Frazee s Karen Pifher has had a long road to finding happiness
Editor s note: This is the fifth installment of the Tribune s 10-part mental health series, Inside Out: A Step Inside Mental Illness. It focuses on one Frazee woman s battle with trauma, depression and anxiety, and why she decided to stop drinking as part of her recovery.
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Vicki Gerdes | ×
Frazee resident Karen Pifher (at right) with her blended family, including (from left) son Lars Norstebon and daughter-in-law Angel; son and daughter, Taylor and Brady Crabtree; and husband Daniel Pifher. (Submitted photo)
Teenage pregnancy, domestic abuse, rape, losing the family farm, divorce any one of these traumatic life events might be considered as a trigger for mental health issues like depression and anxiety. But Frazee resident Karen Pifher has experienced them all at different points in her life, and credits her family, faith and local mental health resources with helping her find the pat
For Waubun farmer (and recovering alcoholic) Bryan Klabunde, holiday season is fraught with potential for relapse
Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year’s Day, and all the days in between should be filled with joy and family togetherness. But the holiday season can also be one of the most stressful times of the year, especially for a recovering substance abuse addict. 2:42 pm, Dec. 16, 2020 ×
Bryan and Sarah Klabunde have a blended family of five children, including older twins Avery and Lauren, 13; younger twins Sophia and Eli, 12; and youngest son Nolan, 6 with a sixth child, the first that the couple will have together, set to be born later this month. (Submitted photo)