Categories
News

Help TWLOHA Win $1 Million for Suicide Prevention

Today is the last day you can vote to help To Write Love On Her Arms win one million dollars for suicide prevention. For more information click here.

To watch founder Jamie Tworkowski discuss the story behind the name of non-profit To Write Love On Her Arms as well as see Miley Cyrus teach Joaquin Phoenix and Liv Tyler how to vote see below.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tzX6XXVEa4s]

Related Links:
The Article That Began It All
You Sing, I Write + The Jew Spot Present A Benefit For TWLOHA
You Sing, I Write Celebrates Two Years
Why Benefit To Write Love On Her Arms?

Categories
News

The Show Goes On…Despite the Blizzard

I want to personally thank everyone who made it out to Don Hills last night! The day was off to a rough start with two band cancellations, but we pulled through and had a great turnout considering the weather. To Write Love On Her Arms founder Jamie Tworkowski made it out as well as benefit coordinator Chloe Grabanski who graced the stage and filled everyone in on TWLOHA.

The Ramblers, Ms. Shira, Tor Miller Band and Dusty Brown rocked the house and walked away with many more fans. If you weren’t able to make it out and would like to donate to TWLOHA, the ticket link is still up so feel free to donate here.

There are a few videos up of two of the performers and I’ll post some more in the upcoming days. Watch The Ramblers kick off the night with “Picture of a Prayer” below.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=murIfiw_z7k]

Check out Ms. Shira take the crowd to school below as she performs the bluesy “Get Over You.”

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PPodWQnarIQ]

Thanks again to everyone who made it out and for all of your support. Next concert will definitely be in the summer!

Related Links:
The Article That Began It All
You Sing, I Write + The Jew Spot Present A Benefit For TWLOHA
You Sing, I Write Celebrates Two Years
Why Benefit To Write Love On Her Arms?

Categories
Benefit News

You Sing, I Write + The Jew Spot Benefit For TWLOHA TONIGHT!

The night is finally here! Hoping to see you all at You Sing, I Write and The Jew Spot’s two-year blog anniversaries and benefit for To Write Love On Her Arms!

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19
DON HILLS, 511 GREENWICH ST.
DOORS 6P | SHOW 7P | ALL AGES

Tickets available at the door for $15. Raffle tickets inside. $5 for 1 auction item, $8 for two tickets. See you there!

Related Links:
The Article That Began It All
You Sing, I Write + The Jew Spot Present A Benefit For TWLOHA
You Sing, I Write Celebrates Two Years
Why Benefit To Write Love On Her Arms?

Categories
Features First Person News

The Article That Began It All

While being interviewed recently by Planet Verge about my blog and the benefit for To Write Love On Her Arms this coming Saturday, I was asked how I first became interested in TWLOHA. It’s something I’ve been talking about a lot lately and I thought I’d share my answer with you and the article that started it all below.

You aren’t just another girl writing about “must know” bands; you’re also involved with the organization, To Write Love On Her Arms. Can you tell us about how you first became interested in collaborating with TWLOHA?

I’m a huge Switchfoot fan and it was through them that I first heard about TWLOHA. I can’t exactly remember if it was at a show, or seeing Jon Foreman wearing their T-shirt in photos, but I was curious about the organization and did some research. I really liked the idea behind TWLOHA, presenting hope and finding help for people struggling with depression, addiction, self-injury and suicide, and wrote about them for a paper in college.

From interviewing three girls in college struggling with depression and self-injury, I realized this was an issue that needed to be talked about. I pitched my article to a few of my internships, but for one reason or another they never ran the article. I was brainstorming with my friend Monica of The Jew Spot (who is hosting the benefit show with me) over the summer and we wanted to celebrate our blog anniversaries, but also raise money for a good cause and I suggested TWLOHA. In a way, this benefit is getting word out about the organization where my unpublished article failed.

You can read the rest of the Planet Verge interview with me here.

As for my article, I will post it in it’s entirety below. Submitted to my magazine writing class in December of 2006, I find it strikingly serendipitous that I was writing it just around this time three years ago, don’t you? Read below as I interview three girls who have struggled with depression and self-mutilation as well as a counselor at Rutgers and former TWLOHA staffer.

