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Jan 11, 2011
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do you remember that daphne? i do remember and it was based a lot on the work of william white, who has written so much on language and the rhetoric of recovery, and what words keep us stuck and what words move us for, forward. for exam, example, the issue of relapse. we talk about relapse and in other illnesses, we might talk about a recurrence or we might talk about re-initiation. but relapse somehow focuses on this was the expected, negative outcome and so...and failure. and so again, it goes back to the consciousness and what are we conveying and what, what kind of expectations are we conveying with our language? and there are a number of those examples that can be found actually on william white's website and, and in other publications that have been done by samhsa and by faces and voices of recovery. there are some wonderful resources to help us become more conscious of the language we use. and that connects to the fact that what we can do within the treatment system. if you're working with a person and the
do you remember that daphne? i do remember and it was based a lot on the work of william white, who has written so much on language and the rhetoric of recovery, and what words keep us stuck and what words move us for, forward. for exam, example, the issue of relapse. we talk about relapse and in other illnesses, we might talk about a recurrence or we might talk about re-initiation. but relapse somehow focuses on this was the expected, negative outcome and so...and failure. and so again, it...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 2, 2011
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so daphne, how do we change the paradigm? how do we begin to use positive language, person-centered, people- first type of language? we begin by being conscious of the words that we're using and there are a number of words and papers and reports and so forth out there that promote words like health and recovery and person-centered and mutual support and so forth. and so there's a, there's a model that talks about going from unconscious incompetence at something, where you, where you do something and it's not what you want to do but you're not even aware of it, to conscious incompetence where you begin to be aware that these aren't the terms i want to use, to conscious competence and we're starting to be more aware of the terminology we're using to unconscious competence. and i think that's what we want to do as a field, is move to a point where we're automatically speaking in positive, person-centered, health-centered approaches. you two folks are in recovery. now they're going to be folks out there that are going to say, alr
so daphne, how do we change the paradigm? how do we begin to use positive language, person-centered, people- first type of language? we begin by being conscious of the words that we're using and there are a number of words and papers and reports and so forth out there that promote words like health and recovery and person-centered and mutual support and so forth. and so there's a, there's a model that talks about going from unconscious incompetence at something, where you, where you do...
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Jan 11, 2011
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certainly the planning partners for recovery month, right daphne? yes indeed, that's been such a valuable group to move the conversation forward throughout the year, not just in september during recovery month, but throughout the year, to keep this issue elevated. so the question is, is what type of system is somebody coming into? i think it's a system that needs to be all encompassing, that can provide services wherever, whichever doorway the person chooses. and i'm, i'm just really grateful to the, the initiatives that samhsa and, and the federal government have supported around the access to recovery program, the recovery community support programs, that foster this peer-to-peer interaction where they're non-traditional approaches, but that, creating that peer-to-peer interaction, i think is just so critical. now it's not a slight on the academics or the, the clinical or the treatment professional, but there's that empathy factor between one person that has experienced this helping another person. and i think we need to promote more of that. so i
certainly the planning partners for recovery month, right daphne? yes indeed, that's been such a valuable group to move the conversation forward throughout the year, not just in september during recovery month, but throughout the year, to keep this issue elevated. so the question is, is what type of system is somebody coming into? i think it's a system that needs to be all encompassing, that can provide services wherever, whichever doorway the person chooses. and i'm, i'm just really grateful...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 4, 2011
01/11
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i know daphne has written a lot about this and, and also bill white. i published a paper in 2004 in the treatment, alcoholism treatment quarterly, which actually talks a lot about the issue of terminology and how it may affect, how it's imprecise. for example, we use the term abuse, generically, but also it's a diagnostic label, it's actually a, a dsm diagnostic label, which creates a lot of confusion when you see it written. are they referring to the more generic issue, you know, regarding the whole range of problems versus a particular diagnosis, that has specific meaning? so it's imprecisely used and this is a problem, of course, in communication. so one of the things that i think we need to, we need to have a term that describes these problems generically... and the institute of medicine has tried to deal with that, have they not? yes and the world health organization too, so in the 1970's they were advocating against using the term abuse, even though the american psychiatric association adopted that term which is unfortunate because then that give
i know daphne has written a lot about this and, and also bill white. i published a paper in 2004 in the treatment, alcoholism treatment quarterly, which actually talks a lot about the issue of terminology and how it may affect, how it's imprecise. for example, we use the term abuse, generically, but also it's a diagnostic label, it's actually a, a dsm diagnostic label, which creates a lot of confusion when you see it written. are they referring to the more generic issue, you know, regarding the...
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Jan 16, 2011
01/11
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i needed to be about to see the daphne that smells indescribably beautiful in january. i needed to understand what people left to understand the great sacrifice that they made by moving to the north and west. this book was meant to be, and i could not rest until it was completed. there are many people who thought it would never be done in fact ever since this whirlwind has begun so many people have said you know, i wondered if he ever would finish it. [laughter] i hoped you would and i believe you might, but i just wasn't certain and so i am so delighted and may be more relieved than anything else to be able to stand here and say that it's done. the review has been astounding and i am so grateful for them. i am grateful for the response but i think i'm even more grateful that my mother is here to see this day. [applause] it is emotional for bea to be here because my roots run deep in georgia, very deep more than most people who live here because you are livre find anybody that is from atlanta. [laughter] my great-grandmother who we believe to have been born to sleeves g
i needed to be about to see the daphne that smells indescribably beautiful in january. i needed to understand what people left to understand the great sacrifice that they made by moving to the north and west. this book was meant to be, and i could not rest until it was completed. there are many people who thought it would never be done in fact ever since this whirlwind has begun so many people have said you know, i wondered if he ever would finish it. [laughter] i hoped you would and i believe...
