earl. He’d stripped down to his underwear, doused himself in gasoline, and lit a match. 

On the way to the burn center in San Luis Obispo, an attendant asked Earl, “Why did you light yourself on fire?” Earl said, “God appeared and told me it wouldn't hurt. He told me I wouldn’t burn and I’d prove to everyone that I am God-like.”

Earl had third-degree burns over 90 percent of his body. His abdomen was burned so badly that his internal organs were exposed. He lived for three more days.

Fast forward years later… Earl’s daughter developed severe bipolar disorder and my son became psychotic, due to paranoid schizophrenia, at about the same age that Earl had become sick. Earl’s wife Renee eventually remarried but divorced years later. Now, she works full-time to support her daughter Janeen and Janeen’s son who also has bipolar disorder. Renee lives in Santa Maria, California and can’t get her daughter help. She struggles with caregiver burnout and worries about what will happen to her daughter and grandson when she’s gone.

Earl lost his life in 1976. In my opinion, since then not much has changed as far as early care and diagnosis of serious mental illness is concerned. We still have to wait until our loved ones are an imminent danger to themselves or others before someone might try to help us.

Why? 

     

From the oldest
Tags Sooner Than Tomorrow - A Mother's Diary, soonerthantomorrow.com, serious mental ilness, SMI, paranoid schizophrenia
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TAKING A TIME OUT by Dede Ranahan

February 26, 2020 Dede Ranahan
“Hello. I’m here to report a missing person - um, dog.” Photo credit: Permian Basin Police Officers

“Hello. I’m here to report a missing person - um, dog.” Photo credit: Permian Basin Police Officers

Here’s my day so far: Wake up at 8:00 AM. Eat some breakfast — mostly blueberries and coffee. Take calcium supplements with Vitamin D. Use Flonase and Ventolin inhalers. Take two prednisone tablets (ugh). Catch up on world news (ugh), US politics (double ugh), and the update on the coronavirus (ugh again).

For six out of the last ten weeks, I’ve been more or less out of commission with two different cold/cough viruses going around. This last week, I added a little drama to the mix. Took Naproxen for a headache and now have a rash (medication reaction) on most of my body. Went to the allergist yesterday and see the regular doc tomorrow.

So, why the heck am I boring you with all this?

Guilt. Probably guilt. Last Saturday, I missed my monthly visit with Travis Christian at Mule Creek State Prison. I’ve lapsed this week on my “Sooner Than Tomorrow” stories because I don’t feel up to the task of giving them the editorial attention they deserve. If I’m going to mess up a post, it better be mine and not someone else’s. So this week’s post is my post — for better or for worse.

You’d think I must get paid big time to produce this blog. I take it seriously. I’m conscientious about the production. I care about the readers. I put in lots of hours. All unpaid. All unpaid in dollars and cents that is. How to you quantify “payments” like these?

“ We love your blog postings and look forward to them.” (yesterday)

“Dede, thank you for everything that you’ve done and I completely share your feelings. I, myself, have stopped posting much since the end of my son’s trial and his going to prison. Whereas I used to worry about grades in school and would my son find the right partner and make a good life for himself, now I live thoughts like is my mentally ill son coping within the prison system? Is he being victimized as he is not a hardened criminal? Are his medications correct and is he being monitored properly? Or the thought of him not getting to see his baby brother grow. It’s all just too sad so I have stopped posting because I want to have hope and I want to be part of a solution. Reading your posts and knowing that I am not alone has given me hope. So thank you so much again, Dede.”

“The grief, second guessing and guilt, are all prices we pay for loving someone with the severe symptoms of a brain illness and struggling to cope with it's tragic consequences. Dede, one of the benefits of the work you do is that others don't feel so alone anymore in their torment. While this doesn't change their personal story, it does ease the isolation that can magnify what they're going through. You work brings these stories to the surface and the light for understanding. Understanding leads to compassion. Compassion leads to positive change. It's hard to see from where you stand. Maybe because you are so busy doing what you do. We can't always see where the ripples from our stones that are thrown in the water reach. Follow your heart. Healing takes time. Big Hugs and much love.”

With the exception of feedback like this, I pretty much write this blog on blind faith. Blind faith that things will get better. That they have to get better. That, by sharing our stories, we can actually make them get better. The blog mission is important to me.

So, while wallowing on the sofa with my runny nose, my cough, and my beautiful rash (if I weren’t the victim, this bodily process could be fascinating to watch), I come across this story. Nothing to do with mass murders, US politics, or the coronavirus. Nothing to do with mental illness. It was published in “The Dodo” on 2/21/2020 and written by Stephen Messenger. “Dog Strolls into Police Station to Report Himself Missing.”

Last week, in the wee hours of the morning, an unexpected visitor strolled through
the doors of the Odessa Police Department in Texas and hopped up onto the counter. 
It was a friendly dog who seemed eager to let officers know of an incident in progress
— that a certain someone had gone missing from home. He, himself.

The author’s playfulness captivated me. But more, the photos of the dog (Chico) in all his doggifulness (is “doggifulness” a word? If not, it should be.) carried me out of myself, off my sickbed, and into the realm of storytelling at its best — for fun, for light-heartedness, for joy.

Chico’s Story

So, to those of you who tell me you read Sooner Than Tomorrow week after week, and indeed, count on it, please allow me this week’s “time out.” Please enjoy Chico and his adventures — even if you’re not a dog person. Please stay well, away from cold and cough and coronaviruses. Maybe, give yourself permission to take your own time out. We all need them and deserve them now and then. Hope you have a good week.

From the oldest
Tags Sooner Than Tomorrow - A Mother's Diary & A Son's Last Facebook Posts, soonerthantomorrow.com, serious mental ilness, SMII, doggifulness, Missing person, time out
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DEAR SENATOR SANDERS: PLEASE RETHINK YOUR DISABILITY PLAN by Ilene Flannery Wells

February 18, 2020 Dede Ranahan
Ilene dressed as Dorothea Dix.

Ilene dressed as Dorothea Dix.

Dear Senator Sanders,

This is in regard to your Disability plan, more specifically your plan to vigorously enforce the Olmstead Decision, and your support of the Medicaid IMD Exclusion. 

As you know, the Olmstead decision is a 1999 Supreme Court decision which determined that people with mental illness should be treated in the least restrictive environment possible. I completely agree with that. What you are forgetting, or ignoring, is that the Olmstead decision was not to close institutions, but rather to make sure that only those who truly needed to be in one, were. Justice Ginsberg warned us to not close institutions when she wrote the following in the decision:

"The ADA is not reasonably read to impel States to phase out institutions, placing patients in need of close care at risk. Nor is it the ADA’s mission to drive States to move institutionalized patients into an inappropriate setting... Some individuals may need institutional care from time to time to stabilize acute psychiatric symptoms. For others, no placement outside the institution may ever be appropriate…This Court emphasizes that nothing in the ADA or its implementing regulations condones termination of institutional settings for persons unable to handle or benefit from community settings. Nor is there any federal requirement that community-based treatment be imposed on patients who do not desire it." 

The Medicaid Institutes for Mental Diseases (IMD) Exclusion, enacted in 1964 when Medicaid was created, bans federal matching Medicaid funds to cover the treatment of otherwise Medicaid eligible adults being treated in a psychiatric hospital (or any facility over 16 beds that provides 24/7 nursing care to people with a mental illness and/or addiction). If you support the IMD Exclusion, you support federally sanctioned discrimination, and a law which has already caused an extreme psychiatric bed shortage and put those “in need of close care” at great risk.

When my twin brother Paul was released from the New York State hospital system in 1998, after 20 years, many states were already off-loading patients into the community, whether or not they could handle or benefit from it, due to the financial squeeze from the IMD Exclusion. Paul was treated as if he were a fully functioning, fully recovered adult, yet he was permanently and gravely disabled and he never gained insight into his illness. Paul, our family, and members of our community, were traumatized by preventable incidents that occurred after his release, due to being placed in inappropriate settings, time and time again. He needed long-term care and pushing him into inappropriate community settings was detrimental to both his physical and mental health.

The Olmstead decision specifically states that a person should be treated in a less restrictive setting when the patient is clinically ready, willing, and there are appropriate setting and supports available. The first and third criteria are often left out of the equation today, with disastrous results.  

The discriminatory Medicaid law and the improper enforcement of Olmstead have already been catastrophic to individuals, like my brother, who are in need of close care, their families, and the communities in which they live. They include re-hospitalization, re-institutionalization, homelessness, victimization, incarceration, and death. More people with a serious mental illness are institutionalized today than ever before, but they are in prison or in homeless shelters, not hospitals. This is a sad testament to the state of health care today for people with serious mental illness. 

Proper support of Olmstead would include:
· Enough acute care and long-term psychiatric beds to support the treatment needs for our current population (approx. 50 beds per 100,000 adults)
· Assessment to determine appropriate treatment setting taking into account
· Whether or not the person has Anosognosia (lack of insight), which affects their ability to participate in treatment
· Level of existing symptoms
· Ability to perform activities of daily living (ADL) and overall cognitive functioning (Schizophrenia, for example, is a cognitive disorder that also affects memory and other cognitive abilities)
· Placement into a setting with supports built around assessment
· Housing to be both scattered and congregate as appropriate for the individuals needs
· Follow up after transition with mechanism to transition back to more restrictive environment, if necessary
· Further step-down to less restrictive environment only when criteria for that level is met

I urge you to re-think what it means to enforce Olmstead and to also support the repeal of the Medicaid IMD Exclusion.

Ilene’s brother Paul right before he died.

Ilene’s brother Paul right before he died.

From the oldest
Tags Sooner Than Tomorrow - A Mother's Diary, soonerthantomorrow.com, IMD Exclusion, Olmstead Decision, schizophrenia, homelessness, incarcerting the seriously mentally ill
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THE OTHER ME by Donna Nance

February 11, 2020 Dede Ranahan
Donna and her son

Donna and her son

The other me is an optimist, 
Always up for something new. 
The other me has a list of dreams that, somehow, 
She’ll make come true. 

The other me writes silly stories 
For someone, or no one, to read. 
The other me loves being creative, 
Always a project up her sleeve. 

The other me sees into hearts  
And knows just how they feel. 
The other me has the gift of saying 
Calming words that heal. 

The other me, in adversity, 
Is as strong as a mother bear. 
The other me is hopeful  
And still believes in prayer. 

She looks just like me, she's just my age 
And her hair is just as gray. 
But her eyes, they sparkle, and she’s quick to smile. 
Wish I could be that way. 

The me, that I am, finds it difficult 
To concentrate on much. 
The me, that I am, no longer has a 
Passion for crafts and such. 

The me, that I am, has worries  
No mother should ever own. 
The me, that I am, often feels  
Hopeless and alone.  

The me, that I am, can't always find 
The soothing words that she would. 
The me, that I am, often doesn’t have 
The patience that I should. 

The me, that I am, is heartbroken 
That it all seems so unfair. 
The me, that I am, is angry 
And incapable of prayer.

Sometimes I catch a glimpse of her 
Out of the corner of my eye. 
She beckons me to join her, 
If only for a while. 

And, if I can pull myself together 
For a brief repose, 
We might do some gardening, take a walk  
Or catch a movie, I suppose. 

We like to share a rocking chair 
And a book out in the sun, 
And she’s nice to have around to 
Share in a bit of fun. 

From time to time she whispers   
Encouragement in my ear. 
And, if I can’t, she’ll be the one 
Who says a little prayer. 

She doesn’t stick around long, 
She comes and goes…and then... 
Sometimes I start to worry 
That I won’t see her again. 

I hope she doesn't forget me. 
I know I’ll never forget her.

My son is 37-years old. Even as a child, he was a worrier and anxious, but had a lot of friends and easily got good grades. He was the kid who didn't drink and who would drive the other kids home. He went away to college in 2001 and, in 2004, had a breakdown, dropped out, and came home. He was diagnosed with Bipolar 2, anxiety, and severe depression. He’d started self-medicating with beer and pot and cigarettes, which he used to hate. Luckily, no hard drugs had been involved.

To make a really long story a bit shorter, over the years his SMI has progressed. He’s been in the ER (51/50's) numerous times (which he often talks his way out of), and has been hospitalized three times. He’s taken a variety of medications — none of which seemed to work that well, especially, when he was drinking, smoking, and not compliant taking them. He said, “I don’t want to kill myself. I just want to be dead.”

Over a year ago, after an extremely bad episode when he was hospitalized, we made the hard decision to not allow our son to come home. Since then, he’s been in five different places — always a "great" opportunity until he gets tired of the venue or gets kicked out. Although he’d been sober for quite a while and was going to AA, he went off his meds last summer and got worse than ever. He was rail thin, let his hair grow really long, and didn’t shave or bathe. His eyes looked wild and his behavior was scary. Every time we talked to him, he ranted and screamed and blamed us and, in the same breath, would cry for us to let him come home. He said, “I’ll show you how much I’ve changed since I’ve been sober.”

My son is back on meds, but is still extremely depressed and lonely and wants to come home. We know it won't work and that we're doing the right thing, but it doesn't feel very good. He’s in "the system," and getting SS disability, but not going to therapy consistently. We’ve been to NAMI meetings and classes.

Mental illness changes the whole family. We’re both 64 and tired, emotionally and physically. Even though our son isn’t with us 24/7 anymore, his illness consumes us. I used to have hobbies and other interests that I would still like to do, but rarely have the energy.

In the 16 years since he was diagnosed, my son’s had a blood clot in his lung (he also has a clotting disorder). I’ve been through breast cancer (chemo and radiation), and had a tumor on my spinal cord removed followed by a lot of physical therapy. My 90 year-old mother-in-law moved in with us for six months before she passed, and I had to liquidate her estate. I worried about another son with the clotting disorder, my husband lost his younger brother, and, now, I'm helping take care of my 90-year-old parents. We're wondering when the golden years kick in.

I wrote this poem a couple of years ago. Thanks for reading it.

From the oldest
Tags Sooner Than Tomorrow - A Mother's Diary, soonerthantomorrow.com, serious mental illness, bipolar 2, anxiery, depression
3 Comments

"THEY SHOULD HAVE LET YOU HELP ME. I WASN'T IN MY RIGHT MIND" by Laurie Turley

February 4, 2020 Dede Ranahan
A bright-eyed, hopeful young girl. Carol with the future in her eyes.

A bright-eyed, hopeful young girl. Carol with the future in her eyes.

My sister, Carol, lived in upstate New York, not far from the town she and I grew up in. She was a high honors student in high school, graduating valedictorian in her senior class, and receiving a full scholarship to an ivy-league university to study journalism. Something happened while she was away at school, but my brother and I, being several years younger, weren't privy to the hushed conversations between my parents and older siblings about just what was the matter. I knew Carol could be volatile and prone to outbursts of anger and irrational reasoning. I also knew she was creative and full of ideas about the world that I found intriguing and inspiring. 