CUTTING
December 20, 2006

The Dangerous Coping Mechanism
By Annie Reuter

Paige* started cutting the summer of freshman year of high school. For Paige, cutting gave her control. While she typically used a razor, she said once she shattered a mirror and used that. “I hated myself. I liked cutting because I could control how much I bled,” she says.

Her depression began in middle school after her neighbor started raping her when she babysat for his little sister. In middle school Paige was depressed, stopped eating and had poor self esteem. She eventually went with a friend to her youth minister and told him about cutting and that she needed help. Paige’s youth minister accompanied her home to tell her parents, who were in shock. “No one really understands why you cut yourself. No one wants to say anything about it,” she said.

For many, cutting is a way to cope with inside pain or emotional pain, explained Marta Aizenman, a counselor with a practice in Princeton and director of the counseling and psychological services at the School of Environment and Biological Sciences at Rutgers University.

“When a person does not know what to do or how to cope what they are experiencing, their body becomes the vehicle to experience that. It’s similar to how a painter experiences painting. A person uses their body to express what they are feeling and what they are feeling is a lot of negative emotion,” Aizenman said.

While cutting tends to start in adolescents or earlier, it’s also frequently seen in high school and college.

Eventually Paige started counseling, but was reluctant. “I didn’t want to go at first,” she says. “It’s like you’re admitting you have a problem and you want to fix it on your own, not go to counseling.”

Therapy is often a major way to combat cutting. “Therapy is very important here because the result is something the person is feeling and those feelings are a result of something that happened in their life. If they find ways to cope, or process ways to cut they feel better,” Aizeman said. She says cutters should take alternative routes to cutting, such as go for a walk or find other ways to release tension.

While even today cutting isn’t talked about completely, there are organizations reaching out to help others deal with depression. One such organization came about rather unexpectedly, from an article written in Relevant Magazine by Jamie Tworkowski. His story was about one girl, Renee, and five days of her life before she went to a clinic for cutting. Lauren Ranzino, director of counseling and organizations for To Write Love On Her Arms talked of how it all began.

“Basically someone brought Renee to treatment. She was addicted to cutting, attempted suicide and was so bad to the point that they said, ‘We can’t take you, and we don’t have the facilities to take you, come back in five days.’ Jaime asked her if he could write about it in Relevant Magazine and he wrote her story, called To Write Love On Her Arms,” Ranzino said.

A group of people, who now work for the organization, started selling shirts to raise money for Renee’s rehab, lead singer/guitarist Jon Foreman of Switchfoot being the first person to wear the shirt. Anberlin, Underoath, and Memoranda are some other bands that have also been wearing the shirts and involved in the Stop the Bleeding Tour, which brings music, counselors, and awareness to the issue of cutting. “The tour is more doing what we do everyday on the road so people can put a face to everything and talk to us in person and meet counselors in their area who come to the event,” Ranzino said.

To Write Love On Her Arms is mainly based out of their MySpace page, where people can leave comments and emails. “We don’t solicit people. We don’t go and try to find people necessarily. We’ll get emails written or messages on MySpace everyday. People come to us and don’t feel condemned or crazy. It’s a place to find hope, help and healing,” Ranzino says.

Ranzino feels part of the huge response to the organization is the anonymity of everything. “Remaining anonymous in the beginning is a v
ery serene thing because they don’t need to be found out by
their family. We want to know if they want to tell us, but we don’t force anything out of them.” In fact, in many instances, when Ranzino asks who else knows about the person’s cutting, no one else does. “It’s a very secretive thing and for anyone to come to us is an honor and a very unique place to be.”

To Write Love On Her Arms are not trained professionals or counselors and they make sure the people they’re reaching know this. “A lot of what I do is encourage them, tell them you’re not crazy if you go to a psychologist, they’re there to help us cope with things,” Ranzino said. While Ranzino says there are many different reasons as to why someone decides to cut themselves, she feels that at the core of it, people don’t have anyone to talk to about their problems.

This was the case for Emily.

