Showing posts with label #recovery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #recovery. Show all posts

Saturday, November 16, 2019

Narrator Note of HOW TO SURVIVE ADDICTION...

Narrator’s Note
Hi Listeners!
I hope you are enjoying Stephanie’s words of wisdom and have found her words as comforting and inspiration as so many others and I have.
We all know life isn’t easy – it feels downright impossible at times, but I know you can overcome any obstacle that comes your way.
Always remember that you deserve a better life and you can make that happen for yourself by taking control and following the tips in this useful guide and you will find the light and happiness at the end of the addiction tunnel.
As Stephanie says, you must never give up, gather up your inner strength and brace yourself against the storm mighty warrior.  You will be the victor in the end.
I wish you all the success and happiness in the world.
Sincerely,
Holly Holt

ww.amazon.com/author/allenstephanie


Wednesday, January 30, 2019

OUTSTANDING NARRATOR'S REVIEW NOW RELEASED TO PUBLIC!

"Hi Listeners!

Isn’t Stephanie the coolest?  Not only do I have the awesome privilege of narrating her books, but she personally sends me a signed copy of each of them!  I’m blown away that she asks me to add in my thoughts at the end too, which is such an honor.

It makes me feel so happy to be a part of her journey in changing lives.  Kudos to you for listening to this book.  That shows me that you are ready to make a positive change in your life.  I just know you can and will do it!

I promise you that if you have the courage to follow her tips, you will overcome your mental illness.  It’s definitely no walk in the park, but Stephanie and I both know you have the power in you.

Don’t worry about the naysayers, they may never get it so don’t let it bother you.

Just focus on you and how wonderful you are going to make your life!  You can overcome any adversity.  You have the strength in you.  Believe it!  Never give up.  Take your life back, take the necessary action, get back up when you fall (it may happen a lot-just be patient and never give up) and be happy because you so deserve it!

God bless!



Holly Holt"
Narrator for Stephanie Anne Allen
Author of MY MENTAL MADNESS MEMOIR &
THE HOW TO SURVIVE SERIES


Did you like what Holly had to say?  Want to check out Stephanie's books?  Click this link...

www.amazon.com/author/allenstephanie

from there you can read Stephanie Anne Allen's bio and info about all her books.   Then you can choose whether you want to purchase them in kindle, paperback, or audiobook version.




Monday, November 26, 2018

Latest Review of MY MENTAL MADNESS MEMOIR

"Mental Madness Memoir: The Provocative True Journey Through My Struggles with Mental Illness
The author shares her experiences with severe mental illness in her life and the ways it affected her as she got into her teens and twenties going forward. A very moving story relating all of the frightening times she went through, not understanding what was happening to her or why her life kept falling apart. How she at last got things under control and made progress. A good read for memoir readers, those with an interest in or having family members with mental illnesses, especially multiple mental illnesses, a super honest, illuminating book on the topic. If you’ve never had or seen what real mental illness looks like, then you need to read this and get educated and help get rid of the stigma. This isn’t the Dark Ages anymore, folks. Stephanie was brave enough to share her story, honestly as possible and it’s not easy to listen to her painful hurting, and loneliness at times. She has some serious mental illnesses that messed up her life repeatedly until she got a handle on what the problem was, and that took many years. She wants her struggles to help others, and I really hope it does. A complimentary audio copy was provided by the author for my honest yet voluntary review."
Learn More about My Mental Madness Memoir

Monday, August 27, 2018

STORY OF HOPE!


STORY OF HOPE 
My name is Stephanie Anne Allen, and I am the new, quickly emerging author of My Mental Madness Memoir and the entire How to Survive Series.  I am also a NAMI Connections peer support group facilitator.  I am very content, and I feel successful and that my life has purpose and worth.  I am grateful for my life.  But it wasn’t always this way.  I came from a long journey of very difficult battles with mental illness.

I was first diagnosed with depression at age 14.  At that time, there was a horrible stigma attached to mental illness.  I didn’t want to be any part of it.  I was not “crazy”.   I remember growing up thinking I was bad and I felt ashamed for being depressed.  But it was obvious to everyone, whether “crazy” of not, I was definitely sick.  I suffered from helplessness, hopelessness, unworthiness, suicidal thoughts/attempts, and self-mutilation, among other symptoms.