I left home at 17 when I went to college. I never really lived with my family after that, only returning home to visit on holidays. By then, my sister was living with a man with whom she bore a son. She held jobs — a staff writer for a magazine; a writing teacher at the local university. She wrote poetry, beautiful poetry. Writing and books were her love and her life. While family gatherings were often uncomfortable and awkward when she was around, I wasn't present to witness the worst of her behaviors, so I was unaware of just how seriously ill she was. I only knew she was "different,” but I loved her, loved her writing, loved her creativity, and loved my sister for herself.

It wasn't until several years later, after I had married, lived three states away, and my second child was an infant in my arms, that my mother called to tell me that they had to have Carol committed to the state psychiatric hospital. Just like mother's own brother, my uncle, my sister was involuntarily admitted to the same state hospital where he had lived many years before his death. I learned that my sister had inherited the family illness. Schizophrenia.

Details of the years following that first hospitalization are sketchy, at least from what I knew. On trips home to visit the family, I visited my sister in the hospital, in her home, and in the mental health outpatient center where she introduced me to her friends. I cried with her when her 12-year-old son was removed from her home by Child Protective Services and put into foster care where none of us were able to see him — due to legal restrictions and "conflict of interest" in our relationship with her. I rejoiced with her when she finally agreed to stay on medication, and when she found a psychiatrist who was willing to work with her — in her words, "Like a tinker, an alchemist" — until they found just the right combination of medication that would keep her stable for the next 20 years. 

Even though she was medically stable, Carol still struggled daily to find her place in a world that couldn't see this woman — who I knew as a beautiful soul — as anything other than a cast-off and a mentally ill person. Medication would keep her stable, but she never could recover, and never be free of schizophrenia and many of the symptoms that medication could not erase. Sometimes the medication would fail and need to be readjusted, and she would regress. She aged prematurely, lost her teeth, was at times morbidly obese, and at others less so, often had a dulled expression, developed diabetes, and was violently assaulted in her own apartment by someone who took nothing from her but the medication she had in her purse. Yet, through it all, she maintained her generous nature and her creative drive to write poetry and fiction. I collaborated with her on compiling some of her poems into a hard-cover book with my photographs accompanying them. In the spring before she died, we self-published several copies to give to friends and family, and she was even able to sell a few. It had always been her dream to be published, and even though this wasn't the same as having her poems accepted by a large publishing company, she told me that she felt her dream had come true. It was the last good thing I was able to do for her. 

A few years before Carol died, we began having long phone conversations. I was struggling with a crisis within my own family, and she alone was willing to listen any time, day or night, as I asked her probing questions to help me understand. She generously shared with me insights into her illness, and tried to help me understand what was impossible to comprehend. She would talk me through many of my darkest times, having a firsthand knowledge of the grief and helplessness that comes of seeing someone you love suffer.  She was wise, giving, and forgiving. She was my rock of wisdom and support during those phone calls. At the other end of the line, when she spoke to me, my sister was complete and whole. 

I visited her in her brand new apartment, which had been subsidized and furnished by charitable agencies. It was bright, with high ceilings, wood floors and big windows, with two bedrooms and clean furniture that had been provided for her. I stayed a weekend with her. We cooked meals together, went shopping together, and she talked about wanting to teach a writing class again. I had every hope and reason to believe that my sister was going to thrive. 

A little less than a year later, Carol began to sound halting in our phone conversations, and would sometimes ramble without direction, or her speech would be slurred. She told me that she had begun to hear voices again, and that she was afraid she needed to have her medication adjusted. I encouraged her to do so soon. She promised me she would. She shared that she hadn't seen her psychiatrist in some time, but was going to make an appointment. I now know that she probably never followed through. I believe that she had digressed too far into the illness to be able to make that rational choice of action on her own. Severe mental illnesses such as schizophrenia take away a person's ability to reason clearly. 

My own life situation took a dreadful turn, and I was preoccupied with trying to cope with things at home, so I didn't get down New York State to visit her that whole next year. When I finally did, nearly a year after she had moved into her new apartment, I found Carol lying naked on her couch. Her apartment had gone from a comfortable, homey, bright space to rooms full of clutter so deep I could hardly make my way through. Unwashed dishes and molding food filled the sink and covered the stove. Dirty laundry and dirty counter and table-tops, added filthy, unsanitary conditions, and cockroaches ran freely. How did this occur? I had to get help for her. With the help of her now-adult son and some other siblings, I got the numbers of her case manager and her former treatment providers. Not one of them would talk with me except to say, “Your sister is her own guardian and has the right to refuse treatment,” which apparently she did. Each and every one of them told me that she was entitled to make her own choices and there was nothing I or anyone else could do.

I knew, because she’d told me, that she feared being sent "back up to the Hill" which the state psychiatric hospital was called. I knew she feared being in a locked ward and forced into treatment. I knew she’d lapsed into a state of psychotic illness, and I couldn’t prevent her downfall nor convince her that treatment, voluntary or involuntary, was exactly what she desperately needed. 

A visiting nurse knocked on the door, while I was there, to deliver insulin which my sister was responsible for administering to herself. The nurse tested her blood sugar levels. They were way above normal. While my sister sat outside on the deck and stabbed her arm with the needle of insulin the nurse had given her, I took the nurse into the apartment. Amidst the filth, we discovered several vials of unopened insulin, evidence that she hadn't taken her diabetes medication and, of course, it was obvious that she hadn't taken her anti-psychotic medication. Another woman came to the door from Meals on Wheels. When she saw me at the door, she thrust the warm tray into my hands, and turned and ran down the stairs. It was clear she’d come to this door before and she was grateful that, this time, she didn't need to do more than deliver and run. 

I begged the nurse to please help me help my sister. It was obvious Carol needed to be on medication, and back into treatment. I thought, if I could just make her look around and acknowledge my sister was in need, surely she would make a report and help me get my sister the help. The nurse said what every other care provider I’d called for the past month said: "Your sister is clearly in need, but she's her own guardian, and if she refuses treatment, there is nothing anyone can do." 

I left my sister in that horrible state, in that unsanitary, unsafe condition, with my heart broken. I returned home, promising her I was going to continue to call her and stay in touch. I promised myself I wouldn’t give up trying to persuade someone — anyone — to get her out of there and into treatment. 

A week or two later, I received a phone call from Carol’s son that she’d been taken by ambulance to the hospital with a serious lung infection. In her absence, her landlord visited her apartment and began eviction proceedings. The city inspectors pronounced the entire apartment building "condemned" due to the untenable conditions which presented a health hazard to the other tenants. While this news was devastating to my sister, upon learning that all of her possessions were to be disposed of, the upside was that she was now deemed homeless, and social services could finally intervene. She couldn't be discharged from the hospital without a place to live. She was placed in a group home for seniors. Although she was only 63 years old, she appeared to be much older. 

Back on psychiatric medication, her ability to reason began to return. In one of our last phone conversations, Carol shared that she felt life returning within her, that she felt like she was awakening from a bad dream. She said to me, "I don't know how I got so bad. I was doing so well. How did things get so bad?" I told her we all knew she was going downhill and we tried to help her, but she refused help. There was nothing family members could do. Her next words were among the last she ever spoke to me. "They should have let you help me. I wasn't in my right mind." 

"They should have let you help me. I wasn't in my right mind." 

Less than a month later, the infection in my sister's lungs, which I have no doubt began as a result of living in the unhealthy condition of her apartment, progressed into pneumonia. The doctors said they’d never seen a case of pneumonia so invasive. Despite their efforts, they couldn't clear her of the infection. After a week of intensive care, it developed into sepsis and took her life. 

All our efforts to rescue her were futile, and had been all the while she was descending into the illness she couldn't manage on her own. She could have been stabilized if the laws, designed to protect her civil rights, hadn’t prevented those who loved her most from getting her into care. 

"They should have let you help me. I wasn't in my right mind." 

Those words will haunt me until the end of my days. Those words are why I believe that families need to be listened to. Families, regardless of whether they have legal guardianship or not, should have the right to intervene and get their loved ones to treatment when they see the need. They’re the ones who see the signs first and most clearly. 

My sister’s death is why I believe that so many, who are left to "die with their rights on," are rather, in truth, denied their right to live because of our current restrictive laws. Carol’s last words to me continue to be my inspiration. They inspire me to fight for treatment for the seriously mentally ill who are unable to help themselves. 

 "They should have let you help me. I wasn't in my right mind." 

Carol, age 42.

Carol, age 42.

BUTTERFLY by Carol A. Snyder

Butterfly, stay away from my net,
It’s there on the ground.
I will not pick it up.
I will not chase after you as others do.

I would chase your colors, lovely lemons,
Butters, purples, monarch’s orange
and blacks away from the flowers
that others would snap their nets over.

Send you after the freedom
that you surely deserve.
I do not like being trapped.

Why should you?

THIS IS MY HEART, TAKE CARE by Carol A. Snyder

Because you’re probably going to squeeze my heart like clay,
I make it mud and send it to the river
to wash clean over stone and pebbles
to make it blue and green as the river water
fresh and sweet as river-rinsed air
And hope you’ll see it, what the river pours forth, as good.
even though you’ll probably never recognize me.
Even then, I wish this good for you.

"In the zeal to impeccably protect the patient's civil liberties and rights, an increasing number of troubled and psychotic patients are what I choose to term dying with their rights on."  

Darold A. Treffert, MD, and Former Officer
American Association of Psychiatric Administrators
American Psychiatric Association and American College of Psychiatrists


From the oldest
Tags Sooner Than Tomorrow - A Mother's Diary, soonerthantomorrow.com, serious mental ilness, SMI, schizophrenia
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WHY IS THIS OKAY? by Sharon Underwood

January 29, 2020 Dede Ranahan
Tim and Sharon in 2013. “About a year before his diagnosis.”

Tim and Sharon in 2013. “About a year before his diagnosis.”

My son, Tim, has been homeless, staying with friends or couch surfing, since he turned 18 (24 now). The minute he turned 18, he walked away from his supported-living group home. He can’t live with me. I can’t control him. He refuses all forms of therapy, including meds, and blocks me from all legal and medical information. He demands money, thinks I injected him with poison to make him sick, and believes I'm withholding a non-existent trust fund from him. I'm out of work and broke. Real broke. Barely making it broke. I've been giving my son at least $100-200 a month as he won’t apply for SSI because he thinks that’s how the demons will track him. He says, “I’m not sick.”

The doctors have diagnosed my son with schizoaffective disorder. He self-medicates with whatever substance he can get his hands on, has been arrested 40 times, and has a felony assault charge against a police officer. I've tried to get him committed (for at least long enough to get him some help) for six years with no luck. He tells authorities he’s not suicidal or dangerous and they let him go. I love him so much but he’s prone to disturbingly scary behaviors and I’ve had to get restraining orders on the advice of his doctor.

Last week, my fiancee and I were driving home from the grocery store and saw my son coming from my house. We stopped to talk with him. He was pissed. He said, “I put a hole in your garage door, and the landlord called the police.” I reminded him, “You can’t come over and get me into trouble.” He basically told me, “You don’t care about me,” and he fled on foot. I pulled up the street into my parking lot. My son had smashed my fiancee’s truck, over and over, into the garage door. He caused $5000 worth of damage. The truck wasn’t touched due to a customized front end. The police picked him up down the street.

I’m losing everything. My fiancee is wonderful and my landlords are trying to be helpful. I filed for a new restraining order and plan to move. I feel like my son’s left me no choice. He’s in jail and will be for a while. I don’t know if I’m relieved to not be terrorized every day or profoundly struck with heartbreak and guilt. I’m now $5000 in debt and have, for all intents and purposes, lost my son. I'm sick of this terrible disease. I’m sick of the terrible system that governs it. The cops all know he’s sick. The doctors all know he’s sick. The judges all know he’s sick. I can’t believe my sick son can be left to his own devices. I can’t believe that the only treatment he’ll get will be in jail or prison.

Why is this okay? Tim talks like he’s 10-years old. How is this okay?

My relationship with my son is now damaged beyond repair. I’m heartbroken and scared to death of him, and all because of the law. It says, basically, my son has to kill someone in order to be committed and properly treated and evaluated.

I don’t know if I'll ever be okay in my heart.

UPDATE:
Since Tim’s arrest in Oregon for unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, he’s spent two months waiting for a spot in Oregon State Hospital. I’ve been in contact with his probation officer as well as the district attorney because I was a witness to my fiancee’s truck being taken. We’ve been assured that, in Oregon, a crime with mental health issues is treated differently. A new order was designed to assist a mentally ill suspect in being evaluated, treated (mandatory treatment if necessary in an attempt to get him fit for trial), and transitioned out of jail or the hospital.

On a Saturday night, I got a message from the Automatic Defendant Tracking System (VINES) saying my son was released from jail. The jail’s phone line wasn’t open on the weekend, so I waited until Monday and called the district attorney who assured me that Tim was finally transported to the state hospital, and he would be there at least 30 days — possibly a year or more —determined by his evaluation and needed treatment.

So, ten days later, there was a knock at the door at 8 A.M. It woke my fiancee and me up. It was my son. We had a restraining order and my fiancee, shook up and barely awake, reminded Tim he couldn’t be on the property. Tim ran. I called the police, but they couldn’t find him. I called the probation officer. She called me back seven hours later. My son had been released from jail instead of being transported to the state hospital. He was told he was free and instructed to show up in court on January 15, 2020.

Apparently, the jail made the mistake and, now, no one knows where Tim is. There are warrants out for his arrest, but the police can’t find him. I live in Medford, Oregon, a tiny 80,000-person town. Not Portland. Not LA. My fiancee and I have been to every shelter and homeless outreach and driven to areas known to homeless people. My son is nowhere. Just nowhere.

I didn’t know he’d been released and was half asleep when he came by. If I’d known that his release was accidental (and didn’t just feel that, once again, they’d let him fall through the cracks), I’d have possibly done something different that morning. My fiancee and I are sick that that might have been our last chance to get him into the state hospital. It’s 30 degrees here at night right now. I feel angry and guilty for trusting the system. I feel helpless at the same time. As I write, my son is out there with no help. I’m going to check some places again. I feel like I have to find him myself because the police can’t. Or won’t.

If you google “Aid and Assist” In Oregon, you’ll see the services they claim to provide — serving time in the state hospital getting help, transitioning through aftercare, housing-assistance. Our family was so happy and hopeful for what that meant. We all thought Tim might get his meds back and have help filing for disability. Instead, every day or other day, I go to the drug dealing park, or to the soup kitchen or to the shelter. I try to spot Tim so the police can get called and we can continue back to what was supposed to happen in the first place. I’m sad. I’m scared for and of him. I’m so disgusted with the system and that I have to do everything myself and, if don’t find him, I’ll be the terrible parent. The terrible person.

I can’t ask anyone to help anymore. They just won’t. It’s on me.

Tim and his sisters. Sharon says, “My family the way i wish it could be.”

Tim and his sisters. Sharon says, “My family the way i wish it could be.”