While many events led Emily into experimenting with cutting, one of her reasons was a loss of feeling she had a confidant to tell things to. One of her friends was in treatment for nine months for cutting, depression, and post traumatic stress disorder and her close friends had been superficial and judgmental of that friend.

Emily began cutting when she was 15 years old and cut regularly, at least three or four times a week until July of her sophomore year when she was hospitalized for suicidal thoughts and her parents found out about her cutting. She suffered from anorexia as well, and cutting became a common routine if she didn’t live up to her ideal daily calorie intake. Since then, Emily has gone back to cutting in instances when she’s feeling intense emotions or is upset about making a bad decision. “Basically, if I can’t verbalize, or feel as though the feelings I feel are wrong or inappropriate, I cut.”

Currently, Emily works at a psych hospital and says many of the adolescents and adults she’s come in contact with have problems with self-mutilation. “It’s like people are crying for help, showing that we’re in pain and we need something, anything, and no one wants to talk about what can help us get through it. There is very little research in the psychology literature and people are so ashamed.”

However, Emily is no longer ashamed of cutting. “I don’t want my family to know that I’ve relapsed right now, because I feel like I’ve let them down and it scares them, the whole idea of hurting your own body intentionally. But with friends that I truly trust and with my therapists I am totally open with the fact that I have this maladaptive coping mechanism. It’s what I do. I want help, I want to stop again, but right now, it’s how I deal.”

The years of adolescence are often a hard adjustment for many girls. Confusion of changing bodies, sexual identity, and uncertainty may lead some to cutting. This was the case of Michelle**, 20, who started cutting in eighth grade. “A lot of it is tied up with development and sexuality, but I had been feeling depressed and unsure about myself and where I was going in life independently of that.” Luckily for Michelle, in ninth grade she found a group of friends who helped her feel less depressed and her cutting decreased. “Cutting became a way for me to calm down from specific stressful situations instead of a gesture of depression.”

However, as her academic pressures built up throughout high school she became more dependent on cutting to focus and get through long nights of work. “I would feel lots of anxiety about starting a paper or being able to finish all my work on time, and cutting myself would help me feel calmer about it all,” she says. Once she entered college she continued cutting, with more intense periods around finals, but she has decided to stop cutting.

“Taking the semester off and admitting this is a real problem in my life has dedicated me to that course of action. My boyfriend and the friends who know I cut are proud of me for this, and their support has been incredibly helpful. I’ve realized I can’t keep dealing with my emotions in such an indirect, self-destructive manner, and that cutting is preventing me from achieving the happiness and confidence that I want in my life. I know I can stop; I have always known that once I decided to stop I would stop.”

In order to change any behavior, including cutting, the person doing harm to herself has to want to change. While it is proven that counseling can help, the person has to decide, like Michelle, on her own that it is time to stop. With organizations such as TWLOHA and more women speaking out about their experiences cutting, society may be able to get over its fear of self-mutilation through spreading awareness and understanding.

*Wishes to use first name only
**Name changed upon request

Related Links:
Two Year Blog Anniversary/Benefit Concert Saturday!
You Sing, I Write + The Jew Spot Present A Benefit For TWLOHA
You Sing, I Write Celebrates Two Years
Why Benefit To Write Love On Her Arms?

Categories
News

Two Weeks Until You Sing, I Write + The Jew Spot Benefit For TWLOHA!

We’re just a little over two weeks away from the official two-year blog anniversary and benefit concert for To Write Love On Her Arms! The show will be Saturday, December 19th from 6-11pm at Don Hills at 511 Greenwich St. Have you RSVP’d yet? You can RSVP here on Facebook as well as purchase your tickets here.

Monica and I are psyched for the show and I hope you are too. We have some awesome auction items including autographed CDs by John Mayer, Ingrid Michaelson, and Jack’s Mannequin as well as a pretty sweet Switchfoot prize pack including an autographed album, DVD and poster. We’ll have some special guests and of course great performances by Hotspur, Love Automatic, Tor Miller Band and The Ramblers.

Doors open at 6 and you’ll want to get there early as the show starts promptly at 7pm with what’s sure to be a memorable set by The Ramblers. (Seriously…we really mean 7).

