Every September the mental health and addiction recovery community comes together to celebrate the gains made by those in recovery—just like we do for people recovering from other health conditions and diseases. Recovery Month is about educating our communities that substance use treatment and mental health services can enable those with a mental and/or substance use disorder to live a healthy and rewarding life.
A vitamin is an organic substance essential in small quantities for normal metabolism. It is found naturally in various foods, but it can also be produced artificially. A lack of vitamins can produce certain diseases.
Home-building has not kept up with job growth, causing a shortage of affordable housing. Possible solutions being pushed in the California state senate could pack cities like Scotts Valley with dense housing.
Dogs are amazing. They can do incredible things. Well maybe not my dog, Sherman, who is more likely to get into mischief than save mankind but we’ve all heard stories about detection dogs sniffing out drugs, explosives, cadavers and disaster survivors. In the mid 90’s, handlers started training them for conservation tasks such as sniffing out scat from endangered species and detecting trafficked ivory. Now their olfactory prowess is being used in the fight against invasive plants and insects. And this year dogs are being trained to sniff out Covid 19 odor with 82% accuracy. The list of how man’s best friend is helping us just keeps getting longer.
If you ask the residents of Boulder Creek what makes their town so special, the answer is always the same: It’s the people. Neighbors who give from their bountiful gardens to help one another; mom & pop shops who let locals run a tab; residents who always lend a helping hand, whether it is cooking food and plating meals for Operation Turkey or volunteering in elementary school classrooms. It’s people with a depth of heart and community spirit that keep generations of families tethered to the town, and there are some who have never lived anywhere else, and wouldn’t dream of it. Deborah Rozman, CEO of HeartMath LLC, a nonprofit based exclusively in Boulder Creek, understands that community mentality. She’s been with the agency since 1991, and has always supported the town’s fire department. After evacuating to Santa Cruz and seeing stories on the national news about Boulder Creek Fire Department’s efforts to save the town, Rozman called Chief Mark Bingham about a fundraiser for the department—not for equipment or engines or new turnouts, but for the volunteers themselves. Bingham, exhausted and grateful, was on board. Supported by the Boulder Creek Business Association, HeartMath’s Gabriella Boehmer set up the GoFundMe account on Monday, September 14th with a goal of $100,000, but Rozman’s not putting a limit on the town’s generosity. “The whole idea is to inspire other communities with volunteer fire departments to do something similar. These heroes,” said Rozman, “they don’t do it for the money. They do it for all of us.” Since the fire department is a nonprofit, GoFundMe won’t take a cut of the proceeds. As of Monday, September 21st, the fund boasted nearly $30,000, including $5,000 seed money from HeartMath, with a guarantee to match funds up to $20,000. “The most important thing to realize is that our volunteer firefighters worked 24/7 to save our homes and businesses, and they did this without pay. Their families were evacuated, some lost their homes, but they stayed and we need to open our hearts and care for them,” says Rozman. “We really hope this sets an example and goes viral in other towns. We’d love to hear other communities say, ‘Look what Boulder Creek did, we should do the same.’” Chief Bingham will distribute the funds equally to all firefighters regardless of rank and length of service with the department. “Let’s get some real dollars into the hands of our own volunteer firefighters,” Rozman implores. ”They all deserve this.” Interested in supporting the volunteers of Boulder Creek Fire Department? You can join the effort at https://www.gofundme.com/f/BoulderCreek-firefighter-relief-fund
This past week I chatted with a very busy and well informed man, Robert Gray, the Felton Fire Protection District Chief. While we covered much, Gray’s most important sentiment was advice for our community in the coming months, “Be patient out there. There’s a lot of people hurting who have lost their homes. The community needs to be kind to each other right now. That goes a long way for people in the recovery process…. Everyone is hurting in their own way, those that lost their homes, firefighters, those who had to evacuate. The fire fighters aren’t just shrugging off the 1,000 lost homes. Every home you lose as a fire fighter hurts. Some fire fighters in pain of losing homes in our community, and their own home. Even those who haven’t lost their homes, but evacuated, are processing a lot of trauma. Let’s use patience and kindness in our interactions, because we simply don’t know what someone could be going through.”
This world is like nothing we’ve seen before and hopefully nothing we will ever see again. No one has gone unscathed: loss, fear, anger, exhaustion, grief, loneliness, disbelief. If you were teetering on the edge of mental and emotional stability, you may feel like everything is crumbling. You may feel like you are crumbling.
Bonny Doon hosts Wildfire Preparedness Fair this Saturday
Supervisor Justin Cummings and the Bonny Doon Fire Safe Council will host a Community Fire Preparedness and...