From the oldest
Tags Sooner Than Tomorrow - A Mother's Diary, soonerthantomorrow.com, serious mental ilness, SMI, treatment not incarceration, criminalization of mental illness, criminal justice
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WANT TO JOIN TEAM TRAVIS? by Dede Ranahan

January 21, 2020 Dede Ranahan
Travis and his mom, Kathy. She says, “I miss my son. I miss him having hope in his eyes. I love him so much and wish I could help him.”

Travis and his mom, Kathy. She says, “I miss my son. I miss him having hope in his eyes. I love him so much and wish I could help him.”

On Saturday (January 18, 2020), I drove to Ione, California to visit Travis Christian at Mule Creek State Prison. I’d been sick for three weeks and was glad I was feeling well enough to make the hour-and-half drive. I didn’t want to let Travis down and miss our regular monthly visit.

When I checked into the visiting center, the guard said, “Your visit will be delayed 20 minutes or so. We had a fog check this morning. Everything was locked down. It took us an hour to complete the prisoner check so we’re running a little behind.”

The guard pointed me toward a table. After a few minutes, a prisoner with a dust cloth stopped and asked, “Would you like me to straighten your table? Would you like me to clean it off for you?” This prisoner spoke with a pleasant smile on his face. He wore glasses and bore tattoos on every exposed feature — arms and neck. I thanked him. He said, “Have a good day.”

In a half hour, the guard directed me to one of four visiting cubicles reserved for prisoners in solitary. Travis was already coming through the door on his side of the glass. I picked up the phone. “Hi Travis.” “Hi Dede.” Already the clock was ticking on our one-hour visiting time. Because I’d been sick, I hadn’t written to Travis since our December visit. He’d learned I was sick from my neighbor who writes to him. “Are you okay? I was so worried about you, Dede.” In an hour, Travis would be all over the emotional map. Glad to see me. Sad and missing his family. Afraid for his future. Anxious because he’s received no information about how long he’ll be in solitary, when he’ll face trial, what the charges will be. Frustrated with his weekly therapy sessions. “I wish I could sit on a sofa when I talk with the clinician.”

I asked, “What do you sit on?”

“I’m in a cage.”

Travis spends too much time in cages. He paces in a cage during his three-hour yard times. “Do you have something to sit on if you want to stop pacing?” “A toilet.” “Does the toilet at least have a lid on it?” “No".

(I think I need to get a job at this prison. I’d make a few changes.)

I told Travis that Kelli Buttler, a Sacramento woman who writes to him on a regular basis, reached out to me and said she’d like to visit him, too. I told Kelli about the paperwork involved to become an approved visitor. Travis’s eyes lit up. “I like her letters. I’d love to meet her.”

I posited another idea. “Travis, how would you feel if we could set up a Team Travis so you’d have a visitor every weekend? Would you like that? Would it feel intrusive? What do you think?”

Travis’s eyes got teary. “That would be amazing. I’d love that. No, it wouldn’t be intrusive. If someone cares enough about me to come visit, I’d want to be open with them.”

I didn’t promise anything. “I’ll see what I can do.” (If I were younger, I’d take this ball and run with it. Maybe an organization of volunteers to visit prisoners in solitary all over the country. A quiet stampede to call attention to the inhumanity in our criminal justice system. Sometimes I get carried away :-)

As usual, our hour flew by. Travis mentioned Pat, Joan, Sue, Christy, and Kelli (I’m not remembering all the names) who are writing to him on a regular basis. “Joan writes me everyday. I told her she doesn’t have to write that often. She has her own life to lead.” Someone sent him a copy of the book Bird by Bird: Some Instructions On Writing and Life by Anne Lamott. It came from Amazon and he didn’t know who sent it. He loved the book and read it in three days. “Please tell them ‘Thank you.’ I’m writing. Some stories. Some journaling. I’m writing for my family. I love them so much. I miss them.” Teary eyes.

I drove home thinking about Team Travis. Could we get volunteers to visit once a month or every other month or three times a year? We’d prioritize Kathy’s visits with her son and work around her schedule. She lives in southern California and tries to visit once a month. Kelli had asked me, “Is it scary visiting the prison?” I said, “No. It’s not scary. It’s depressing but so rewarding. You make a huge impact on someone’s life — offering a lifeline to the outside world. Letting them know they’ve not been forgotten.”

I hope to hear from some of you. Let’s see where this goes. Team Travis. It has a nice ring don’t you think?

Travis’s mailing address:
Travis Christian BB8099
C-12-242
Mule Creek State Prison
P.O. Box 409060
Ione, CA 95640

On the way home from Mule Creek State Prison Photo credit: Dede Ranahan

On the way home from Mule Creek State Prison
Photo credit: Dede Ranahan

From the oldest
Tags Sooner Than Tomorrow - A Mother's Diary, soonerthantomorrow.com, serious mental ilness, SMI, treatment not incarceration, solitary confinement
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IN 2020, PEACE AND SERENITY TO OUR AMAZING TRIBE by Dede Ranahan

December 30, 2019 Dede Ranahan
Photo Credit: Michael Klotz https://www.flickr.com

Photo Credit: Michael Klotz
https://www.flickr.com

On July 15, 2016, (almost two years to the day after I lost my son, Pat), I wrote:

Welcome to my blog. This is my first post. I've included the photo of the killdeer because a killdeer mom gave me courage when I needed it most.    

Excerpt from my book, Sooner Than Tomorrow: "This morning I'm heartened on my early walk. The killdeer is back on her nest, in the same brown and gray rocks as before, one block over. No trees shade her. No bushes shield her from predators. She sits on four new eggs -- faithful, vulnerable, determined. 'You inspire me little Mama Bird, and I wish you the best. We mothers have to stick together.'"

Please know that I intend this blog to be about more than just me and my book. I want it to be a safe place for mothers and grandmothers and sisters and daughters — any family member or caregiver really — to tell our stories and to share insights about living our lives to the fullest while we try to help someone we love cope with serious mental illness.

So here we go. Let's see where this takes us. I look forward to hearing from you, hosting our discussions, and posting your stories.

Hope you're having a good week. Dede

Fast forward to today:

Little did I know the journey I was embarking on when I created that post. In the last three-and-a-half years, in addition to my own stories, I’ve posted 161 stories from mothers, fathers, politicians, journalists, and individuals with SMI — including a prisoner in solitary confinement and a woman homeless on the streets of Sacramento. I’ve met quite a few of you in person and come to know many more of you on Facebook. As of December 30, 2019, Sooner Than Tomorrow has reached readers in over 90 countries and has received over 96,000 page views.

The top twelve stories in 2019 are the following:

  1. “I’m Past Anger. I’m in Complete Despair” by Linda Rippee.

  2. “The Failure of Kevin’s Law” by Kimberlee West

  3. “Our Country’s Shame” by Dede Ranahan

  4. “Rewind and Erase” by Linda Rippee

  5. “My Video May Be Difficult to Watch” by Sherri McGimsey

  6. “Just the Beginning of Our Journey With Our Son” by Rebecca Distel Reinig

  7. “Please Help Us Reach the 2020 Presidential Candidates” by Dede Ranahan
    (To receive a copy of the 2020 Grassroots 5-Part Plan for SMI Reform, email me: dede@soonerthantomorrow.com)

  8. “Please Don’t Kill My Son” by Darlene Been Watkins

  9. “Thank You For All Your Letters to Travis” by Dede Ranahan

  10. “Beyond My Understanding of What Being Human Means” by CJ Hanson

  11. “I See Change Coming” by Channin Henry Williams

  12. “This Is A Moral Moment” by Teresa Pasquini

Thank you to all the 2019 contributors, in addition to those listed above: Viviana Kaeg-Runde, Sarah C., Julie Fast, Lynn Nanos, Tamara Lee, Deborah Harper, Laura Pogliano, Lance Soberg, RNP, Kelli Nidey, SARDAA, Audrey Adams, National Shattering Silence Coalition, Sal Rosselli, Jerri Clark, Ashley Doonan, Cathie Curtis, Stacy Kollias, Sheila Ganz, Sherry Hunter, Allilsa Fernandez, Pamela Armstrong, Angela McCandless, Mary Rossell, Pat Wood Sterling, Gary Warth, Pete Earley, Marcella Brown, Francie Van Zandt, Donna, Ellie Shukert, Leslie Carpenter, Steve Bullock, Marcy Murphy, Kamala Harris, and many Anonymous.

Thank you to all the 2019 readers, those with SMI experience and those newly learning about SMI.

By blog standards, Sooner Than Tomorrow is still a baby blog. That fact, though, doesn’t tell the whole story. I challenge anyone, anywhere, to point to a blog with more heart, more courage, more grief, more resilience, more generosity, or more hope. Your stories come from across our country. When I read them, I’m in the presence of love and strength beyond what any of us thought those attributes would ever require. Your stories make me sad and proud and humbled to be part of our amazing tribe.

May 2020 bring peace and serenity to all of us in the SMI community, and to all those ready and willing to help us fight for comprehensive and compassionate mental illness care.

Love to you, Dede

P.S. Have to include this photo.

Pat, I love you forever. Mom

Pat, I love you forever. Mom

Sooner Than Tomorrow — A Mother’s Diary About Mental Illness, Family, And Everyday Life by Dede Ranahan
Click here to see Sooner Than Tomorrow on Amazon

For Patrick and his sisters,
Megan, Marisa, and Kerry.
And for the mothers.

Mothers are the people who love us for no good reason.
And those of us who are mothers know
it’s the most exquisite love of all.
—Maggie Gallagher

From the oldest
Tags Sooner Than Tomorrow - A Mother's Diary, soonerthantomorrow.com, serious mental ilness, SMII, Grassroots 2020: 5-Part Plan for SMI, Reclassification of SMI as neurological not behavioral, IMD Repeal, HIPAA Reform, Continuum of Care, Decriminalization of SMI
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Winner: 2019 Nautilus Book Awards - GoldClick here to watch my Nautilus Book Awards Author Spotlight VideoClick here to see my book on Amazon.

Winner: 2019 Nautilus Book Awards - Gold

Click here to watch my Nautilus Book Awards Author Spotlight Video

Click here to see my book on Amazon.

Hi! Thanks for stopping by.Blog 1: Your Stories: Our stories of serious mental illness — and how it impacts individuals, our loved ones and our families — will help bring this topic into the mainstream discourse.Blog 2. My Diary: I began keeping my …

Hi! Thanks for stopping by.

Blog 1: Your Stories: Our stories of serious mental illness — and how it impacts individuals, our loved ones and our families — will help bring this topic into the mainstream discourse.

Blog 2. My Diary: I began keeping my diary as I was approaching my 70th birthday. I wasn’t a happy camper. I felt like I was being dragged into the walled city of old age. And I wasn’t coming out. I decided to lean into the experience. I wanted to reflect on the extra-ordinary in the ordinary. In the wonder of each day. I wanted to leave a time capsule for my grandchildren. That was it. A gift for myself and my grandchildren. But after Pat died, my diary morphed into something some complex. It included a legacy for Pat and a stealth indictment of our mental illness system. My blog is now my book.

I hope, with these two blogs, we'll see increased understanding and movement toward better mental illness care. Sooner than tomorrow...

Hope you're having a good day.

Dede

DISCLAIMER: I never was or ever will be a psychiatrist or psychologist. The mental illness comments and information I post on this website and on these blogs shouldn't be taken as advice or recommendations. People in need of mental health and mental illness assistance should see their mental health/mental illness providers.

P.S. The opinions expressed by other writers on this blog are their own. I respect them even when/if I don't agree with them. Their stories need to be told. And heard.

