the article, since it is academic and scholarly, needs to be as long as it is to qualify as academic and scholarly.
but i think solutions to mental health issues need to be more succinct and easy for the layperson to follow.
honestly, if you are mentioning prisons and prisoners in this article, based on my own observations first hand, this information and articles like this will simply be unavailable to members of said group.
furthermore, reforming individuals who are viewed as aberrant requires industrious training… people need hands on skills to convert them to becoming gentle.
they need to gain, learn, and know what it means to have understanding and compassion.
too much of this cycle of rehospitalization/respiralization leads people nowhere but to the coffin.
if we want people to become productive members of society, let us teach them the positive outcomes of doing homework, not doing medication.
i can teach people how to make origami fidget spinners and how to design and illustrate fonts for starters.
a life long goal i have is to teach people of all ages how to make toilet paper, once i learn how to source materials from the forest and mulch/pulp them into wet paper.
i also think allowing patients tools to create content in psych and prison institutions on tablet platforms (i.e. access to Autodesk Sketchbook and YouTube Studio “for Reforming Individuals” — this hasnt been built yet) would establish trust in the patients and prisoners. they would realize that they are learning valuable skills that can help them survive rather than being forced to recommit criminal or aberrant behavioral acts upon re-entry to society. it takes time, but far less time than to keep people institutionalized in hospitals or jails perpetually.
lets advance the institutions of learning and rewarding talents, not the institutions of punishment that have no light at the end of the tunnel.
the article, since it is academic and scholarly, needs to be as long as it is to qualify as academic and scholarly.
but i think solutions to mental health issues need to be more succinct and easy for the layperson to follow.
honestly, if you are mentioning prisons and prisoners in this article, based on my own observations first hand, this information and articles like this will simply be unavailable to members of said group.
furthermore, reforming individuals who are viewed as aberrant requires industrious training… people need hands on skills to convert them to becoming gentle.
they need to gain, learn, and know what it means to have understanding and compassion.
too much of this cycle of rehospitalization/respiralization leads people nowhere but to the coffin.
if we want people to become productive members of society, let us teach them the positive outcomes of doing homework, not doing medication.
i can teach people how to make origami fidget spinners and how to design and illustrate fonts for starters.
a life long goal i have is to teach people of all ages how to make toilet paper, once i learn how to source materials from the forest and mulch/pulp them into wet paper.
i also think allowing patients tools to create content in psych and prison institutions on tablet platforms (i.e. access to Autodesk Sketchbook and YouTube Studio “for Reforming Individuals” — this hasnt been built yet) would establish trust in the patients and prisoners. they would realize that they are learning valuable skills that can help them survive rather than being forced to recommit criminal or aberrant behavioral acts upon re-entry to society. it takes time, but far less time than to keep people institutionalized in hospitals or jails perpetually.
lets advance the institutions of learning and rewarding talents, not the institutions of punishment that have no light at the end of the tunnel.
rené
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