A few years later, I was labeled as a manic depressive.  I would suffer racing thoughts, impulsive decisions, risky behaviors, and insomnia.  That diagnosis soon became a dual diagnosis, when I was defined as a borderline personality patient.  I had difficulties making and keeping friends.  I was cutting and burning myself.

A few years after that, I was diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder and then schizophrenia. I was suffering from intense delusions and hallucinations of all five senses. 

Mental illness has impacted my life in many ways.  I lost friends, relationships, jobs, cars, homes, and even my own freedom.  But despite all the pain, all the heartache, all the adversity, I was able to beat all the given odds by finding the courage, strength, faith, and hope to overcome it all.

I have been in treatment since I was a teenager, but unfortunately treatment is not always effective with every patient.  There are so many different medications out there, and so many of them wouldn’t work on me or had horrible side effects.  Today, there are a lot of new psychotherapies available that simply did not exist when I was a child.  And then there’s that stigma again that causes people to feel guilt and shame for seeking treatment for an illness that is not their fault.

I have had several turning points and many downfalls in my life.  But the last turning point was definitely the most life-changing.  After committing a crime when I was insane, I took a look at myself and studied my thoughts and behaviors and attempted to adjust what needed to be changed.  After being incarcerated at a state hospital for 18 months, you better have gotten some insight and introspection into yourself.  But I believe the turning point for everyone can be different.  For some it may be almost losing your life to suicide or some other major incident that causes a person to reflect on his/her own thought processes.

My own personal treatment consisted of medications and psychotherapy.  Finding the right meds is surely a trial and error thing.  But at age 36, I was finally stabilized.  I would much rather take a pill or two a day, than suffer the pain and heartache and unrest I had when I was sick.  The meds keep me stable and help me to live a better life.

Currently, I am doing great!  I am working on correcting all my mistakes, and picking up all the pieces.  It’s not easy, but it’s what I feel needs to be done.  I have now found my purpose in life and that is to inspire as many people as possible.  If my story saves just one life (and it has) then my life truly has value, purpose, and worth.

If I had not suffered…If I had not been in mental pain and agony…If I had not learned how to endure…I would not be who I am today.  I have gained much compassion, empathy, understanding, and wisdom.  The pain shaped me into who I am today. 
I will continue taking my medications exactly as prescribed.  I will seek help immediately if I feel in crisis (hopefully never again).   The sooner you catch the problem, the sooner you can receive treatment, and the sooner you will feel better.
I am involved in mental health advocacy.  I am a NAMI Connections peer support group facilitator.  I am also the author of seven books on conquering mental illness…one memoir and six self-help books.
·        My Mental Madness Memoir—the provocative true journey through my struggles with mental illness
·        How to Survive Depression
·        How to Survive Bipolar Disorder
·        How to Survive Schizophrenia
·        How to Survive Anxiety
·        How to Survive Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD)
·        How to Survive PTSD (Posttraumatic Stress Disorder)

Also, I am all over social media with positive uplifting and inspirational posts on overcoming mental illness!  You can find me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, Tumblr, Goodreads, Amazon, Google +, Lyf, Pinterest, and I even post on NAMI.  I also have a mental health blog.  Feel free to check me out on any of those…
Mailing list:  http://eepurl.com/dd5jYj

MY MESSAGE TO THOSE WORKING ON THEIR RECOVERY FROM MENTAL ILLNESS
Life isn’t easy, and when you have mental illness that has a huge impact on your every day living.   You may feel lost.  You may feel alone.  You may feel that no one cares.  But I want you to know that YOU are worth fighting for.   YOU are worth getting well.  YOU have value and worth and your goal in life is to find your purpose, and work diligently towards fulfilling it.  You have a reason to be alive.  The hardest part is finding it.  But once you do, you will be so glad you did. First you need to recover so that you work towards finding that purpose.  Don’t listen to the stigma.  Listen to your heart.  Your heart definitely wants and needs to be well again.  Have enough self-love and faith in yourself to seek out the proper help you may need.   You don’t have to go it alone.  And once you get that treatment and recover, you will be so happy that you began your journey of recovery in the first place.  Never give up… as YOUR LIFE awaits you.




