Actress Glenn Close has enjoyed a celebrated career in the film industry, but she once worried she could be risking it all by speaking out against the stigma around mental
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Josh Duggar Pleads Not Guilty to Felony Charges of Possession of… It s astounding that something you went through at such an early stage of your life still has such a potential to be destructive, Glenn Close says in the final episode of Oprah Winfrey and Prince Harry s mental health docuseries,
For the actress, it was her upbringing in the religious group, Moral Re-Armament. From when I was seven to when I was 22, I was in this group called MRA, and it was basically a cult, Close explains. Everybody spouted the same things and there was a lot of rules, a lot of control. It was really awful.
Watch The Trailer For Prince Harry And Oprah s Documentary Series Zach Harper, Hello! Updated
Prince Harry and Oprah Winfrey are set to release
The Me You Can’t See, their highly anticipated mental health documentary series, on May 21, and Apple has just released the trailer.
The emotional, star-studded clip opens with the Duke of Sussex and Oprah discussing mental health and the stigma that still surrounds it.
“All over the world, people are in some kind of mental, psychological, emotional pain,” Oprah says, before Harry asks her about the types of words she’s heard about mental health. They then trade off unhelpful terms such as “crazy,” “lost it” and “can’t keep it together” before she adds that telling one’s story and “saying, ‘This is what happened to me,’ is crucial.”
Oscar nominee Glenn Close is on a mission to end the stigma surrounding mental illness
Glenn Close is up for an Oscar this Sunday for her role in the film “Hillbilly Elegy.”
But in real life, the Academy Award nominee and Tony, Emmy and Golden Globe winner is busy shining the spotlight on mental health awareness.
And for Close, it’s personal.
“Most families are dealing with some aspect of mental health,” Close told CNN. “When my sister Jess came to me and said, ‘I need help because I can’t stop thinking of killing myself,’ it was like a bolt out of nowhere.”
The BoZone
MSU hosts free virtual talk about schizophrenia, experience with mental illness
April 10, 2021
From MSU News Service
Montana State University’s Center for Mental Health Research and Recovery will host an online talk Thursday, April 15, focused on schizophrenia.
The talk is the fourth in the center’s
“Experience and Science of Mental Illness” series. It will feature Calen Pick, who will describe his experience of living with mental illness, and Dr. Sophia Vinogradov, chair of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Minnesota medical school, who will discuss basic features of schizophrenia and share some of her research on brain information processing networks.