Guest of a Guest was nice enough to promote the show in their December calendar and if you’d like to promote as well, feel free to e-mail me for the official flier. Don Hills holds 600 and we’re expecting a sold-out crowd, so buy your tickets early!

To Write Love on Her Arms is a non-profit movement dedicated to presenting hope and finding help for people struggling with depression, addiction, self-injury and suicide. TWLOHA exists to encourage, inform, inspire and also to invest directly into treatment and recovery. For more information, visit TWLOHA’s Web site here.

Categories
News

You Sing, I Write + The Jew Spot Present A Benefit For TWLOHA

You Sing, I Write and The Jew Spot are happy to be hosting a benefit concert for To Write Love On Her Arms on December 19th.

We invite you to join us as we celebrate our 2-year blog anniversaries and raise awareness for To Write Love on Her Arms. We’ve asked a few of our friends to join us in this worthy cause, with performances by Hotspur, The Ramblers, Tor Miller Band and Love Automatic.

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19
DON HILLS, 511 GREENWICH ST.
DOORS 6P | SHOW 7P | ALL AGES

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

Buying a ticket online will automatically enter you into one raffle of your choice: autographed cd and poster packages from artists like John Mayer, Mat Kearney, Jack’s Mannequin & Ingrid Michaelson!

To Write Love on Her Arms is a non-profit movement dedicated to presenting hope and finding help for people struggling with depression, addiction, self-injury and suicide. TWLOHA exists to encourage, inform, inspire and also to invest directly into treatment and recovery.

www.yousingiwrite.com | www.thejewspot.net | www.twloha.com | FACEBOOK

Categories
Benefit

Why Benefit To Write Love On Her Arms?

Monica and I have been contacting venues and bands throughout the New York scene in pursuit of our joint benefit concert for the non-profit To Write Love On Her Arms. In between talks with friends and explaining the organization, I thought I’d fill you in on the history of TWLOHA and how I originally discovered it so you get more of a sense why this charity concert is so important to us.

History
Jamie Tworkowski founded To Write Love on Her Arms (TWLOHA), three years ago when he met a girl who was dealing with depression, addiction, self injury and had attempted suicide. The girl was denied entry at a treatment center in Florida and for five days, he and a group of friends tried to encourage and help her. The girl gave Tworkowski permission to tell her story, which became the To Write Love on Her Arms article featured in Relevant Magazine. To help raise money for her treatment, Jamie began selling T-shirts, which bands like Switchfoot, Paramore and local New Yorkers Lights Resolve wore at concerts, helping to spread the word of TWLOHA.

The Vision
TWLOHA is a non-profit movement dedicated to presenting hope and finding help for those struggling with depression, addiction, self-injury and suicide. TWLOHA exists to encourage, inform, inspire, and also to invest directly into treatment and recovery. For an in-depth interview with Jamie, click here.

Why TWLOHA?
I’m not sure exactly how I first heard of TWLOHA. Maybe it was at a Switchfoot concert, could have been MySpace, whatever it was, the message resonated with me. Perhaps it was my desire to change the world with writing meaningful articles, but I tried everything I could to pitch what TWLOHA was doing at two of my internships at the time. While each editor acknowledged their interest in the story, for whatever reason the article never ran.

You can imagine my excitement then, when seeing more being written about TWLOHA in countless publications. The benefit concert is my way of bringing awareness where my unpublished article failed. In the upcoming weeks, in between announcing each performer, I plan on posting my article, one page at a time on You Sing, I Write. While it isn’t entirely music related, I hope you’ll read it.

Nearly three years ago, I spoke with three college students who dealt with and overcame self mutilation and depression as well as a counselor at Rutgers University and staff member of TWLOHA. While it was written a while back, I think the issues brought up in the article are still relevant today and finally these three stories will be told. Stay tuned.

For more on TWLOHA, visit their Web site. Have you heard of TWLOHA previously? What are your thoughts on the non-profit? What bands have you seen supporting the cause?

Related Links:
Q&A; with Switchfoot
Q&A; with Jon Foreman
Q&A; with Lights Resolve
What Music Do You Want At YSIW’s Anniversary Bash?