Friday, May 25, 2018

THE POSITIVE SIDE OF EXPERIENCING ADVERSITY


THE POSITIVE SIDE OF EXPERIENCING ADVERSITY
BY: STEPHANIE ANNE ALLEN

I’ve experienced more adversity in my life than someone who is twice my age!  Been through the darkest and scariest times ever.  There were many years I thought I would not survive.  I believed I was destined to die by my own hands or those of the people I thought wanted me dead.  But with the grace of God, I survived, and I learned to embrace my pain and turn it around into something good, something special, and something worthy.
It all began early in my life.  I went through depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, and borderline personality disorder.  I was a complete mess emotionally and mentally.  I survived a variety of symptoms including suicidal thoughts and attempts.   And I also dealt with hallucinations and delusions.  My thoughts were affected and so were my moods.
The depressed times were lonely and dark.  I was also a cutter on top of that.  I remember just begging God to take my life because I just couldn’t deal with the extreme mental mess I had become.  The manic times put others lives at risk.  And the psychotic times could have seriously injured or killed many people. 
I was psychiatrically hospitalized about 20 times in my life and this does not even include the six years I spent at a residential facility.  After I went completely insane and lost my mind, I had to spend over 2 months in jail and a year and a half at a psychiatric prison. 
There were so many times I believed that God just didn’t care, and He wasn’t going to help me.  No one would.  I could not comprehend why God would inflict me with such terrible mental illnesses.  I blamed Him completely for my life being in shambles.  I believed He just didn’t care or love me.   I began to feel like Job had in the Bible.  I was so lost and unable to function in society.
For over half my life I lived in fear.  I felt I would either kill myself and that someone out there would kill me.  Living in fear everyday for so many years is very difficult.  Living in a mental state such as I had, could have killed me or worse, others.   But God began to work miracles in my life when I least expected it.
I could have spent 20 years in prison.  I could have had to stay at the forensics center forever.  I could have been released on a contract.  I could have ended up homeless.  But God took care of me.  And He helped me to obtain a better life!
He brought me through it all.  God helped me find the strength, courage, hope, and faith to overcome it all and achieve a state of mental stability that I hadn’t had since childhood.  And now I am giving back and helping others who suffer like I have.  I have written 5 books on mental health topics.  One memoir and 4 self-help books.  I aim to inspire others through my stories and life experience, and I have.  I have gotten numerous comments from readers who tell me how much of an inspiration I am to them.  One even went as far as to call me her hero. In addition, I have become a NAMI Connections Recovery Support Group Facilitator. 
I now have hopes and dreams for the future.  They may not be what I had planned for my life, which was becoming an oncologist and finding the cure for cancer, but these are the hopes and dreams that God has for me.  It is His will that I must accept.  He wants me to write and help others with mental illness.  And so what choice do I have but to accept God’s will for my life.
I would never be the person I am today without going through all that adversity and pain.  I would never be able to empathize with others.  I would never have the compassion for others that I now do.  Adversity has strengthened my character and made me into a better person.  And that was God’s plan.  He turned my pain into hope.  Hope for my own life and hope for the lives of others.  God is good!
Please remember that even though you think you cannot overcome the pain and make it through, know that you can.  That pain you are feeling now, will be a very humbling experience.  God is molding you into a much greater person.  And that is what He has done for me. . .  Thank you, Lord!

To take a look at all my books, please visit my author page!

Books include:
My Mental Madness Memoir
How to Survive Depression
How to Survive Bipolar Disorder
How to Survive Schizophrenia
How to Survive Anxiety

