Portraits of Resilience
1 total work
More than 15 million American adults grapple with depression in a given year. Anxiety disorders affect 40 million Americans over the age of 18. And yet these diseases are often invisible, hidden, unacknowledged. In Portraits of Resilience, people coping with depression, anxiety, and other challenges step out of the shadows to meet us face to face. A series of photographic portaits conveys their charisma, strength, and wisdom. In accompanying narratives, they describe their struggles and their insights into their conditions and the societal and cultural forces that shaped them.
We hear from Victor, who once wondered "Why should I be alive?" but now says "My life from now on is a tribute to those people who showed me love." We meet John, a 72-year-old physics professor who says, "The most spiritual I've ever felt was sitting in support groups where people are sharing anonymously," and Rosalind, a media professor who found strength in Judeo-Christian scriptures when recovering from postpartum depression. There is Haley, an overachiever who met one of her closest friends in a mental hospital; Therese, an administrative assistant who grew up with an abusive parent but learned to heal her inner child and create a new life for herself; and Jay, a linguistics professor, who was paralyzed in a fall. All of them experienced emotional or physical calamity but lived to tell the tale. But, as they tell us, they didn't do it entirely by themselves; they were helped by professionals, by friends, and by spiritual practices. No one is immune to depression or anxiety; many of these narrators had achieved professional or academic success in the demanding world of MIT. They tell their stories here to encourage others everywhere.
We hear from Victor, who once wondered "Why should I be alive?" but now says "My life from now on is a tribute to those people who showed me love." We meet John, a 72-year-old physics professor who says, "The most spiritual I've ever felt was sitting in support groups where people are sharing anonymously," and Rosalind, a media professor who found strength in Judeo-Christian scriptures when recovering from postpartum depression. There is Haley, an overachiever who met one of her closest friends in a mental hospital; Therese, an administrative assistant who grew up with an abusive parent but learned to heal her inner child and create a new life for herself; and Jay, a linguistics professor, who was paralyzed in a fall. All of them experienced emotional or physical calamity but lived to tell the tale. But, as they tell us, they didn't do it entirely by themselves; they were helped by professionals, by friends, and by spiritual practices. No one is immune to depression or anxiety; many of these narrators had achieved professional or academic success in the demanding world of MIT. They tell their stories here to encourage others everywhere.