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Piedmont Laureate

~ Promoting awareness and heightened appreciation for excellence in the literary arts throughout the Piedmont Region

Piedmont Laureate

Tag Archives: self help

Piedmont Laureate Talks: Petrow Shares Secrets On How To Age Better Than Your Parents

23 Tuesday Jul 2024

Posted by Steven Petrow in Uncategorized

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aging, parents, piedmont laureate, self help

WASHINGTON, D.C. (7News) — Award-winning journalist and book author Steven Petrow joined Good Morning Washington recently to provide exclusive tips that will help people age gracefully and avoid making the same health mistakes made by their parents.

“We have to be a little more aware of what we’re doing and make some small adjustments as we go along,” Petrow said. “Doing one thing was fine when I was 20, but not so much in my sixties.”

Petrow’s essay in the Washington Post, “Five tips for aging better than your parents,” provides strategies for younger generations to curb signs of poor aging, while embracing healthy habits.

In the article, the contributing columnist and author of the forthcoming book, The Joy You Make, focuses on efforts to “age smarter” by valuing the gifts that come with aging, while taking any necessary steps to make life less difficult.

Petrow noted that as individuals get older, there can be a stigma about utilizing hearing aids or glasses. He emphasized the importance of prioritizing health, rather than being stubborn when it comes to implementing helpful assistance.

Based on continued research and personal experiences with his parents, Petrow curated a list of “things not to do as he gets older.” After collecting items over the decades, he transformed the record into his most recent book, Stupid Things I Won’t Do When I Get Old.

According to Petrow, a key tip to aging flawlessly is staying connected to others. He explained that it’s critical as you get older to stay “in the mix” of emerging technology and innovation.

The journalist also mentioned that an extensive amount of his research shows that nurturing intergenerational relationships is critical to successful aging and includes positive benefits on health and psychological well-being.

“Smiling also releases dopamine and serotonin, which makes us feel happy and less stressed,” Petrow said. “And when you are doing that with someone else, you are bouncing that energy back and forth. “

The Piedmont Laureate Interview: Banning Lyon, Author of The New Book, The Chair and The Valley, Talks About Mental Health, Resilience, And His New Family

12 Wednesday Jun 2024

Posted by Steven Petrow in Uncategorized

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author, banning lyon, healing, interview, memoir, piedmont laureate, self help, steven petrow, trauma

[This interview was originally published on Maria Shriver’s Sunday Paper. To read
the whole interview, please click here.]

(from left: Steven Petrow and Banning Lyon)

At least once a year I post a meme that says, “You never know what someone is going through. Be kind.” It clocks high on “likes” because it speaks truth. What’s on the surface can hide a world of hurt.

That’s certainly true of Banning Lyon.

Looking at his Instagram feed, chock full of photos of his wife and young daughter, you’d never imagine what he has endured. At 15, a self-described skateboarding nut, his life changed radically when a guidance counselor in his Dallas high school suspected that Lyon was suicidal because he gave away his board to a friend (not believing what he said, which is that he was planning to buy a new one).  At the urging of the counselor, his parents admitted Lyon to a psychiatric hospital for a two-week stay, which turned into 353 days.

In his new memoir, The Chair and the Valley: A Memoir of Trauma, Healing, and the Outdoors, Lyon, now 52, reveals the mistreatment he endured. The chair in the title refers to “chair therapy,” supposedly intended to help him think about his problems but instead, consisted of 11 months sitting in a chair facing the wall, sometimes up to 12 hours a day. By the time Banning left the hospital, he writes, “I was the scattered wreckage of a teenager,” full of rage and fantasizing about hanging himself.

Lyon takes readers on a gut-wrenching story of trauma and healing, including his lawsuit against the facility’s owners who bilked insurance companies (like his father’s employer). Now, with a family of his own, Lyon finds peace in the wilderness and has found peace within himself—although you’d never understand the world of hurt he endured by looking at him: a middle-aged dad with hair he describes as “defiant,” who now works as a backpacking guide in Yosemite National Park.

This beautiful book is honest and raw. After all this time, why did you decide to write your story? 

The book began as a product of working with my therapist. She told me to “free write,” but I wouldn’t do that. I just kind of rolled my eyes at all of it, but eventually, ultimately decided to start. I wrote a lot, about 200 pages in four weeks, and that was it. It was done. It was just this cathartic surge of emotions and, really, had no cohesive narrative.

How did that mess of pages become a book Kirkus Reviews described as a “heartfelt memoir and an urgent demand for higher standards of juvenile mental health care”? 

An event during my work as a backpacking guide left me feeling very strongly that I had a moral obligation to write a book, that I’d be committing some kind of sin by not writing it. After spending days in the backcountry with clients I realized I wasn’t different from them. They weren’t better or more normal than me. Among them were alcoholics and cutters, people who had lost siblings and spouses to cancer and suicide. I realized then that I’d found my place in the world, and that I needed to come to terms with my past. I never would have found the courage without the serenity of nature and the help of my clients. So I committed to writing the book and it has been a long, difficult, and painful process.  

[To read the full interview, please click here.]

Piedmont Laureate Steven Petrow In Conversation With Bestselling Author, Damon Tweedy, MD

12 Friday Apr 2024

Posted by Steven Petrow in Uncategorized

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Tags

book review, Fiction, historical-fiction, knitting, medicine, music, piedmont laureate, self help, writing

At Quail Ridge Books, The Two Writers Talk About Tweedy’s New Book, Facing The Unseen: The Struggle to Center Mental Health in Medicine

I was thrilled to be Dr. Damon Tweedy’s “conversation partner” at Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh this week. Together we were taking about his new book, Facing the Unseen, which is about the mental health crisis in this country, in our hospitals, and within our families. Tweedy, the bestselling author of Black Man in a White Coat and a professor of psychiatry at the Duke School of Medicine, has written another powerful volume, one that combines expert interviews, personal experience, and policy analysis to examine how the medical system fails people with mental illness. As he writes, “When a system marginalizes mental health … patients pay the price.”

Clearly, Dr. Tweedy was on his home turf at Quail Ridge Books, as he engaged the audience for close to 45 minutes with stories from his world—personal and professional—and then took at least a dozen questions from the audience. By 8 p.m., the program had ended and the good doctor took out his pen, signing his name in the books of a great many individuals who waited in a long line to greet and thank him.

To purchase Dr. Tweedy’s books from Quail Ridge, please click here. Or buy them from your local book store, Bookshop.org, or Amazon.com.

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Here’s an excerpt from the BookPage review of Dr. Tweedy’s new book:

“Mostly, though, Facing the Unseen is about his patients. Tweedy is an excellent storyteller, making the people whom he treats unforgettably visible in all their complexities. Their stories embody why recognizing the mind-body connection is critical. There’s Natalie (all patients’ names are pseudonyms), an Iraq war veteran with PTSD, who came to the ER desperate for help. But treating her drug withdrawal was not considered a medical priority, and she was left to seek outpatient psychiatric care elsewhere. A passionate advocate for integrated medical and psychiatric care, Tweedy cites statistics that tally addiction and opioid abuse, PTSD, depression and anxiety, and the prevalent use of prescription pills. Throughout, he uses powerful descriptions that yield keen insights, showing us how the health care system sets doctors up to fail their patients, and offering solutions that will help.”

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