TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY NAUTILUS BOOK AWARDS 2020 SILVER MEDAL by Dede Ranahan

2020 Nautilus Book Awards:

Dear Tomorrow Was Yesterday Authors,

First, we are stunned with joy by the outpouring of passion, commitment, and collaboration from all of you and which is needed so very much at this time. The pulse of energy embodied in your books has indeed helped to spark the greater life of our world. Please know that we treasure you and your work.

We are thrilled to announce that you are a new Nautilus Book Award Winner! Your book has been selected as an Award Winner in the category shown below:

Title: Tomorrow Was Yesterday: Explosive First-Person Indictments of the US Mental Health System - Mothers Across the Nation Tell It Like It Is

Author: Dede Ranahan with 64 Co-Authors

Publisher: Read First Press

Award: Silver

Category: Social Change / Social Justice

We welcome you to the Nautilus Book Awards family, comprised of highly esteemed authors and publishers from across the USA, and from over 20 nations around the world. You can be especially proud of your book's selection as an Award Winner this season, which attracted a record-number of entries and included a magnificent diversity of high-quality books.

We are grateful for the chance to help promote and celebrate your book by increasing its visibility as a Nautilus Award Winner. And we are truly encouraged by the new perspectives these books present with which to co-create a better future, individually and collectively.

On behalf of all the Nautilus reviewers, team of judges, staff, and volunteers, thank you. May your book's message bring hope, wisdom, healing, and inspiration to many people.

Thank you for your book and all you contribute to Better Books for a Better World.

With warm regards,

Mary Belknap, PhD.
for the Nautilus Book Awards team

Nautilus Book Awards is a prestigious, international book awards program. Previous winners include Deepak Chopra, M.D, Judy Collins, Barbara Kingsolver, Eckhart Tolle, His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Desmond Tutu, and many more…

Their core mission is to celebrate and honor books that support conscious living & green values, high-level wellness, positive social change & social justice, and spiritual growth.

During the past 22 years, this unique book awards program has continued to gain prestige with authors and publishers around the world as it seeks, recognizes, honors, celebrates and promotes print books that inspire and connect our lives as individuals, families, communities, and global citizens.

Dedicated to excellence and the highest literary standards, the Nautilus Awards program encourages its winners in getting wider recognition, exhibiting opportunities, industry exposure and enhanced prospects for sales.

https://nautilusbookawards.com

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HOW DO WE GET A NATIONAL PLAN FOR SMI? by Dede Ranahan

Just downloaded the White House National Strategy for the COVID-19 Response and Pandemic Preparedness (198 pages). It lays 7 goals out in detail. To date, 24 million Americans have contracted COVID and over 400,000 have died. Hopefully this will be a time-limited health crisis.

Right now, between 11-13 million Americans (and by extension 11-13 million families, maybe 44 million more Americans) suffer from the ramifications of SMI each year. This crisis isn't time-limited.

The country is being crushed with multiple crises, but our on-going SMI crisis needs to be added to the crises requiring immediate attention -- a National Plan. It's way past time to ask for a National Plan.

From Tomorrow Was Yesterday: ā€œAs it stands today, the US mental health/illness system is filled with political landmines and gut-wrenching divisions: parents vs. children, peer organizations vs. family organizations, voluntary vs. involuntary treatment concepts, psychiatrist vs. psychologist turf wars, state vs. federal jurisdictions, HIPAA restrictions vs. parental rights, lack of beds vs. incarceration, unions vs. providers, psychiatry vs. anti-psychiatry, civil rights vs. dying with your rights on, NIMBYism vs. housing, traditional medicine vs. holistic medicine, and funded advocacy organizations vs. unfunded grassroots advocacy efforts. I watched my son Pat die because the system is tied up in bureaucratic and philosophical knots."

There will never be a better time than now to ask for what we need and deserve. How can we make this request?

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GOOD AND BAD IN 2020 by Dede Ranahan

I’m pleased to report that Tomorrow Was Yesterday — Explosive First-Person Indictments of the US Mental Health System — Mothers Across the Nation Tell It Like It Is — is doing really well. Thank you to those of you who have already purchased and read our book (65 mothers from 28 states). Thank you to those who have left reviews on Amazon. Reviews help spread the word.

Some exciting new connections are developing from the publication of this book. Too soon to talk about, but more good things might be coming. Keep fingers crossed…

Click on this link to the book’s page on Amazon:

Meanwhile, goodbye 2020. What a year! A friend, just diagnosed with Covid says, ā€œYou don’t really have a bubble because people are careless.ā€

Please stay safe and well in 2021. Over and above surviving, may the new year bring you and your families many blessings. Love, Dede

Please stay safe and well in 2021. Over and above surviving, may the new year bring you and your families many blessings. Love, Dede

ALL THE BEST FROM ME TO YOU by Dede Ranahan

Thanks to my new kitty, Detective Lucas Whiskers, being sick, and getting old/er, I’ve ā€œset upā€ my simplest Christmas tree ever. In this chaotic 2020 year, simple feels comforting to me. So I'm sending simple wishes to all.