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    • Aug 27, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (OREGON) - COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Aug 27, 2020
    • Aug 19, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (COLORADO) - COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Aug 19, 2020
    • Aug 12, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (OHIO) - COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Aug 12, 2020
    • Aug 5, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (MICHIGAN) - COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Aug 5, 2020
  • July 2020 3
    • Jul 15, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY - A NEW BOOK DEDICATED TO SMI MOTHERS EVERYWHERE - by Dede Ranahan Jul 15, 2020
    • Jul 8, 2020 EVERYONE NEEDS HOPE by Martha Jul 8, 2020
    • Jul 1, 2020 A BEAUTIFUL SIGN OF BETTER DAYS AHEAD FOR OUR SON by Leslie Carpenter Jul 1, 2020
  • June 2020 4
    • Jun 24, 2020 Dorothea Dix Reborn by Ellie Shukert Jun 24, 2020
    • Jun 17, 2020 TALK ABOUT IT by Mimi Feldman Jun 17, 2020
    • Jun 10, 2020 RECLASSIFICATION OF SMI IS THE TIPPING POINT by Peter Jarnstrom Jun 10, 2020
    • Jun 3, 2020 HELPING MR. K by April Jun 3, 2020
  • May 2020 7
    • May 28, 2020 MY NAUTILUS BOOK AWARDS VIDEO FOR SOONER THAN TOMORROW - by Dede Ranahan May 28, 2020
    • May 27, 2020 I JUST WANT MY BEAUTIFUL BOY BACK - Anonymous May 27, 2020
    • May 20, 2020 STORIES A SECRET SMI SUPERHERO CAN NEVER, EVER TELL - Anonymous May 20, 2020
    • May 14, 2020 TODAY IN THE LAist: A STORY ABOUT US by Robert Garrova May 14, 2020
    • May 13, 2020 UNDERSTANDING & MUTUAL DECISION-MAKING by Wesley Loofburrough May 13, 2020
    • May 7, 2020 I NEED WORDS OF HOPE AND REPORTS OF PROGRESS by Dede Ranahan May 7, 2020
    • May 6, 2020 WHAT IS THE ANSWER? by Dawn MacTaggart Connolly May 6, 2020
  • April 2020 6
    • Apr 29, 2020 THE BEST DAYS by Channin Henry Williams Apr 29, 2020
    • Apr 22, 2020 A LETTER & A POEM FROM TRAVIS - by Travis Christian (BB8099) Apr 22, 2020
    • Apr 15, 2020 WE ARE ALL IN THIS TOGETHER. "WE" SHOULD INCLUDE THE SMI by Linda Rippee Apr 15, 2020
    • Apr 8, 2020 WHEN COVID-19 IS CONTAINED, "EXTRA" BEDS SHOULD BE USED FOR SMI by Dede Ranahan Apr 8, 2020
    • Apr 2, 2020 FROM THE DIRECTOR OF NURSING AT A STATE PRISON Apr 2, 2020
    • Apr 1, 2020 I'D LIKE TO BE A PEN PAL FROM SCOTLAND by Anna Heath Apr 1, 2020
  • March 2020 5
    • Mar 26, 2020 A NEW PAGE ON THE BLOG - PEN PALS by Dede Ranahan Mar 26, 2020
    • Mar 25, 2020 FROM SOMEPLACE INSIDE MYSELF - by Ron Powers Mar 25, 2020
    • Mar 18, 2020 TRAVIS AND KATHY AND ME - SO MANY QUESTIONS by Dede Ranahan Mar 18, 2020
    • Mar 11, 2020 WHAT DO I DREAM OF NOW? by Leslie Carpenter Mar 11, 2020
    • Mar 4, 2020 WHY? by Robin Lynn Duffey Mar 4, 2020
  • February 2020 4
    • Feb 26, 2020 TAKING A TIME OUT by Dede Ranahan Feb 26, 2020
    • Feb 18, 2020 DEAR SENATOR SANDERS: PLEASE RETHINK YOUR DISABILITY PLAN by Ilene Flannery Wells Feb 18, 2020
    • Feb 11, 2020 THE OTHER ME by Donna Nance Feb 11, 2020
    • Feb 4, 2020 "THEY SHOULD HAVE LET YOU HELP ME. I WASN'T IN MY RIGHT MIND" by Laurie Turley Feb 4, 2020
  • January 2020 2
    • Jan 29, 2020 WHY IS THIS OKAY? by Sharon Underwood Jan 29, 2020
    • Jan 21, 2020 WANT TO JOIN TEAM TRAVIS? by Dede Ranahan Jan 21, 2020
  • December 2019 4
    • Dec 30, 2019 IN 2020, PEACE AND SERENITY TO OUR AMAZING TRIBE by Dede Ranahan Dec 30, 2019
    • Dec 23, 2019 MY LAST VISIT WITH TRAVIS (BB8099) IN 2019 by Dede Ranahan Dec 23, 2019
    • Dec 5, 2019 AN EXTENDED LIST OF SMI ISSUES THAT NEEDS TO BE ADDRESSED by Dede Ranahan Dec 5, 2019
    • Dec 4, 2019 OUR 2020 GRASSROOTS FIVE-PART PLAN TO ADDRESS SMI UPDATED by Dede Ranahan Dec 4, 2019
  • November 2019 7
    • Nov 28, 2019 HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO SOONER THAN TOMORROW READERS by Dede Ranahan Nov 28, 2019
    • Nov 25, 2019 KAMALA'S PLAN TO ADDRESS THE MENTAL HEALTH CARE CRISIS by Kamala Harris Nov 25, 2019
    • Nov 21, 2019 NEED A PORCH OR PATIO IN MIDTOWN SACRAMENTO CA by Marcy Murphy Nov 21, 2019
    • Nov 20, 2019 REAL SOLUTIONS FOR OUR MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS by Steve Bullock (Presidential Candidate) Nov 20, 2019
    • Nov 13, 2019 GUESS WHO CALLED ME ABOUT SMI - by Leslie Carpenter Nov 13, 2019
    • Nov 12, 2019 THANK YOU FOR ALL YOUR LETTERS TO TRAVIS by Dede Ranahan Nov 12, 2019
    • Nov 7, 2019 GETTING OUR 2020 GRASSROOTS PLAN OUT THERE by Ellie Shukert Nov 7, 2019
  • October 2019 6
    • Oct 31, 2019 MISSING PERSON by Donna Oct 31, 2019
    • Oct 30, 2019 PREPARE MYSELF? HOW DO I DO THAT? by Francie VanZandt Oct 30, 2019
    • Oct 23, 2019 MY RESPONSE TO THE CBS THIS MORNING SHOW ABOUT MENTAL ILLNESS - Dede Ranahan Oct 23, 2019
    • Oct 14, 2019 OUR COUNTRY'S SHAME by Dede Ranahan Oct 14, 2019
    • Oct 10, 2019 ANNOUNCEMENT by Dede Ranahan Oct 10, 2019
    • Oct 1, 2019 I'M OKAY. ARE YOU OKAY? by Dede Ranahan Oct 1, 2019
  • August 2019 11
    • Aug 29, 2019 TAKING A BREAK. THANK YOU FOR YOUR AMAZON REVIEWS by Dede Ranahan Aug 29, 2019
    • Aug 28, 2019 I WANT TO HARNESS EVERY LITTLE PIECE OF HAPPINESS by Anonymous Aug 28, 2019
    • Aug 21, 2019 NO STORIES THIS WEEK by Dede Ranahan Aug 21, 2019
    • Aug 15, 2019 A THANK YOU FOR OUR SMI PLAN FROM THE HOMELESS IN SACRAMENTO by Marcella Brown Aug 15, 2019
    • Aug 14, 2019 HATE IS NOT A MENTAL ILLNESS by Pete Earley Aug 14, 2019
    • Aug 13, 2019 I SEE CHANGE COMING by Channin Henry Williams Aug 13, 2019
    • Aug 9, 2019 HAPPY PIC Aug 9, 2019
    • Aug 8, 2019 MENTAL HEALTH ADVOCATES PUSH REFORMS by Gary Warth Aug 8, 2019
    • Aug 6, 2019 PLEASE FORWARD TO THOSE IN YOUR SPHERE OF INFLUENCE by Dede Ranahan Aug 6, 2019
    • Aug 2, 2019 HAPPY PIC Aug 2, 2019
    • Aug 1, 2019 OUR SON'S PREVENTABLE DEATH by Pat Wood Sterling Aug 1, 2019
  • July 2019 8
    • Jul 31, 2019 WE'RE THINKING INCORRECTLY ABOUT SERIOUS MENTAL ILLNESS by Mary Rossell Jul 31, 2019
    • Jul 26, 2019 HAPPY PIC Jul 26, 2019
    • Jul 24, 2019 PLEASE HELP US BRING SERIOUS MENTAL ILLNESS INTO 2020 POLITICAL DISCOURSE by Dede Ranahan Jul 24, 2019
    • Jul 23, 2019 PATRICK RANAHAN, I LOVE YOU FOREVER. MOM by Dede Ranahan Jul 23, 2019
    • Jul 18, 2019 PLEASE HELP US REACH THE 2020 PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES by Dede Ranahan Jul 18, 2019
    • Jul 10, 2019 PLEASE JOIN THE CONVERSTAION ON MY FACEBOOK PAGE by Dede Ranahan Jul 10, 2019
    • Jul 5, 2019 HAPPY PIC & POEM II Jul 5, 2019
    • Jul 3, 2019 I HATE THIS CRUEL ILLNESS by Anonymous Jul 3, 2019
  • June 2019 11
    • Jun 28, 2019 HAPPY PIC & POEM Jun 28, 2019
    • Jun 27, 2019 BEYOND MY UNDERSTANDING OF WHAT BEING HUMAN MEANS by CJ Hanson (PART TWO) Jun 27, 2019
    • Jun 26, 2019 REWIND AND ERASE by Linda Rippee (PART ONE) Jun 26, 2019
    • Jun 21, 2019 HAPPY PIC Jun 21, 2019
    • Jun 19, 2019 'WE DON'T HELP PEOPLE HERE." by Angela McCandless Jun 19, 2019
    • Jun 14, 2019 HAPPY PIC Jun 14, 2019
    • Jun 13, 2019 PLEASE INCLUDE SMI IN YOUR PLATFORM by Dede Ranahan Jun 13, 2019
    • Jun 12, 2019 TRAVIS & ME - OUR JUNE PRISON VISIT by Dede Ranahan Jun 12, 2019
    • Jun 7, 2019 HAPPY PIC Jun 7, 2019
    • Jun 6, 2019 I'M PAST ANGER. I'M IN COMPLETE DESPAIR by Linda Rippee Jun 6, 2019
    • Jun 5, 2019 KAISER MENTAL HEALTH CLINICIANS SAY "ENOUGH" by Sal Rosselli Jun 5, 2019
  • May 2019 14
    • May 31, 2019 HAPPY PIC May 31, 2019
    • May 30, 2019 MY POINT IS, SPEAK OUT ALWAYS by Pamela Armstrong May 30, 2019
    • May 29, 2019 TODAY, WOW! TODAY I ACCOMPLISHED THIS by Allilsa Fernandez May 29, 2019
    • May 24, 2019 A LETTER TO SHARE OR TO COPY AND PASTE by Dede Ranahan May 24, 2019
    • May 22, 2019 SEVENTY FIVE YEARS/THOUSANDS OF LETTERS by Dede Ranahan May 22, 2019
    • May 17, 2019 HAPPY PIC May 17, 2019
    • May 16, 2019 WHEN THINGS GO "WELL" by Sherry Hunter May 16, 2019
    • May 15, 2019 IS THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA A CIVILIZED COUNTRY? by Dede Ranahan May 15, 2019
    • May 10, 2019 HAPPY PIC May 10, 2019
    • May 9, 2019 SAMPLE SMI LETTER TO 2020 PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES by Dede Ranahan May 9, 2019
    • May 8, 2019 2020 PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE CONTACT INFORMATION by Dede Ranahan May 8, 2019
    • May 3, 2019 HAPPY PIC May 3, 2019
    • May 2, 2019 ONE OF THE LUCKY ONES by Sheila Ganz May 2, 2019
    • May 1, 2019 ONE MOM'S LIST OF SMI NEEDS by Stacy Kollias May 1, 2019
  • April 2019 10
    • Apr 26, 2019 HAPPY PIC Apr 26, 2019
    • Apr 25, 2019 WE HAVE FAILED JOEY AND MANY OTHERS LIKE HIM by Rebecca Distel Reinig Apr 25, 2019
    • Apr 24, 2019 JUST THE BEGINNING OF OUR JOURNEY WITH OUR SON by Rebecca Distel Reinig Apr 24, 2019
    • Apr 19, 2019 HAPPY PIC Apr 19, 2019
    • Apr 17, 2019 I AM ASHLEY. I DEFINE ME by Ashley Doonan and Cathie Curtis Apr 17, 2019
    • Apr 16, 2019 MY APRIL VISIT WITH TRAVIS CHRISTIAN (BB8099) by Dede Ranahan Apr 16, 2019
    • Apr 10, 2019 MY GOAL IS NOT HAPPINESS BUT HUMAN UNDERSTANDING by Jerri Clark Apr 10, 2019
    • Apr 5, 2019 HAPPY PIC Apr 5, 2019
    • Apr 4, 2019 ACKNOWLEGMENTS FOR SOONER THAN TOMORROW (Coming Soon) by Dede Ranahan Apr 4, 2019
    • Apr 2, 2019 MENTAL HEALTH CLINICIANS FIGHTING TO FIX MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES by Sal Rosselli Apr 2, 2019
  • March 2019 12
    • Mar 29, 2019 HAPPY PIC Mar 29, 2019
    • Mar 27, 2019 THE COST OF NOT CARING - A LETTER TO CONGRESSMAN UPTON FROM NSSC Mar 27, 2019
    • Mar 26, 2019 MY VIDEO MAY BE DIFFICULT TO WATCH by Sherri McGimsey Mar 26, 2019
    • Mar 22, 2019 HAPPY PIC Mar 22, 2019
    • Mar 21, 2019 MY BRAIN LIES TO ME by Julie A. Fast Mar 21, 2019
    • Mar 20, 2019 "PLEASE DON'T KILL MY SON" by Darlene Been Watkins Mar 20, 2019
    • Mar 15, 2019 HAPPY PIC Mar 15, 2019
    • Mar 14, 2019 I'M PREPARED FOR JOEY'S DEATH by Rebecca Reinig Mar 14, 2019
    • Mar 12, 2019 MY MARCH VISIT WITH TRAVIS (BB8099) by Dede Ranahan Mar 12, 2019
    • Mar 8, 2019 HAPPY PIC Mar 8, 2019
    • Mar 6, 2019 FOR NOW, I'M THANKFUL ADAM IS ALIVE by Audrey Adams Auernheimer Mar 6, 2019
    • Mar 1, 2019 HAPPY PIC Mar 1, 2019
  • February 2019 12
    • Feb 28, 2019 SUPPORT RECLASSIFICATION OF SCHIZOPHRENIA AS A NEUROLOGICAL DISORDER by SARDAA Feb 28, 2019
    • Feb 26, 2019 HAPPENING NOW: HAVE YOU SEEN MY SON? by Kelli Nidey Feb 26, 2019
    • Feb 22, 2019 HAPPY PIC Feb 22, 2019
    • Feb 21, 2019 THIS IS A MORAL MOMENT by Teresa Pasquini Feb 21, 2019
    • Feb 20, 2019 A GOLDEN LIGHT by RNP Feb 20, 2019
    • Feb 15, 2019 HAPPY PIC Feb 15, 2019
    • Feb 14, 2019 MY NAME IS LANCE by Lance Soberg Feb 14, 2019
    • Feb 13, 2019 IT'S COMFORTING TO KNOW THAT YOU JUST GET IT (PART III) by Anonymous Feb 13, 2019
    • Feb 7, 2019 HAPPY PIC Feb 7, 2019
    • Feb 7, 2019 IT'S COMFORTING TO KNOW THAT YOU JUST GET IT (PART II) by Anonymous Feb 7, 2019