Thursday, May 3, 2018

BRAVELY BATTLING BIPOLAR


Bravely Battling Bipolar
By: Stephanie Anne Allen, NAMI Connections Recovery Support Group Facilitator
            Bipolar disorder, often called manic depression, can be a very deliberating illness to such a degree that the individual is unable to function normally in life. The symptoms of bipolar disorder are divided into two categories: depressive symptoms & symptoms of mania.  There are also two types of bipolar disorder.  Bipolar I and Bipolar II.  Also, suffering with the illness is inevitable, but so is the hope of recovery.
            Symptoms of depression include loss of interest in activities that used to be enjoyable, changes in sleep and eating habits, hopelessness, helplessness, crying spells, and suicidal thoughts and attempts.  Often someone suffering with depression describes that “a dark cloud has distended over their head”.  They often suffer from low self-esteem and self-worth.  They believe that life has no purpose.
            Symptoms of mania include impulsive and risky behavior, with an inflated self-ego and delusions of grandeur.  They may believe that they are a saint or God or have some other “higher status”.  They may spend excessively, gamble away their entire paycheck, or engage in irresponsible sexual behavior.  They may speed to a great degree while driving.
            When an individual experiences both mania and depression at the very same time, it is called a mixed episode and this can be the most dangerous state for a bipolar person to suffer with.  The mania may be saying that they a martyr, while the depression is saying that suicide is not a choice.  Combine both of those and you have a suicidal person who believes that their life’s purpose is suicide and that when they commit it they with be seen as a hero.
            A person with Bipolar I experiences at least one episode of full-blown mania with depression.  While someone diagnosed with Bipolar II has a lesser degree of mania (hypomania) with bouts of depression. 
            Treatment of bipolar symptoms include both psychiatric medications and various forms of therapy.  The meds, normally mood-stabilizers, will level out the symptoms of this mood disorder.  Therapy will help a person to problem solve and turn their lives around.  A combination of both of these things is highly recommended. 
            Recovery is definitely possible.  I am a prime example of someone who achieved recovery through resilience.  If I can overcome this, I know that you can.  You must be strong, and you must never give up.  Someday my friend, you will be “in the light” again.  You can get your life back!  And that is what I wish for you.

(Stephanie Anne Allen is the author of My Mental Madness Memoir, How to Survive Depression, How to Survive Bipolar Disorder, & How to Survive Schizophrenia)


Check out all of Stephanie Anne Allen's Book here!
www.amazon.com/author/allenstephanie

Friday, April 27, 2018

COMPASSION & EMPATHY FOR BIPOLAR VICTIMS

Do you suffer from bipolar disorder or know anyone that does?   I have been there and I know many who are bipolar as well.  Frankly speaking, it "sucks".  So I turned it around and now I am inspiring others through my book How to Survive Bipolar Disorder. 

The content of this book is as follows:
  • Introduction
  • Definition of Bipolar Disorder
  • Causes
  • Symptoms
  • My Own Personal Struggle with Bipolar
  • Tips on How to Cope Successfully
  • Recovery and Outcome
  • Inspirational Quotes
  • A Message from Author
This book is written by someone who has both professional and personal experience with mental illness.  The author gets right to point and hides nothing.  This book is written by someone who is "REAL" and has been there!  

If you know anyone who needs this book (you?), please forward this email to as many people as possible! 



Thank you for spreading the love my friends.

--Stephanie Anne Allen

AN EMPATHETIC VIEW ON CLINICAL DEPRESSION

Hello Friends! 
You've all heard the word "depression" thrown around.  Someone can be sad to be depressed after a death or any mishap in life.  But what is Clinical Depression.  What is its causes and symptoms?  How can we cope with it?  Is there hope of recovery? 

I have the answer to that and so much more!  But why should you listen to me?  Because I have a degree in psychology and first and foremost I have had depression for almost my entire life.  This gives me both professional and extensive personal experience when it comes to depression.

Depression can drain you and frankly make you feel like "shit".  You loss all interest in life and the things you used to enjoy.  Sometimes you dwell on thoughts of suicide and self-harm. 

Now what?
I wrote a book especially for those with depression.  It offers insight and inspiration into the illness.
This is what this How to Survive Depression contains:

  • Introduction
  • Definition of Depression
  • Causes
  • Symptoms
  • My Own Personal Struggle
  • How to Cope
  • Recovery and Outcome
  • Inspirational Quotes
  • A Message from the Author

This book is available in kindle, ebook, paperback, and audiobook!
Get yours now!

Much love to you all!
--Stephanie Anne Allen

Friday, February 9, 2018

HOW TO SURVIVE SERIES

EXCITING BOOK RELEASE INFORMATION!  HOW TO SURVIVE DEPRESSION is the first book in the How to Survive Series.  It was published just a few days ago.  I wrote it to provide education, hope, inspiration, and tips on how to cope effectively with depression.  Please get your copy today.  If you haven't already done so, My Mental Madness Memoir is also available.

Here is a link to my author's page so you can check out all my books.  www.amazon.com/author/allenstephanie

Here is a direct link to How to Survive Depression.
https://www.amazon.com/How-Survive-Depression-Book-ebook/dp/B079LZ87MZ/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8