MERRY CHRISTMAS1 HAPPY HOLIDAYS! STAY SAFE AND WELL.

MERRY CHRISTMAS1 HAPPY HOLIDAYS! STAY SAFE AND WELL.

TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY - INTRODUCING THE AUTHORS (4) by Dede Ranahan

Introducing authors of the 65 stories in Tomorrow Was Yesterday - Explosive First-Person Indictments of the US Mental Health System — Mothers Across the Nation Tell It Like It Is.

This book is now available on Amazon
: Click on this link.

FROM NORTH CAROLINA
Gwendolyn Bartley: ā€œIt’s Kind of like a Daily ā€˜Sophie’s Choiceā€™ā€
Gwendolyn is the mother of five (now adult) children through the blessing of adoption and natural birth. She is the founder and executive director of Amazing Grace Advocacy, a non-profit that supports families raising children with brain disorders in Concord, North Carolina. Gwendolyn serves on several community, state, and national initiatives to advocate for access to appropriate services for children with serious emotional disturbances (SED).

Sherri McGimsey: ā€œWhat Would You Do?ā€
Sherri is a wife, mother of two sons, grandmother, business owners for 39 years, and a national advocate for SMI. Her eldest son, Matt, has schizophrenia. Sherri’s a member of NAMI South Mountains, North Carolina and serves on the NSSC (National Shattering Silence Coalition). She’s a trainer in NAMI’s Family-toFamily class and in the Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) for police and law enforcement. ā€œA Mother’s Prayer for Mental Illnessā€ guides her on this journey.

FROM OHIO
Nikki Landis: ā€œNikki and Kevinā€
Nikki is the mother of five and homeschools her children on a small farm in rural Ohio. She loves to read and learn new perspectives. Her childhood dream was to have a large family, live in the country, and write. She continues to pursue her dreams despite how SMI has affected her life and she encourages everyone to do the same.

FROM OKLAHOMA
Audrey Adams Auernheimer: ā€œFor Now I’m Thankful Adam is Aliveā€
Audrey is the mother of four children, three of whom have been diagnosed with mental illness. Her son, Marty, was diagnosed with schizophrenia at age 22. Her only daughter Candace was diagnosed with depression with suicidal ideation at age 12. Marty died at 28 and Candace died at 26 to suicide. Her 30-year-old son, also diagnosed, lives with her. The youngest son remains untreated and barely functional, mostly due to anosognosia.

FROM OREGON
Carole McAfee: ā€œA Mother’s Fightā€

Kecia Bolken Speck: ā€œI’m Never Calling the Crisis Team or the Police Againā€
Kecia is the mother of two adult children and currently lives in rural Oregon. She works in pediatric occupational therapy and takes care of her 29-year-old son full-time. Her dreams for the future are to change the education of first responders, to ensure the funding of skilled crisis teams, and to decriminalize serious mental illness. ā€œMy family’s lives depend on it. Nobody should ever have to go through this alone.ā€

Sharon Underwood: ā€œWhy Is This Okay?ā€
Sharon is a single mother of four. Her mentally ill son Tim is her youngest child. Sharon’s been a caregiver for the elderly for over 25 years.

FROM PENNSYLVANIA
Holly Alston: ā€œMommy Please Clear My Nameā€
Holly’s son suffered from schizophrenia and other mental health issues. He was in prison for over seven years while his mental health was ignored. When Terrell was in isolation, he would scrape his eyebrows off and pluck out his eyelashes. ā€œHe was released from prison 8/8/16 and by 8/20/16 he was dead.ā€

Mary A. Butler: ā€œLet’s Talk About hopeful Voluntary Admissionsā€

FROM TEXAS
Joyce Berryman: ā€œStuck in Texasā€

Channin Henry Williams: ā€œI See Change Comingā€
After 14 years of giving so much of herself to meet her daughter’s special needs, Channin is now focusing on her husband, hobbies, and finding her way. ā€œRaven left the institution on her 18th birthday. Soon all communication stopped. My greatest nightmare came true. How should a mother like me grieve or even feel? It is my supportive family and faith in Jesus Christ that has given me strength and hope that change is coming.ā€

FROM UTAH
Heidi Franke: ā€œI Am Livid. Shakingā€
Heidi is an RN. She’s been living through the diagnosis of her youngest son’s pervasive mental illness and struggles with addiction. Her goal is to empower parents to speak up to help overcome obstacles to care for their children. ā€œBy telling our stories, we give permission to others to start telling theirs.ā€ Heidi makes mending herself a personal daily engagement project ā€œas we must put on our oxygen mask first to help those beside us.ā€

FROM VIRGINIA
Pat Wood: ā€œOur Son’s Preventable Deathā€
After his first year of college, Pat’s elder son was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. ā€œHis death by suicide at age 38 was the outcome we’d fought against for years and was our worst nightmare come true.ā€ Pat’s younger son also has a mental illness. ā€œThere have been many medications, hospitals, therapists, psychiatrists, and less-than-successful battles to get the services my children needed. My younger son’s uncertain future remains my concern and focus now.ā€

FROM WASHINGTON
April: ā€œHelping Mr. K.ā€
April is a wife, retired direct marketing creator, and sibling to Mr. K. Her mother died seven years ago with no plan in place for her brother’s care other than the designation of ā€œSocial Security Payee.ā€

Jerri Clark: ā€œMy Goal Is Not Happiness but Human Understandingā€
Jerri advocates for treatment access in Washington State where she started Mothers of the Mentally Ill (MOMI). She and her husband (married since 1994) have a daughter and two grandsons. Their son Calvin died from suicide March 1, 2019.