    • Feb 6, 2019 IT'S COMFORTING TO KNOW THAT YOU JUST GET IT (PART I) by Anonymous Feb 6, 2019
    • Feb 1, 2019 HAPPY PIC Feb 1, 2019
  • January 2019 14
    • Jan 31, 2019 RACISM IS NOT A MENTAL ILLNESS by Laura Pogliano Jan 31, 2019
    • Jan 30, 2019 I FEARED HE'D BE BLOWN TO PIECES by Deborah Harper Jan 30, 2019
    • Jan 25, 2019 HAPPY PIC Jan 25, 2019
    • Jan 24, 2019 MY SON, WITH SCHIZOPHRENIA, REMAINS MY HERO - by Tamara Lee Jan 24, 2019
    • Jan 22, 2019 WE ARE SO TIRED by Anonymous Jan 22, 2019
    • Jan 18, 2019 HAPPY PIC Jan 18, 2019
    • Jan 17, 2019 PLEASE GIVE YOUR LEGISLATORS A COPY OF MY BOOK, BREAKDOWN by Lynn Nanos Jan 17, 2019
    • Jan 15, 2019 MY FIRST 2019 VISIT WITH TRAVIS (BB8099) by Dede Ranahan Jan 15, 2019
    • Jan 11, 2019 HAPPY PIC Jan 11, 2019
    • Jan 10, 2019 ROCK BOTTOM IS NOT DIGNITY. HELP US by Julie Fast Jan 10, 2019
    • Jan 8, 2019 IT FEELS LIKE THE STATE OF MICHIGAN WANTS ME DEAD by Sarah C. Jan 8, 2019
    • Jan 4, 2019 HAPPY PIC Jan 4, 2019
    • Jan 3, 2019 NEED YOUR HELP. WHICH COLOR DRAWS YOU IN? by Dede Ranahan Jan 3, 2019
    • Jan 2, 2019 HOPE FOR THE NEW YEAR by Viviana Kaeg-Runde Jan 2, 2019
  • December 2018 12
    • Dec 28, 2018 HAPPY PIC - HAPPY 2019 Dec 28, 2018
    • Dec 27, 2018 2018 THANK YOU'S AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS by Dede Ranahan Dec 27, 2018
    • Dec 26, 2018 A HAPPY STORY TO END 2018 by Kathy Day Dec 26, 2018
    • Dec 21, 2018 HAPPY PIC - HAPPY HOLIDAYS Dec 21, 2018
    • Dec 20, 2018 TIME TO GET GUARDIANSHIP by Sherri McGimsey Dec 20, 2018
    • Dec 19, 2018 END PROLONGED SOLITARY CONFINEMENT by Dr. Mariposa McCall, Psychiatrist Dec 19, 2018
    • Dec 14, 2018 HAPPY PIC Dec 14, 2018
    • Dec 13, 2018 MY CONCERNING XMAS VISIT WITH TRAVIS (BB8099) by Dede Ranahan Dec 13, 2018
    • Dec 12, 2018 FIGHTING FOR CHANGE by Allison Brown Dec 12, 2018
    • Dec 7, 2018 HAPPY PIC Dec 7, 2018
    • Dec 6, 2018 BRAIN CARE VERSUS HEART CARE by Sandy Turner Dec 6, 2018
    • Dec 5, 2018 HOLIDAY EMOTIONS - Anonymous Dec 5, 2018
  • November 2018 13
    • Nov 30, 2018 HAPPY PIC Nov 30, 2018
    • Nov 29, 2018 AND NOW, ON THE LIGHTER SIDE - Anonymous Nov 29, 2018
    • Nov 28, 2018 WHAT IS WRONG WITH THIS COUNTRY? by Kimberlee Cooper West Nov 28, 2018
    • Nov 22, 2018 HAPPY PIC - HAPPY THANKSGIVING! Nov 22, 2018
    • Nov 21, 2018 MAYBE THAT IS MY STORY by Jennifer Cordova Nov 21, 2018
    • Nov 16, 2018 HAPPY PIC Nov 16, 2018
    • Nov 15, 2018 MY NOVEMBER VISIT WITH TRAVIS (BB8099) by Dede Ranahan Nov 15, 2018
    • Nov 14, 2018 LOSING MY CHILD, BARBARICALLY by Margie Annis Nov 14, 2018
    • Nov 9, 2018 HAPPY PIC Nov 9, 2018
    • Nov 8, 2018 MOMMY, PLEASE CLEAR MY NAME by Holly Alston Nov 8, 2018
    • Nov 7, 2018 PUZZLE PIECES BEGAN FITTING TOGETHER by Sherry Hunter Nov 7, 2018
    • Nov 2, 2018 HAPPY PIC Nov 2, 2018
    • Nov 1, 2018 MY HEART IS BEATING BUT MY BODY FEELS LIKE STONE by Monica Virtaneva Nov 1, 2018
  • October 2018 13
    • Oct 31, 2018 TWENTY-ONE DAYS AND NOT A THING WE CAN DO by Viviana Kaeg-Runde Oct 31, 2018
    • Oct 26, 2018 HAPPY PIC Oct 26, 2018
    • Oct 25, 2018 TOO MANY FAMILIES LIVE THIS PAIN by Jacque Cowger Mckinney Oct 25, 2018
    • Oct 24, 2018 WE RECEIVED THE WORST CALL OF OUR LIVES by Rhonda Meth Oct 24, 2018
    • Oct 19, 2018 HAPPY PIC Oct 19, 2018
    • Oct 18, 2018 TALKING WITH TRAVIS (BB8099) by Dede Ranahan Oct 18, 2018
    • Oct 17, 2018 GOING TO CALIFORNIA STATE PRISON TO MEET TRAVIS by Dede Ranahan Oct 17, 2018
    • Oct 12, 2018 HAPPY PIC Oct 12, 2018
    • Oct 11, 2018 WE ARE STILL IN A PRISON by Tama Bell Oct 11, 2018
    • Oct 10, 2018 A VISIT WITH TRAVIS by Travis Christian BB8099 Oct 10, 2018
    • Oct 5, 2018 HAPPY PIC Oct 5, 2018
    • Oct 4, 2018 I YELLED AT GOD by Lynn Smith Oct 4, 2018
    • Oct 3, 2018 STAND YOUR GROUND by Mary Irwin Butler Oct 3, 2018
  • September 2018 12
    • Sep 28, 2018 HAPPY PIC Sep 28, 2018
    • Sep 27, 2018 I AM BROKEN. BEYOND REPAIR - An Anonymous Mother Sep 27, 2018
    • Sep 26, 2018 SOMEBODY PLEASE HELP US by Debra Ammon Sep 26, 2018
    • Sep 21, 2018 HAPPY PIC Sep 21, 2018
    • Sep 20, 2018 ONE DAY AT A TIME by Tamara Lee Sep 20, 2018
    • Sep 19, 2018 THE "RIGHT" TO BE SO ILL by Kathy Day Sep 19, 2018
    • Sep 14, 2018 HAPPY PIC Sep 14, 2018
    • Sep 13, 2018 YOUR TRUST IS MY GOLD STANDARD by Dede Ranahan Sep 13, 2018
    • Sep 12, 2018 A SUPPORTIVE RESOURCE FOR YOUNG STUDENTS - 826 NATIONAL Sep 12, 2018
    • Sep 7, 2018 HAPPY PIC Sep 7, 2018
    • Sep 6, 2018 YOU DON'T MATTER by Theresa Assunto Sep 6, 2018
    • Sep 5, 2018 A DIFFERENT BACK TO SCHOOL by Elizabeth Sep 5, 2018
  • August 2018 15
    • Aug 31, 2018 HAPPY PIC Aug 31, 2018
    • Aug 30, 2018 A MOTHER'S FIGHT: PART II - 2017 by Carole M. Aug 30, 2018
    • Aug 29, 2018 A MOTHER'S FIGHT: PART I - 2011 by Carole M. Aug 29, 2018
    • Aug 24, 2018 HAPPY PIC Aug 24, 2018
    • Aug 23, 2018 A POEM FROM SALINAS VALLEY STATE PRISON by Jorge Fajardo, Jr. Aug 23, 2018
    • Aug 22, 2018 A LETTER FROM CALIFORNIA STATE PRISON by Travis Christian Aug 22, 2018
    • Aug 17, 2018 HAPPY PIC Aug 17, 2018
    • Aug 16, 2018 THERE'S NO LIMIT TO WHAT A MOTHER WILL DO by Theresa Assunto Aug 16, 2018
    • Aug 14, 2018 TAHLEQUAH & MOURNINGMOM: A TALE OF TWO MOTHERS by Dede Ranahan Aug 14, 2018
    • Aug 10, 2018 HAPPY PIC Aug 10, 2018
    • Aug 9, 2018 WHAT PARENTS WANT FOR THE SERIOUSLY MENTALLY ILL by Dede Ranahan Aug 9, 2018
    • Aug 8, 2018 A PROBLEM SHARED IS A PROBLEM HALVED by Mara Briere Aug 8, 2018
    • Aug 3, 2018 HAPPY PIC Aug 3, 2018
    • Aug 2, 2018 WHAT WOULD YOU DO? by Sherri McGimsey Aug 2, 2018
    • Aug 1, 2018 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan - GOING FORWARD Aug 1, 2018
  • June 2018 8
    • Jun 20, 2018 TAKING A MENTAL HEALTH BREAK by Dede Ranahan Jun 20, 2018
    • Jun 15, 2018 HAPPY PIC Jun 15, 2018
    • Jun 13, 2018 UPDATE ON TYLER by Kimberlee West Jun 13, 2018
    • Jun 12, 2018 AH REALITY. IT SUCKS by Laurie Mendoza Jun 12, 2018
    • Jun 8, 2018 HAPPY PIC (VIDEO) Jun 8, 2018
    • Jun 6, 2018 PRISON CORRESPONDENCE by Travis Christian and Dede Ranahan Jun 6, 2018
    • Jun 5, 2018 IT'S KIND OF LIKE A DAILY "SOPHIE'S CHOICE" by Gwendolyn Bartley Jun 5, 2018
    • Jun 1, 2018 HAPPY PIC Jun 1, 2018
  • May 2018 14
    • May 30, 2018 NIKKI AND KEVIN - PART TWO by Nikki Landis May 30, 2018
    • May 29, 2018 NIKKI AND KEVIN - PART ONE by Nikki Landis May 29, 2018
    • May 25, 2018 HAPPY PIC May 25, 2018
    • May 23, 2018 I'M SURE THEY MEAN WELL, BUT...by Tania Irie May 23, 2018
    • May 22, 2018 RYAN'S STORY - PART THREE by Donna Erickson May 22, 2018
    • May 18, 2018 HAPPY PIC May 18, 2018
    • May 16, 2018 A MOTHER'S DAY LETTER FROM TRAVIS (IN SOLITARY) by Travis Christian May 16, 2018
    • May 15, 2018 RYAN'S STORY - PART TWO by Donna Erickson May 15, 2018
    • May 11, 2018 HAPPY PIC May 11, 2018
    • May 9, 2018 UPDATE ON RICHARD QUINTERO by Nicole Finn May 9, 2018
    • May 8, 2018 RYAN'S STORY - PART ONE by Donna Erickson May 8, 2018
    • May 4, 2018 HAPPY PIC May 4, 2018
    • May 2, 2018 WE'RE HOPING SOMEONE, SOMEWHERE, CAN HELP US by Nicole Finn May 2, 2018
    • May 1, 2018 REACH OUT TO OTHERS WHO ARE STRUGGLING May 1, 2018
  • April 2018 12
    • Apr 27, 2018 HAPPY PIC Apr 27, 2018
    • Apr 25, 2018 I'M LOOKING FOR A FRIEND (FROM SOLITARY) by Jorge Fajardo Apr 25, 2018
    • Apr 24, 2018 KAREN'S STORY ABOUT WELCOME HOME HOUSING IN SACRAMENTO Apr 24, 2018
    • Apr 20, 2018 HAPPY PIC Apr 20, 2018
    • Apr 18, 2018 A THANK YOU FROM SOLITARY by Travis Christian Apr 18, 2018
    • Apr 17, 2018 I'D GIVE UP EVERYTHING TO GIVE HIM A NORMAL LIFE by Sherry Apr 17, 2018
    • Apr 13, 2018 HAPPY PIC Apr 13, 2018
    • Apr 11, 2018 THE NEW BREED by Alison Luterman Apr 11, 2018
    • Apr 10, 2018 MY SON, GUNS, AND SERIOUS MENTAL ILLNESS by Heidi Franke Apr 10, 2018
    • Apr 6, 2018 HAPPY PIC Apr 6, 2018
    • Apr 4, 2018 URGENT: AN OPEN LETTER TO JUDGE HICKS IN MICHIGAN by Anne Francisco Apr 4, 2018
    • Apr 3, 2018 IT'S NOT BEHAVIORAL IT'S MENTAL ILLNESS by Sherry Hunter Apr 3, 2018
  • March 2018 13
    • Mar 30, 2018 HAPPY PIC Mar 30, 2018
    • Mar 28, 2018 LET'S TALK ABOUT HOPEFUL VOLUNTARY ADMISSIONS by Mary Irwin Butler Mar 28, 2018
    • Mar 27, 2018 HOW TURNING POINT FAILED MY SON by Laurie Mendoza Mar 27, 2018
    • Mar 23, 2018 HAPPY PIC Mar 23, 2018
    • Mar 21, 2018 AN ADVOCATE MOTHER'S LETTER TO AG JEFF SESSIONS by GG Burns Mar 21, 2018
    • Mar 20, 2018 SOME CHILDREN by Rhonda Hart Mar 20, 2018
    • Mar 16, 2018 HAPPY PIC Mar 16, 2018
    • Mar 14, 2018 ANOTHER LETTER FROM SOLITARY by Travis Christian Mar 14, 2018
    • Mar 13, 2018 MANDATED TREATMENT AND RED TAPE by Melinda Nichols Balliett Mar 13, 2018
    • Mar 9, 2018 HAPPY PIC Mar 9, 2018
    • Mar 7, 2018 I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO by Emma's Mom Mar 7, 2018
    • Mar 3, 2018 HAPPY PIC Mar 3, 2018
    • Mar 3, 2018 THE WORLD HAS LOST A MOTHER OF PERPETUAL DETERMINATION by Mary Sheldon Mar 3, 2018
  • February 2018 10
    • Feb 28, 2018 YOU F*#KING NEED TO GET INVOLVED by Amy Swartz Kerr Feb 28, 2018
    • Feb 27, 2018 LETTER FROM TRAVIS IN SOLITARY CONFINEMENT by Travis Christian Feb 27, 2018
    • Feb 19, 2018 THANK YOU FROM NEW ZEALAND Feb 19, 2018
    • Feb 17, 2018 HAPPENING NOW: I AM LIVID. SHAKING by Heidi Franke Feb 17, 2018
    • Feb 16, 2018 HAPPY PIC Feb 16, 2018
    • Feb 14, 2018 I LOVE MY CHILDREN by Heidi Franke Feb 14, 2018
    • Feb 10, 2018 MY LETTER TO A YOUNG MAN IN SOLITARY CONFINEMENT by Dede Ranahan Feb 10, 2018
    • Feb 6, 2018 SO WHERE DO I GO FROM HERE? by Kathy Baker Feb 6, 2018
    • Feb 3, 2018 LETTERS FROM SOLITARY CONFINEMENT by Kathy Baker & Travis Christian Feb 3, 2018
    • Feb 2, 2018 HAPPY PIC Feb 2, 2018
  • January 2018 12
    • Jan 31, 2018 REALLY? WHO ELSE WILL DO IT? by Kecia Bolken Speck Jan 31, 2018
    • Jan 30, 2018 I'M NEVER CALLING THE CRISIS TEAM OR THE POLICE AGAIN by Kecia Bolken Speck Jan 30, 2018
    • Jan 27, 2018 HAPPY PIC Jan 27, 2018
    • Jan 24, 2018 I HAVE A QUESTION ABOUT RESIDENTIAL CARE by Gloria Hill Jan 24, 2018
    • Jan 23, 2018 I'M GONNA BRAG ABOUT MY SON by Harriet B. Jan 23, 2018
    • Jan 17, 2018 THIS BOOK IS FOR YOU, KEVIN by Ron Powers Jan 17, 2018
    • Jan 12, 2018 HAPPY PIC Jan 12, 2018
    • Jan 10, 2018 THE FAILURE OF KEVIN'S LAW by Kimberlee West Jan 10, 2018
    • Jan 9, 2018 THAT F@CKING BUMPER STICKER by Ray Weaver Jan 9, 2018
    • Jan 5, 2018 HAPPY PIC Jan 5, 2018
    • Jan 3, 2018 THE BEST TEACHER I'VE EVER HAD by Deborah Fabos Jan 3, 2018
    • Jan 2, 2018 A MUST READ by Dede Ranahan Jan 2, 2018
  • December 2017 12
    • Dec 29, 2017 HAPPY PIC Dec 29, 2017
    • Dec 27, 2017 OUR STORIES CAN RESONATE IN WAYS BEYOND OUR COMPREHENSION by Dede Ranahan Dec 27, 2017
    • Dec 26, 2017 DANNY LOVE by Teresa Pasquini Dec 26, 2017
    • Dec 22, 2017 HAPPY PIC Dec 22, 2017
    • Dec 20, 2017 CHRISTMAS TREES by Karen Riches Dec 20, 2017
    • Dec 15, 2017 HAPPY PIC Dec 15, 2017