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with a injury from a wild spassky stina man first for them one following her straight sets win over daphne maddox sounds the americans were back on track thanks to john mason was a relatively easy victory against belmont is there a natural sounds and panned out to defeat belgium in the size of mixed doubles six one six three and flinches. a record six months. on the greens marcus briere and british open champion louis aust husan share the lead after three rounds out of the africa open bria propellants sell through its all thanks to a solid three under seventy on saturday while also using carded before and sixty nine helped by and they go on the fifteenth the local favorite was able to match bri is overall results finishing the day on the park so. watch out adrift while drawing the line i believe the brandon grey stumbled through seventy second after this triple bogey at the sixteen. over in chile russian drivers retained the lead in their car elite trucks competition while in the bike section helder of drug use was awarded stage six victory despite finishing second it would use crossing th
with a injury from a wild spassky stina man first for them one following her straight sets win over daphne maddox sounds the americans were back on track thanks to john mason was a relatively easy victory against belmont is there a natural sounds and panned out to defeat belgium in the size of mixed doubles six one six three and flinches. a record six months. on the greens marcus briere and british open champion louis aust husan share the lead after three rounds out of the africa open bria...
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drew with a injury from a well it's best man for us for them following her straight sets win over daphne maddox sounds americans were back on track thanks to john mason was a relatively easy victory against. these dramatic sounds and paired up to defeat belgium in the size of mixed doubles six one six three and clinch a record six one. on the greens marcus briere and british open champion louis also husan share the lead after three rounds out the africa open bria propellants himself through its all thanks to a solid three under seventy on saturday while also use in carded a four and sixty nine helped by and they go on the fifteenth the local favorite was able to match bri is overall results finishing the day on the thirteenth on the park so. watch out adrift while joint overnight leader brandon gray stumbled to seventy second after this triple bogey sixteen. over in chile russian drivers retained the lead in their car aly trucks competition while in the bike section helder a druggist's. was awarded stage six victory despite finishing second the bushes crossing the line behind compadre at
drew with a injury from a well it's best man for us for them following her straight sets win over daphne maddox sounds americans were back on track thanks to john mason was a relatively easy victory against. these dramatic sounds and paired up to defeat belgium in the size of mixed doubles six one six three and clinch a record six one. on the greens marcus briere and british open champion louis also husan share the lead after three rounds out the africa open bria propellants himself through its...
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Jan 5, 2011
01/11
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daphne bavalier thinks so. she is a professor in the brain and cognitive sciences department at the university of rochester. she has done a lot of research on video game players. and parents: the news is a little bit counter-intuitive. >> we can show that, they have better vision, the kind of skills that are not typically corrected by training but corrected by your glasses which is not something that you would think playing videogames actually changes. and it's not only the case for vision but its also the case for attention, for different aspects of cognition like multitasking, visual short term memory. >> reporter: and bavalier says the games that are most beneficial are the not the ones you might suspect. no disagreement from the halo legend known as flamesword, a.k.a. michael chaves. he's a professional video gamer. yes, kids, you can get paid t do this! even though i hesitate to mention it. >> i think faster. i have more outcomes in my head because in the game you are trying to complete a task and there ma
daphne bavalier thinks so. she is a professor in the brain and cognitive sciences department at the university of rochester. she has done a lot of research on video game players. and parents: the news is a little bit counter-intuitive. >> we can show that, they have better vision, the kind of skills that are not typically corrected by training but corrected by your glasses which is not something that you would think playing videogames actually changes. and it's not only the case for...
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Jan 8, 2011
01/11
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. >> and then when they asked me to play fantine for the revival, i went in to replace daphne rubin vegas like, "i'm replacing another..." >> hinojosa: she's dominican, yeah, latina. >> so the cast actually was made up of... we had a black javert, there was... the cast was just so diverse, it was crazy diverse. but it never centered on just how diverse everyone was. it was just, "here's a story, and these are the people that we have chosen to tell the story and to tell it well." >> hinojosa: do you think that now there are more asian american producers who are saying, "okay, i need to step..." i mean, what about you? couldn't you produce? >> well, i actually just did a reading in new york city yesterday, and it's a show called allegiance. and the subject matter of the show is japanese internment in world war ii. so the cast... i mean, it's... obviously this is not open to blind casting, because you have to be asians to play japanese, and there has to be either white or black to play the americans. and so it's very specific. >> hinojosa: are you going to get the role? >> i read for... i w
. >> and then when they asked me to play fantine for the revival, i went in to replace daphne rubin vegas like, "i'm replacing another..." >> hinojosa: she's dominican, yeah, latina. >> so the cast actually was made up of... we had a black javert, there was... the cast was just so diverse, it was crazy diverse. but it never centered on just how diverse everyone was. it was just, "here's a story, and these are the people that we have chosen to tell the story and...