Jerri Clark with son Calvin

Jerri Clark with son Calvin

TOMORROW WAS YESTERDAY - INTRODUCING THE AUTHORS (3) by Dede Ranahan

Introducing authors of the 65 stories in Tomorrow Was Yesterday - Explosive First-Person Indictments of the US Mental Health System — Mothers Across the Nation Tell It Like It Is. Available on Amazon in December.

This book is now available on Amazon.

FROM MAINE
Jeanne Gore: ā€œWe Need A Revolutionā€
Jeanne is a family member and Coordinator and Co-Chair of the Steering Committee for the National Shattering Silence Coalition (NSSC).

Laurie Turley: ā€œThey Should Have Let You Help Me. I Wasn’t in My Right Mind.ā€
Laurie is a musician, music teacher, wife, mother, grandmother and advocate of ā€œtreatment before tragedy.ā€

FROM MARYLAND
Amy Kerr: ā€œI Feel Incredibly Blessedā€

Laura Pogliano: ā€œZac, My Darling Sonā€ & ā€œLet’s Talk About Real Issues"
Laura is a training and education consultant in Baltimore, Maryland. She lost her only son, Zaccaria, to schizophrenia in 2015. Laura is a former board member of SARDAA (Schizophrenia and Related Disorders Alliance of America) and leads the Maryland SARDAA State chapter advocating for reform and the reclassification of schizophrenia to neurology.

FROM MASSACHUSETTS
Mara Briere: ā€œA Problem Shared is a Problem Halvedā€
Mara is the mother, aunt, daughter, and sister of adults with serious mental illness. She’s a Master’s Level Certified Family Life Educator. She founded a nonprofit for families uprooted by mental illness, Grow A Strong Family, in order to generate, share, and develop the resources, support, and network that families like hers need and do not have.

Donna Erickson: ā€œWhat I’ve Learned About Our Broken Mental Health Systemā€
Donna is the mother of a son (age 35) who has a serious brain illness. ā€œAs a mental health reform activist, I hope to see much needed major changes for our loved ones. We are long overdue for a better mental health system.ā€

Deborah Harper: ā€œI Feared He’d Be Blown to Piecesā€
Deborah is a teacher, mother, and friend. She is a designer and photographer. She is a Christian/Catholic.

FROM MICHIGAN
Sarah C.: ā€œIt Feels Like the State of Michigan Wants Me Deadā€

Kimberlee Cooper West: ā€œWalk A Mile in Our Shoesā€

FROM NEW HAMPSHIRE
Theresa A.: ā€œYou Don’t Matterā€ & ā€œThere’s No Limit to What a Mother Will Doā€
Theresa has been a preschool teacher for many years. She lives in New Hampshire with her husband.

Ashley Doonan/Cathie Curtis: ā€œI Am Ashley. I Define Me.ā€
Cathy’s daughter Ashley fought a good fight to reduce the stigma associated with mental illness in academia, the workplace, the correctional system, and society as a whole. Cathie says, ā€œAlthough she is no longer with us, I am her voice.ā€

FROM NEW JERSEY
Julia Gillies: ā€œThis is Exhaustingā€
ā€I’ve been a mental health advocate in New Jersey for 11 years. I read. I research. I witness the suffering of those with mental illness as a loving mother. I send emails, texts, and letters, and make phone calls. Yet, my cries for help often go unheard. Change doesn’t happen until action occurs to help those suffering with SMI. We must wake up, educate others, and be persistent.ā€

FROM NEW YORK
Tama Bell: ā€œNightmares in the Daylightā€ & ā€œ10 Myths Mental Health Officials Tell Us About Our Kidsā€

Laurie Lethbridge Christmas: ā€œWhat an Effing Nightmareā€

Karen Riches: ā€œOur Pledgeā€
ā€I’m a mom. My son meant the world to me. Jacob suffered with serious mental illness. He was diagnosed with schizophrenia. Too bad that my son meant nothing to the medical community. He died because of their beliefs and lack of knowledge about mental illness.ā€

Laura Pogliano’s son, Zaccaria

Laura Pogliano’s son, Zaccaria

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1732974527/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=tomorrow+was+yesterday+ranahan&qid=1606247459&refinements=p_n_feature_browse-bin%3A2656022011&rnid=618072011&s=books&sr=1-1

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1732974527/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=tomorrow+was+yesterday+ranahan&qid=1606247459&refinements=p_n_feature_browse-bin%3A2656022011&rnid=618072011&s=books&sr=1-1