    • Dec 13, 2017 JUDGE NOT by Christi Anne Dec 13, 2017
    • Dec 12, 2017 TOO MUCH PRIVACY by Lynn Nanos LICSW Dec 12, 2017
    • Dec 8, 2017 HAPPY PIC Dec 8, 2017
    • Dec 6, 2017 WITH A HEAVY HEART by Dede Ranahan Dec 6, 2017
    • Dec 5, 2017 PURSUING MY DREAM by Ryan Reyes Dec 5, 2017
    • Dec 1, 2017 HAPPY PIC Dec 1, 2017
  • November 2017 11
    • Nov 29, 2017 THANKSGIVINGS PAST - by Judy Waldo Bracken Nov 29, 2017
    • Nov 28, 2017 OH, WHAT A DIFFERENCE A YEAR CAN MAKE by Christi Anne Nov 28, 2017
    • Nov 24, 2017 HAPPY PIC Nov 24, 2017
    • Nov 22, 2017 MY HOLIDAY STORY by Mary Barksdale Nov 22, 2017
    • Nov 17, 2017 HAPPY PIC Nov 17, 2017
    • Nov 15, 2017 HOPE ONE DAY WE'LL HAVE REAL CHOICES by Kimberlee West Nov 15, 2017
    • Nov 14, 2017 BETWEEN NOW AND THE NEXT FULL MOON by Judy Waldo Bracken Nov 14, 2017
    • Nov 10, 2017 HAPPY PIC Nov 10, 2017
    • Nov 8, 2017 LORD, HAVE MERCY ON US ALL by Anne Schmidt Francisco Nov 8, 2017
    • Nov 3, 2017 HAPPY PIC Nov 3, 2017
    • Nov 1, 2017 #SHATTERINGSILENCE4SMI by Teresa Pasquini Nov 1, 2017
  • October 2017 13
    • Oct 31, 2017 DEPRESSION by Donna Hairston Oct 31, 2017
    • Oct 27, 2017 HAPPY PIC Oct 27, 2017
    • Oct 25, 2017 MY LIFE HAS CHANGED by Andrea Turner Oct 25, 2017
    • Oct 24, 2017 WE NEED HOLISTIC HEALTH CARE FOR PEOPLE WITH SMI by Cheri VanSant Oct 24, 2017
    • Oct 20, 2017 HAPPY PIC Oct 20, 2017
    • Oct 18, 2017 OUR PLEDGE by Karen Riches Oct 18, 2017
    • Oct 17, 2017 HAPPENING NOW: MY SON'S LIFE IS AT RISK by Sherry Hunter Oct 17, 2017
    • Oct 13, 2017 HAPPY PIC Oct 13, 2017
    • Oct 11, 2017 MY SON'S NEW GROUP HOME by Christi Anne Oct 11, 2017
    • Oct 10, 2017 I'M FURIOUS AT OUR CRIMINAL MENTAL HEALTH SYSTEM by Sherry Hunter Oct 10, 2017
    • Oct 6, 2017 UNHAPPY PIC Oct 6, 2017
    • Oct 4, 2017 PIECE OF MIND FILM by Sheila Ganz Oct 4, 2017
    • Oct 3, 2017 STUCK IN TEXAS by Joyce Berryman Oct 3, 2017
  • September 2017 14
    • Sep 29, 2017 HAPPY PIC Sep 29, 2017
    • Sep 27, 2017 BEING PROACTIVE by Frank Robbins Sep 27, 2017
    • Sep 26, 2017 TRAPPED IN A MAZE by Kevin Sep 26, 2017
    • Sep 23, 2017 HAPPY PIC Sep 23, 2017
    • Sep 20, 2017 MORE STORIES FROM ACROSS THE USA - A COMPOSITE Sep 20, 2017
    • Sep 19, 2017 THE WAY SOCIETY TEACHES US TO THINK ABOUT SMI IS WRONG by Nikki Landis Sep 19, 2017
    • Sep 15, 2017 HAPPY PIC Sep 15, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 13, 2017 MORE STORIES FROM ACROSS THE USA - A COMPOSITE Sep 13, 2017
    • Sep 12, 2017 UPDATE ON SHAYLON: IT'S NOT REALLY GOOD NEWS by Laural Fawcett Sep 12, 2017
    • Sep 8, 2017 HAPPY PIC Sep 8, 2017
    • Sep 6, 2017 STORIES FROM ACROSS THE USA - A COMPOSITE Sep 6, 2017
    • Sep 5, 2017 LETTER TO HHS INTERDEPARTMENTAL SERIOUS MENTAL ILLNESS COORDINATING COMMITTEE - Jeanne Gore, Teresa Pasquini, Dede Ranahan and 36 Co-signers Sep 5, 2017
    • Sep 1, 2017 HAPPY PIC Sep 1, 2017
  • August 2017 14
    • Aug 29, 2017 WHY WE BEGAN P82 PROJECT RESTORATION by Deborah Geesling Aug 29, 2017
    • Aug 25, 2017 HAPPY PIC Aug 25, 2017
    • Aug 23, 2017 A SHORTLIST OF SOLUTIONS FOR THE 4% WITH SERIOUS MENTAL ILLNESS (SMI) by Dede Ranahan Aug 23, 2017
    • Aug 22, 2017 WALK A MILE IN OUR SHOES by Kimberlee Cooper West Aug 22, 2017
    • Aug 18, 2017 HAPPY PIC Aug 18, 2017
    • Aug 16, 2017 HELPING MY DAUGHTER HAVE A CHILDHOOD by Elizabeth Courtois Aug 16, 2017
    • Aug 15, 2017 ZAC, MY DARLING SON by Laura Pogliano Aug 15, 2017
    • Aug 11, 2017 HAPPY PIC Aug 11, 2017
    • Aug 9, 2017 MISSING - LAST SEEN IN MESA AZ Aug 9, 2017
    • Aug 9, 2017 WHAT HAVING SCHIZOPHRENIA IS LIKE by Joe IV Aug 9, 2017
    • Aug 8, 2017 POWER IN NUMBERS by Heidi Franke Aug 8, 2017
    • Aug 4, 2017 HAPPY PIC Aug 4, 2017
    • Aug 2, 2017 HE HAS SCHIZOPHRENIA, YOUR HONOR by Sandy Turner Aug 2, 2017
    • Aug 1, 2017 TIME FOR A CURE: MY LETTER TO SENATOR HARRIS by Diane Rainbowitz Aug 1, 2017
  • July 2017 13
    • Jul 28, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jul 28, 2017
    • Jul 26, 2017 SORROW AND JOY - Anonymous Jul 26, 2017
    • Jul 21, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jul 21, 2017
    • Jul 19, 2017 EGG IN MY BEER? by James Callner Jul 19, 2017
    • Jul 18, 2017 I TOLD THEM ALL OF IT - Anonymous (A Mother Bear) Jul 18, 2017
    • Jul 14, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jul 14, 2017
    • Jul 12, 2017 LET'S TALK ABOUT REAL ISSUES by Laura Pogliano Jul 12, 2017
    • Jul 11, 2017 I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO. ANY ADVICE? Anonymous Jul 11, 2017
    • Jul 7, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jul 7, 2017
    • Jul 6, 2017 FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Jul 6, 2017
    • Jul 5, 2017 A LETTER TO MOM AND DAD AND FAMILY by William Vogel Jul 5, 2017
    • Jul 4, 2017 ENABLING VERSUS PROTECTING by Margie Altman Jul 4, 2017
    • Jul 3, 2017 HAPPENING NOW: SHAYLON'S STILL MISSING by Laural Fawcett Jul 3, 2017
  • June 2017 15
    • Jun 30, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jun 30, 2017
    • Jun 28, 2017 INSANE CONSEQUENCES: LETTER TO THE SACRAMENTO BEE Jun 28, 2017
    • Jun 27, 2017 A LETTER TO MY SON by Laurie Lamsus Vogel Jun 27, 2017
    • Jun 26, 2017 HAPPENING NOW: UPDATE ON SHAYLON By Laural Fawcett Jun 26, 2017
    • Jun 23, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jun 23, 2017
    • Jun 22, 2017 HEART TO HEART by Nikki Landis Jun 22, 2017
    • Jun 21, 2017 WELCOME HOME MITCHEL! by Sherry Hunter Jun 21, 2017
    • Jun 20, 2017 HAPPENING NOW: MY SON'S MISSING IN SF by Laural Fawcett Jun 20, 2017
    • Jun 16, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jun 16, 2017
    • Jun 14, 2017 BEFORE - SCENES FROM THE TRENCHES by Dede Ranahan Jun 14, 2017
    • Jun 9, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jun 9, 2017
    • Jun 8, 2017 CAST OF CHARACTERS by Dede Ranahan Jun 8, 2017
    • Jun 7, 2017 NIGHTMARES IN THE DAYLIGHT by Tama Bell Jun 7, 2017
    • Jun 2, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jun 2, 2017
    • Jun 1, 2017 SOONER THAN TOMORROW - A MOTHER'S DIARY: INTRODUCTION by Dede Ranahan Jun 1, 2017
  • May 2017 13
    • May 31, 2017 PURSUING HIS DREAMS by Ray Maternick May 31, 2017
    • May 26, 2017 HAPPY PIC May 26, 2017
    • May 25, 2017 I'M BLOGGING MY BOOK - MY GIFT TO YOU by Dede Ranahan May 25, 2017
    • May 24, 2017 A MOTHER'S REQUEST IN COURT - by Kate Shultz May 24, 2017
    • May 19, 2017 HAPPY PIC May 19, 2017
    • May 18, 2017 HAPPENING NOW: MY SON IS ENDANGERED! MISSING! May 18, 2017
    • May 17, 2017 I FEEL INCREDIBLY BLESSED by Amy Kerr May 17, 2017
    • May 13, 2017 MY FAVORITE BOOKS by Dede Ranahan May 13, 2017
    • May 12, 2017 HAPPY PIC May 12, 2017
    • May 10, 2017 HELPING FOLKS UNDERSTAND by Mindy Willers May 10, 2017
    • May 5, 2017 HAPPY PIC May 5, 2017
    • May 4, 2017 WHAT AN EFFING NIGHTMARE by Laurie Lethbridge Christmas May 4, 2017
    • May 3, 2017 BUY THIS BOOK - by Anne Schmidt Francisco May 3, 2017
  • April 2017 12
    • Apr 28, 2017 HAPPY PIC Apr 28, 2017
    • Apr 27, 2017 ASK AND HONOR by James Callner Apr 27, 2017
    • Apr 25, 2017 SHATTERING SILENCE by Jeanne Gore Apr 25, 2017
    • Apr 21, 2017 HAPPY PIC Apr 21, 2017
    • Apr 19, 2017 I'M ON A MISSION - by Dede Ranahan Apr 19, 2017
    • Apr 18, 2017 DEAD BOY WALKING by Crystal Burks Apr 18, 2017
    • Apr 14, 2017 HAPPY PIC Apr 14, 2017
    • Apr 13, 2017 A CHOICE - FOR MY BEST BROTHER - Anonymous Apr 13, 2017
    • Apr 12, 2017 OUR FAMILY TRAGEDY by Sonia Fletcher Dinger Apr 12, 2017
    • Apr 7, 2017 HAPPY PIC Apr 7, 2017
    • Apr 5, 2017 A GRANDMOTHER'S PRAYER by Marie Abbott Apr 5, 2017
    • Apr 4, 2017 A SURPRISE by Patricia Gager Apr 4, 2017
  • March 2017 13
    • Mar 31, 2017 HAPPY PIC Mar 31, 2017
    • Mar 29, 2017 NOT ACCEPTING THINGS by Tama Bell Mar 29, 2017
    • Mar 28, 2017 MY SON'S LIFE - A VIDEO by Sherry Hunter Mar 28, 2017
    • Mar 24, 2017 HAPPY PIC Mar 24, 2017
    • Mar 22, 2017 PROFIT TRUMPS PATIENT CARE by David L. Bain Mar 22, 2017
    • Mar 21, 2017 IN A STATE OF SHOCK by Kim West Mar 21, 2017
    • Mar 17, 2017 HAPPY PIC Mar 17, 2017
    • Mar 14, 2017 INTERNAL DRUM by Patrick Ranahan Mar 14, 2017
    • Mar 10, 2017 HAPPY PIC Mar 10, 2017
    • Mar 9, 2017 A LITTLE BIRD AND A LIFE LESSON by Gilbert Anderson, Jr. Mar 9, 2017
    • Mar 8, 2017 HOLDING IT TOGETHER - Excerpt from My Memoir Mar 8, 2017
    • Mar 3, 2017 HAPPY PIC Mar 3, 2017
    • Mar 1, 2017 PRISON IS NOT THE ANSWER by Tama Bell Mar 1, 2017
  • February 2017 11
    • Feb 24, 2017 HAPPY PIC Feb 24, 2017
    • Feb 23, 2017 WE ARE SICK, NOT EVIL by Craig Willers Feb 23, 2017
    • Feb 21, 2017 MY LOVE AND LIFE WITH MY GRANDSON AND SCHIZOPHRENIA by Maggie Willis Feb 21, 2017
    • Feb 17, 2017 HAPPY PIC Feb 17, 2017
    • Feb 16, 2017 10 MYTHS MENTAL HEALTH OFFICIALS TELL US by Sis Kaya Tama IsesaJah-Bell Feb 16, 2017
    • Feb 15, 2017 I KNOW THIS TO BE TRUE by Debra DeLash Feb 15, 2017
    • Feb 10, 2017 HAPPY PIC Feb 10, 2017
    • Feb 8, 2017 WHAT ARE YOUR FAMILY'S NUMBERS? by Deborah Fabos Feb 8, 2017
    • Feb 7, 2017 WHAT DO I DO TO PROTECT MY SON? by Maggie McGurk Feb 7, 2017
    • Feb 3, 2017 HAPPY PIC Feb 3, 2017
    • Feb 1, 2017 UNEXPLAINED GRACE by Donia Que Feb 1, 2017
  • January 2017 15
    • Jan 30, 2017 HAPPENING NOW - WALTER'S LOOKING FOR MY MOM by Robin Burton Jan 30, 2017
    • Jan 27, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jan 27, 2017
    • Jan 25, 2017 SHATTERING THE SILENCE by Teresa Pasquini Jan 25, 2017
    • Jan 24, 2017 THERE'S NO HELP IN THE USA - by Sylvia Charters Jan 24, 2017
    • Jan 19, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jan 19, 2017
    • Jan 18, 2017 AND THERE'S MORE...SO PROUD OF MY HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER - LINCOLN NEWS MESSENGER Jan 18, 2017
    • Jan 17, 2017 COMMENTS FROM OUR SUPPORT GROUP - by Dede Ranahan Jan 17, 2017
    • Jan 16, 2017 WORD IS GETTING AROUND - by Dede Ranahan Jan 16, 2017
    • Jan 13, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jan 13, 2017
    • Jan 12, 2017 OUR STORY ABOUT A REALLY GOOD MAN by Gilbert Anderson, Jr. Jan 12, 2017
    • Jan 10, 2017 THE SPIN CYCLE: RECOVERING, RELAPSING, RECOVERING - Anonymous Jan 10, 2017
    • Jan 6, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jan 6, 2017
    • Jan 4, 2017 HAPPENING NOW - PLEASE HELP FIND RYAN by Christi Weeks Jan 4, 2017
    • Jan 4, 2017 WHY I'M MARCHING ON JAN 21, 2017 by Dede Ranahan Jan 4, 2017
    • Jan 3, 2017 TELL YOUR STORY HERE IN 2017 - A CALL TO ACTION by Dede Ranahan Jan 3, 2017
  • December 2016 8
    • Dec 29, 2016 IN HONOR OF YOU CARRIE FISHER Dec 29, 2016
    • Dec 16, 2016 HAPPY PIC Dec 16, 2016
    • Dec 14, 2016 TIME TO REPLENISH MY SPIRIT by Dede Ranahan Dec 14, 2016
    • Dec 13, 2016 TONY'S FINGER by Patrick Ranahan Dec 13, 2016
    • Dec 9, 2016 HAPPY PIC Dec 9, 2016
    • Dec 7, 2016 A SYSTEM OF LUCK AND HEROICS, NOT A SYSTEM OF CARE by Teresa Pasquini Dec 7, 2016
    • Dec 6, 2016 JESSE AND ME by Val Greenoak Dec 6, 2016
    • Dec 2, 2016 HAPPY PIC Dec 2, 2016
  • November 2016 15
    • Nov 30, 2016 ANYONE WANT TO TELL ME WHY? by Sherry Hunter Nov 30, 2016
    • Nov 29, 2016 NO ONE ASKS. SHE'S BEEN ERASED - by Ronni Blumenthal Nov 29, 2016
    • Nov 25, 2016 HAPPY PIC Nov 25, 2016
    • Nov 23, 2016 JUST FOR A MOMENT by Karen Riches Nov 23, 2016
    • Nov 22, 2016 THINGS I CHERISH AS A PERSON WITH A CHRONIC ILLNESS by May Enos Nov 22, 2016
    • Nov 18, 2016 HAPPY PIC Nov 18, 2016
    • Nov 16, 2016 EMPTY SHOES AND OUR CATCH 22 by Dede Ranahan Nov 16, 2016
    • Nov 15, 2016 UPDATE: HAPPENING NOW - HIPAA IS KILLING OUR LOVED ONES by Linda Olivia Nov 15, 2016
    • Nov 11, 2016 HAPPENING NOW: HIPAA IS KILLING OUR LOVED ONES by Linda Olivia Nov 11, 2016
    • Nov 11, 2016 HAPPY PIC Nov 11, 2016
    • Nov 9, 2016 MY BRAIN IS ON FIRE by Lynne Warberg Nov 9, 2016
    • Nov 8, 2016 FIND ANY REASON by Deborah Fabos Nov 8, 2016
    • Nov 4, 2016 HAPPY PIC Nov 4, 2016
    • Nov 2, 2016 HOPE IS CRITICAL - by Craig Willers Nov 2, 2016
    • Nov 1, 2016 NO RESPITE by Gloria Hill Nov 1, 2016
  • October 2016 13
    • Oct 28, 2016 HAPPY PIC Oct 28, 2016
    • Oct 26, 2016 LOSING FARRON by Mary Barksdale Oct 26, 2016
    • Oct 25, 2016 FINDING SARAH by Joann Strunk Oct 25, 2016
    • Oct 21, 2016 HAPPY PIC Oct 21, 2016
    • Oct 20, 2016 BE YOUR BEST SELF MINUTE BY MINUTE by Heidi Franke Oct 20, 2016
    • Oct 19, 2016 ACCEPTANCE by Sherry Hunter Oct 19, 2016
    • Oct 18, 2016 CAN I JUST HAVE A MINUTE TO FALL APART? by Kendra Burgos Oct 18, 2016
    • Oct 14, 2016 HAPPY PIC Oct 14, 2016
    • Oct 12, 2016 ME vs. THE HOSPITAL: THE BLATANT NEGLECT OF MY MOM by Mike Gaeta Oct 12, 2016
    • Oct 11, 2016 FEELING HELPLESS by Janet Hays Oct 11, 2016
    • Oct 7, 2016 HAPPY PIC Oct 7, 2016
    • Oct 5, 2016 NOT GIVING UP - Anonymous Oct 5, 2016
    • Oct 4, 2016 LISTENING by Heidi Franke Oct 4, 2016
  • September 2016 9
    • Sep 30, 2016 HAPPY PIC Sep 30, 2016
    • Sep 27, 2016 FALL CONNECTION by Dede Ranahan Sep 27, 2016
    • Sep 26, 2016 A MOM'S POWERFUL REQUEST by Teresa Pasquini Sep 26, 2016
    • Sep 23, 2016 HAPPY PIC Sep 23, 2016
    • Sep 20, 2016 STAR THROWERS: STORY OF A FAMILY MENTAL ILLNESS SUPPORT GROUP by Dede Ranahan Sep 20, 2016
    • Sep 16, 2016 HAPPY PIC Sep 16, 2016
    • Sep 12, 2016 I WAS SEVEN: A REMEMBRANCE OF MY MOTHER'S MENTAL ILLNESS - Anonymous Sep 12, 2016
    • Sep 8, 2016 LOOKING FOR JOY (CONTINUED) by GG BURNS Sep 8, 2016
    • Sep 7, 2016 LOOKING FOR JOY by Dede Ranahan Sep 7, 2016
  • August 2016 5
    • Aug 23, 2016 HOW LONG DOES CHANGE TAKE? PART THREE by Dede Ranahan Aug 23, 2016
    • Aug 21, 2016 HOW LONG DOES CHANGE TAKE? PART TWO by Dede Ranahan Aug 21, 2016
    • Aug 16, 2016 HOW LONG DOES CHANGE TAKE? PART ONE by Dede Ranahan Aug 16, 2016
    • Aug 8, 2016 TERESA AND DANNY by Teresa Pasquini Aug 8, 2016
    • Aug 7, 2016 WHEN REAL LIFE INTERFERES by Dede Ranahan Aug 7, 2016
  • July 2016 5
    • Jul 31, 2016 DID MIKE LEHMKUHL HAVE TO DIE? by Dede Ranahan Jul 31, 2016
    • Jul 29, 2016 THANK YOU DEMI LOVATO by Dede Ranahan Jul 29, 2016
    • Jul 23, 2016 DID YOU KNOW YOU'D BE LEAVING US WAY TOO SOON? by Dede Ranahan Jul 23, 2016
    • Jul 20, 2016 WHAT ABOUT ME? WHAT ABOUT DADS? by Dede Ranahan Jul 20, 2016
    • Jul 15, 2016 WE MOTHERS HAVE TO STICK TOGETHER by Dede Ranahan Jul 15, 2016
  • March 2022
    • Mar 12, 2022 MENTALLY ILL PEOPLE IN SAN FRANCISCO ARE CYCLING IN AND OUT OF EMERGENCY ROOMS by Heather Knight Mar 12, 2022
  • January 2022
    • Jan 18, 2022 DELIVERED FROM CRAZY by Katie R. Dale Jan 18, 2022
    • Jan 12, 2022 BEING THE MOTHER OF SOMEONE WITH SCHIZOPHRENIA by Susan Inman Jan 12, 2022
    • Jan 1, 2022 HAPPY NEW YEAR by Dede Ranahan Jan 1, 2022
  • December 2021
    • Dec 29, 2021 LETTER TO CA ASSEMBLY ABOUT LPS REFORM by Dede Ranahan Dec 29, 2021
    • Dec 3, 2021 REMEMBERING ROSE KING by Dede Ranahan Dec 3, 2021
  • November 2021
    • Nov 23, 2021 AT THANKSGIVING by Dede Ranahan Nov 23, 2021
    • Nov 2, 2021 LETTER TO SENATOR WYDEN AND THE SENATE COMMITTEE ON FINANCE by Dede Ranahan Nov 2, 2021
  • August 2021
    • Aug 16, 2021 IN MEMORY OF SYLVIA CHARTERS by Dede Ranahan Aug 16, 2021
    • Aug 10, 2021 GIFTS FROM THE UNIVERSE by Dede Ranahan Aug 10, 2021
  • May 2021
    • May 10, 2021 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY NAUTILUS BOOK AWARDS 2020 SILVER MEDAL by Dede Ranahan May 10, 2021
  • March 2021
    • Mar 30, 2021 WORLD-WIDE GOOD DEEDS IN HONOR OF TOMMY RASKIN by the Raskin Family Mar 30, 2021
  • February 2021
    • Feb 9, 2021 SMI Advocates Urge President Biden's Pick For HHS Secretary to Leave No One Out Feb 9, 2021
    • Feb 3, 2021 WE DID IT! 50 STATES! By Dede Ranahan Feb 3, 2021
  • January 2021
    • Jan 26, 2021 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY WHITE HOUSE BOOK PROJECT by Dede Ranahan Jan 26, 2021
    • Jan 22, 2021 HOW DO WE GET A NATIONAL PLAN FOR SMI? by Dede Ranahan Jan 22, 2021
  • December 2020
    • Dec 30, 2020 GOOD AND BAD IN 2020 by Dede Ranahan Dec 30, 2020
    • Dec 24, 2020 ALL THE BEST FROM ME TO YOU by Dede Ranahan Dec 24, 2020
    • Dec 3, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY - INTRODUCING THE AUTHORS (4) by Dede Ranahan Dec 3, 2020
  • November 2020
    • Nov 25, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY - INTRODUCING THE AUTHORS (3) by Dede Ranahan Nov 25, 2020
    • Nov 21, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY COMING TO AMAZON NEXT WEEK by Dede Ranahan Nov 21, 2020
    • Nov 18, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY - INTRODUCING THE AUTHORS (2) by Dede Ranahan Nov 18, 2020
    • Nov 12, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY - INTRODUCING THE AUTHORS by Dede Ranahan Nov 12, 2020
    • Nov 5, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY PUBLISHING UPDATE by Dede Ranahan & 64 Co-Authors Nov 5, 2020
  • October 2020
    • Oct 29, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (MASSACHUSETTS) - COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Oct 29, 2020
    • Oct 22, 2020 WHO COULD HAVE KNOWN. WE ALL DID by Linda Rippee Privatte Oct 22, 2020
    • Oct 15, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (FLORIDA) - COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Oct 15, 2020
    • Oct 8, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (IOWA) - COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Oct 8, 2020
  • September 2020
    • Sep 30, 2020 TOMOROW WAS YESTERDAY (NEW HAMPSHIRE) - COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Sep 30, 2020
    • Sep 23, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (CALIFORNIA) -- COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Sep 23, 2020
    • Sep 16, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (CALIFORNIA) - COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Sep 16, 2020
    • Sep 9, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (TEXAS) - COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Sep 9, 2020
    • Sep 2, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (MAINE) - COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Sep 2, 2020
  • August 2020
    • Aug 27, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (OREGON) - COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Aug 27, 2020
    • Aug 19, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (COLORADO) - COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Aug 19, 2020
    • Aug 12, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (OHIO) - COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Aug 12, 2020
    • Aug 5, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY (MICHIGAN)-- COMING SOON by Dede Ranahan Aug 5, 2020
  • July 2020
    • Jul 15, 2020 TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY -- A NEW BOOK DEDICATED TO SMI MOTHERS EVERYWHERE by Dede Ranahan Jul 15, 2020
    • Jul 8, 2020 EVERYONE NEEDS HOPE by Martha Jul 8, 2020
    • Jul 1, 2020 A BEAUTIFUL SIGN OF BETTER DAYS AHEAD FOR OUR SON by Leslie Carpenter Jul 1, 2020
  • June 2020
    • Jun 24, 2020 Dorothea Dix Reborn by Ellie Shukert Jun 24, 2020
    • Jun 17, 2020 TALK ABOUT IT by Mimi Feldman Jun 17, 2020
    • Jun 10, 2020 RECLASSIFICATION OF SMI IS THE TIPPING POINT by Peter Jarnstrom Jun 10, 2020
    • Jun 3, 2020 HELPING MR. K by April Jun 3, 2020
  • May 2020
    • May 28, 2020 MY NAUTILUS BOOK AWARDS VIDEO FOR SOONER THAN TOMORROW - Dede Ranahan May 28, 2020
    • May 27, 2020 I JUST WANT MY BEAUTIFUL BOY BACK - Anonymous May 27, 2020
    • May 20, 2020 STORIES A SECRET SMI SUPERHERO CAN NEVER, EVER TELL - Anonymous May 20, 2020
    • May 14, 2020 TODAY IN THE LAist: A STORY ABOUT US by Robert Garrova May 14, 2020
    • May 13, 2020 UNDERSTANDING & MUTUAL DECISION-MAKING by Wesley Loofburrough May 13, 2020
    • May 7, 2020 I NEED WORDS OF HOPE AND REPORTS OF PROGRESS by Dede Ranahan May 7, 2020
    • May 6, 2020 WHAT IS THE ANSWER? by Dawn MacTaggart Connolly May 6, 2020
  • April 2020
    • Apr 29, 2020 THE BEST DAYS by Channin Henry Williams Apr 29, 2020
    • Apr 22, 2020 A LETTER & A POEM FROM TRAVIS (BB8099) by Travis Christian Apr 22, 2020
    • Apr 15, 2020 WE ARE ALL IN THIS TOGETHER. "WE" SHOULD INCLUDE THE SMI by Linda Rippee Apr 15, 2020
    • Apr 8, 2020 WHEN COVID-19 IS CONTAINED, "EXTRA" BEDS SHOULD BE USED FOR SMI by Dede Ranahan Apr 8, 2020
    • Apr 2, 2020 FROM THE DIRECTOR OF NURSING AT A STATE PRISON Apr 2, 2020
    • Apr 1, 2020 I'D LIKE TO BE A PEN PAL FROM SCOTLAND by Anna Heath Apr 1, 2020
  • March 2020
    • Mar 26, 2020 A NEW PAGE ON THE BLOG - PEN PALS by Dede Ranahan Mar 26, 2020
    • Mar 25, 2020 FROM SOMEPLACE INSIDE MYSELF by Ron Powers Mar 25, 2020
    • Mar 18, 2020 TRAVIS AND KATHY AND ME - SO MANY QUESTIONS by Dede Ranahan Mar 18, 2020
    • Mar 11, 2020 WHAT DO I DREAM OF NOW? by Leslie Carpenter Mar 11, 2020
    • Mar 4, 2020 WHY? by Robin Lynn Duffey Mar 4, 2020
  • February 2020
    • Feb 26, 2020 TAKING A TIME OUT by Dede Ranahan Feb 26, 2020
    • Feb 18, 2020 DEAR SENATOR SANDERS: PLEASE RETHINK YOUR DISABILITY PLAN by Ilene Flannery Wells Feb 18, 2020
    • Feb 11, 2020 THE OTHER ME by Donna Nance Feb 11, 2020
    • Feb 4, 2020 "THEY SHOULD HAVE LET YOU HELP ME. I WASN'T IN MY RIGHT MIND" by Laurie Turley Feb 4, 2020
  • January 2020
    • Jan 29, 2020 WHY IS THIS OKAY? by Sharon Underwood Jan 29, 2020
    • Jan 21, 2020 WANT TO JOIN TEAM TRAVIS? by Dede Ranahan Jan 21, 2020
  • December 2019
    • Dec 30, 2019 IN 2020, PEACE AND SERENITY TO OUR AMAZING TRIBE by Dede Ranahan Dec 30, 2019
    • Dec 23, 2019 MY LAST VISIT WITH TRAVIS (BB8099) IN 2019 by Dede Ranahan Dec 23, 2019
    • Dec 5, 2019 AN EXTENDED LIST OF SMI ISSUES THAT NEEDS TO BE ADDRESSED by Dede Ranahan Dec 5, 2019
    • Dec 4, 2019 OUR 2020 GRASSROOTS FIVE-PART PLAN TO ADDRESS SMI UPDATED by Dede Ranahan Dec 4, 2019
  • November 2019
    • Nov 28, 2019 HAPPY THANKSGIVING SOONER THAN TOMORROW READERS - by Dede Ranahan Nov 28, 2019
  • October 2019
    • Oct 30, 2019 PREPARE MYSELF? HOW DO I DO THAT? by Francie VanZandt Oct 30, 2019
    • Oct 23, 2019 MY RESPONSE TO THE CBS THIS MORNING SHOW ABOUT MENTAL ILLNESS - Dede Ranahan Oct 23, 2019
    • Oct 14, 2019 OUR COUNTRY'S SHAME by Dede Ranahan Oct 14, 2019
    • Oct 10, 2019 ANNOUNCEMENT by Dede Ranahan Oct 10, 2019
    • Oct 1, 2019 I'M OKAY. ARE YOU OKAY? by Dede Ranahan Oct 1, 2019
  • August 2019
    • Aug 29, 2019 TAKING A BREAK. THANK YOU FOR YOUR AMAZON REVIEWS by Dede Ranahan Aug 29, 2019
    • Aug 21, 2019 NO STORIES THIS WEEK by Dede Ranahan Aug 21, 2019
    • Aug 8, 2019 MENTAL HEALTH ADVOCATES PUSH REFORMS by Gary Warth Aug 8, 2019
    • Aug 6, 2019 PLEASE SHARE WITH THOSE IN YOUR SPHERE OF INFLUENCE by Dede Ranahan Aug 6, 2019
  • July 2019
    • Jul 24, 2019 PLEASE HELP US BRING SERIOUS MENTAL ILLNESS INTO 2020 POLITICAL DISCOURSE by Dede Ranahan Jul 24, 2019
    • Jul 23, 2019 PATRICK RANAHAN, I LOVE YOU FOREVER. MOM by Dede Ranahan Jul 23, 2019
    • Jul 18, 2019 PLEASE HELP US REACH 2020 PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES by Dede Ranahan Jul 18, 2019
    • Jul 10, 2019 PLEASE JOIN THE CONVERSATION ON MY FACEBOOK PAGE by Dede Ranahan Jul 10, 2019
    • Jul 5, 2019 HAPPY PIC & POEM II Jul 5, 2019
  • June 2019
    • Jun 29, 2019 HAPPY PIC & POEM Jun 29, 2019
    • Jun 21, 2019 HAPPY PIC Jun 21, 2019
    • Jun 13, 2019 PLEASE INCLUDE SMI IN YOUR PLATFORM by Dede Ranahan Jun 13, 2019
    • Jun 12, 2019 TRAVIS & ME - OUR JUNE PRISON VISIT by Dede Ranahan Jun 12, 2019
  • May 2019
    • May 24, 2019 A LETTER TO SHARE OR TO COPY AND PASTE by Dede Ranahan May 24, 2019
    • May 22, 2019 SEVENTY-FIVE YEARS/THOUSANDS OF LETTERS by Dede Ranahan May 22, 2019
    • May 10, 2019 HAPPY PIC May 10, 2019
    • May 9, 2019 SAMPLE SMI LETTER TO 2020 PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES by Dede Ranahan May 9, 2019
    • May 8, 2019 2020 PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE CONTACT INFORMATION by Dede Ranahan May 8, 2019
  • April 2019
    • Apr 11, 2019 ADVANCE PRAISE FOR SOONER THAN TOMORROW - by Dede Ranahan (With Patrick Ranahan) Apr 11, 2019
    • Apr 4, 2019 SOONER THAN TOMORROW - A MOTHER'S DIARY (Coming Soon) by Dede Ranahan Apr 4, 2019
  • March 2019
    • Mar 28, 2019 THANK YOU PETE EARLEY - BOOKS THAT CHRONICLE MENTAL ILLNESSES AND THOSE IMPACTED BY THEM Mar 28, 2019
  • January 2019
    • Jan 3, 2019 NEED YOUR HELP. WHICH COLOR DRAWS YOU IN? by Dede Ranahan Jan 3, 2019
  • December 2018
    • Dec 28, 2018 HAPPY PIC - HAPPY 2019 Dec 28, 2018
  • August 2018
    • Aug 1, 2018 A MOTHER'S DIARY & A SON'S LAST FACEBOOK POSTS by Dede Ranahan - GOING FORWARD Aug 1, 2018
  • June 2018
    • Jun 21, 2018 A MOTHER'S DIARY - THANK YOU'S AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS by Dede Ranahan Jun 21, 2018
    • Jun 15, 2018 HAPPY PIC Jun 15, 2018
    • Jun 14, 2018 A MOTHER'S DIARY - CONCLUSION by Dede Ranahan Jun 14, 2018
    • Jun 8, 2018 HAPPY PIC (VIDEO) Jun 8, 2018
    • Jun 7, 2018 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Jun 7, 2018
    • Jun 1, 2018 HAPPY PIC Jun 1, 2018
  • May 2018
    • May 31, 2018 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan JUNE 1, 2014 - JUNE 14, 2014 May 31, 2018
    • May 25, 2018 HAPPY PIC May 25, 2018
    • May 24, 2018 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan May 24, 2018
    • May 18, 2018 HAPPY PIC May 18, 2018
    • May 17, 2018 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan May 18, 2014 - May 29, 2014 May 17, 2018
    • May 11, 2018 HAPPY PIC May 11, 2018
    • May 10, 2018 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan May 10, 2018
    • May 4, 2018 HAPPY PIC May 4, 2018
    • May 3, 2018 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan MAY 5, 2014 - MAY 17, 2014 May 3, 2018
  • April 2018
    • Apr 27, 2018 HAPPY PIC Apr 27, 2018
    • Apr 26, 2018 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Apr 26, 2018
    • Apr 20, 2018 HAPPY PIC Apr 20, 2018
    • Apr 19, 2018 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan APRIL 21, 2014 - MAY 2, 2014 Apr 19, 2018
    • Apr 13, 2018 HAPPY PIC Apr 13, 2018
    • Apr 12, 2018 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Apr 12, 2018
    • Apr 6, 2018 HAPPY PIC Apr 6, 2018
    • Apr 5, 2018 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan APRIL 7, 2014 - APRIL 20, 2014 Apr 5, 2018
  • March 2018
    • Mar 30, 2018 HAPPY PIC Mar 30, 2018
    • Mar 29, 2018 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Mar 29, 2018
    • Mar 23, 2018 HAPPY PIC Mar 23, 2018
    • Mar 22, 2018 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan MARCH 24, 2014 - APRIL 4, 2014 Mar 22, 2018
    • Mar 16, 2018 HAPPY PIC Mar 16, 2018
    • Mar 15, 2018 MORE FEED BACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Mar 15, 2018
    • Mar 9, 2018 HAPPY PIC Mar 9, 2018
    • Mar 8, 2018 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan MARCH 9, 2014 - MARCH 21, 2014 Mar 8, 2018
    • Mar 2, 2018 HAPPY PIC Mar 2, 2018
    • Mar 1, 2018 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Mar 1, 2018
  • February 2018
    • Feb 23, 2018 HAPPY PIC Feb 23, 2018
    • Feb 22, 2018 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan: FEBRUARY 22, 2014 - MARCH 8, 2014 Feb 22, 2018
    • Feb 16, 2018 HAPPY PIC Feb 16, 2018
    • Feb 15, 2018 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Feb 15, 2018
    • Feb 8, 2018 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan FEBRUARY 8, 2014 - FEBRUARY 21, 2014 Feb 8, 2018
    • Feb 2, 2018 HAPPY PIC Feb 2, 2018
    • Feb 1, 2018 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Feb 1, 2018
  • January 2018
    • Jan 26, 2018 HAPPY PIC Jan 26, 2018
    • Jan 25, 2018 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan JANUARY 26, 2014 - FEBRUARY 7, 2014 Jan 25, 2018
    • Jan 19, 2018 HAPPY PIC Jan 19, 2018
    • Jan 18, 2018 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Jan 18, 2018
    • Jan 12, 2018 HAPPY PIC Jan 12, 2018
    • Jan 11, 2018 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan JANUARY 11, 2014 - JANUARY 24, 2014 Jan 11, 2018
    • Jan 5, 2018 HAPPY PIC Jan 5, 2018
    • Jan 4, 2018 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Jan 4, 2018
    • Jan 2, 2018 A MUST READ by Dede Ranahan Jan 2, 2018
  • December 2017
    • Dec 29, 2017 HAPPY PIC Dec 29, 2017
    • Dec 28, 2017 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan DECEMBER 30, 2013 - JANUARY 10, 2014 Dec 28, 2017
    • Dec 22, 2017 HAPPY PIC Dec 22, 2017
    • Dec 21, 2017 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Dec 21, 2017
    • Dec 15, 2017 HAPPY PIC Dec 15, 2017
    • Dec 14, 2017 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan WINTER 2013-2014 DECEMBER 18, 2013 - DECEMBER 25, 2013 Dec 14, 2017
    • Dec 8, 2017 HAPPY PIC Dec 8, 2017
    • Dec 7, 2017 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Dec 7, 2017
  • November 2017
    • Nov 30, 2017 A MOTHER' DIARY by Dede Ranahan DECEMBER 1, 2013 - DECEMBER 16, 2013 Nov 30, 2017
    • Nov 24, 2017 HAPPY PIC Nov 24, 2017
    • Nov 23, 2017 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Nov 23, 2017
    • Nov 17, 2017 HAPPY PIC Nov 17, 2017
    • Nov 16, 2017 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan NOVEMBER 18, 2013 - DECEMBER 1, 2013 Nov 16, 2017
    • Nov 10, 2017 HAPPY PIC Nov 10, 2017
    • Nov 9, 2017 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Nov 9, 2017
    • Nov 3, 2017 HAPPY PIC Nov 3, 2017
    • Nov 2, 2017 A MOTHER' DIARY by Dede Ranahan NOVEMBER 3, 2013 - NOVEMBER 16, 2013 Nov 2, 2017
  • October 2017
    • Oct 27, 2017 HAPPY PIC Oct 27, 2017
    • Oct 26, 2017 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Oct 26, 2017
    • Oct 20, 2017 HAPPY PIC Oct 20, 2017
    • Oct 19, 2017 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan - OCTOBER 19, 2013 - NOVEMBER 2, 2013 Oct 19, 2017
    • Oct 13, 2017 HAPPY PIC Oct 13, 2017
    • Oct 12, 2017 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Oct 12, 2017
    • Oct 6, 2017 UNHAPPY PIC Oct 6, 2017
    • Oct 5, 2017 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan - OCTOBER 2, 2013 - OCTOBER 18, 2013 Oct 5, 2017
  • September 2017
    • Sep 29, 2017 HAPPY PIC Sep 29, 2017
    • Sep 28, 2017 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Sep 28, 2017
    • Sep 22, 2017 HAPPY PIC Sep 22, 2017
    • Sep 21, 2017 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan - FALL 2013 - SEPTEMBER 18, 2013 - OCTOBER 1, 2013 Sep 21, 2017
    • Sep 15, 2017 HAPPY PIC Sep 15, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 8, 2017 HAPPY PIC Sep 8, 2017
    • Sep 7, 2017 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan SEPTEMBER 8, 2013 - SEPTEMBER 16, 2013 Sep 7, 2017
    • Sep 1, 2017 HAPPY PIC Sep 1, 2017
  • August 2017
    • Aug 31, 2017 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY - by Dede Ranahan Aug 31, 2017
    • Aug 25, 2017 HAPPY PIC Aug 25, 2017
    • Aug 24, 2017 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan: AUGUST 30, 2013 - SEPTEMBER 7, 2013 Aug 24, 2017
    • Aug 18, 2017 HAPPY PIC Aug 18, 2017
    • Aug 17, 2017 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Aug 17, 2017
    • Aug 11, 2017 HAPPY PIC Aug 11, 2017
    • Aug 10, 2017 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan: AUGUST 18, 2013 - AUGUST 29, 2013 Aug 10, 2017
    • Aug 4, 2017 HAPPY PIC Aug 4, 2017
    • Aug 3, 2017 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Aug 3, 2017
  • July 2017
    • Jul 28, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jul 28, 2017
    • Jul 27, 2017 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan: AUGUST 3, 2013 - AUGUST 16, 2013 Jul 27, 2017
    • Jul 21, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jul 21, 2017
    • Jul 20, 2017 MORE FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Jul 20, 2017
    • Jul 14, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jul 14, 2017
    • Jul 13, 2017 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan: JULY 15, 2013 - JULY 31, 2013 Jul 13, 2017
    • Jul 7, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jul 7, 2017
    • Jul 6, 2017 FEEDBACK FOR A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Jul 6, 2017
  • June 2017
    • Jun 30, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jun 30, 2017
    • Jun 29, 2017 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan: JULY 2, 2013 - JULY 14, 2013 Jun 29, 2017
    • Jun 23, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jun 23, 2017
    • Jun 22, 2017 SOONER THAN TOMORROW - A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan Jun 22, 2017
    • Jun 16, 2017 HAPPY PIC Jun 16, 2017
    • Jun 15, 2017 A MOTHER'S DIARY by Dede Ranahan: SUMMER - JUNE 15, 2013 - JUNE 29, 2013 Jun 15, 2017
    • Jun 14, 2017 BEFORE - SCENES FROM THE TRENCHES by Dede Ranahan Jun 14, 2017

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