UnLonely Videos Archives - The Foundation for Art & Healing https://www.artandhealing.org/category/unlonely-project/up-videos/ The UnLonely Project is our Signature Initiative Mon, 13 Feb 2023 22:15:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://www.artandhealing.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/cropped-fah-favicon-1-32x32.png UnLonely Videos Archives - The Foundation for Art & Healing https://www.artandhealing.org/category/unlonely-project/up-videos/ 32 32 FilmFest 3 Launch Event https://www.artandhealing.org/filmfest-3-launch-event/ https://www.artandhealing.org/filmfest-3-launch-event/#respond Thu, 11 Jul 2019 22:01:56 +0000 https://artandhealing.org/?p=14725 The post FilmFest 3 Launch Event appeared first on The Foundation for Art & Healing.

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UnLonely FilmFest 3 Launch Event

An Inspiring Evening

We kicked off our third annual online film festival at the Alvin Ailey Dance Theater in New York City. We’re truly inspired by this year’s collection of stories and the filmmakers who told them. Click on the video above to see a short clip of the festivities.


A Welcome Message from 
Jeremy Nobel, MD, MPH
Founder and President
The UnLonely Project from the Foundation for Art & Healing

As we face a world increasingly distressed and divided, it’s more timely than ever to recognize loneliness and isolation as critical public health concerns. The statistics are alarming: 65% of us will be affected at some point and 35% say they are lonely right now.

And loneliness won’t just make you miserable, it will kill you, with the early mortality equivalent of smoking 15 cigarettes per day.

But here’s some good news: Through the UnLonely Project, our Foundation has demonstrated the benefit of creative expression to reduce the burden of loneliness for those most significantly affected. Now, as part of that effort, we launched our third annual UnLonely Film Festival. Through it, we’re making powerful storytelling accessible anywhere—from the living room to the lunchroom, to the classroom, to audiences around the world.

Our goal is to raise awareness around loneliness and reduce its stigma, while ultimately accelerating authentic and sustained connection through personal and social dialogue. We are delighted that you can be with us on this timely and exciting journey to creatively connect.

Thanks to Our Sponsors & Partners

Tell Us Your Thoughts and Join The Conversation

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Short Video: Voices of the UnLonely Project https://www.artandhealing.org/about-the-unlonely-project/ Wed, 05 Sep 2018 02:00:30 +0000 https://artandhealing.org/?p=12384 The post Short Video: Voices of the UnLonely Project appeared first on The Foundation for Art & Healing.

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Watch the Video:

A Little Bit of Background About the UnLonely Project

Hear what the UnLonely Project is all about from a variety of perspectives: Health, the arts, storytellers, and more.

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Conversation at the School of Art Institute of Chicago https://www.artandhealing.org/conversation-at-the-school-of-art-institute-of-chicago/ Tue, 27 Mar 2018 00:26:36 +0000 https://artandhealing.org/?p=10488 The post Conversation at the School of Art Institute of Chicago appeared first on The Foundation for Art & Healing.

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Being UnLonely through Creative Expression

March 26, 2018

A conversation with Joseph Behen, Executive Director, Counseling, Health, and Disability Services at the School of Art Institute of Chicago and Jeremy Nobel, MD, MPH, President of the Foundation for Art & Healing

Transcript

Joseph Behen: Jeremy, it’s wonderful to have you here at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Thank you for coming. Tell us about yourself!

Jeremy Nobel: Thanks, Joe. First, it’s a pleasure to be here. My name is Jeremy Nobel and I’m a medical doctor by training, also a public health practitioner, and also the founder of The Foundation for Art & Healing.

What is the Foundation for Art & Healing?

The Foundation for Art & Healing is a 501-c3 non-profit. We’ve been around 15 years and we’ve got a mission. Our mission is three-fold: to actually demonstrate and declare that creative arts expression can improve health and well-being for individuals and community. To explore that very important idea. Very relevant to SAIC and many of the students and faculty here.

But also, to look at innovative programming in ways we can bring creative expression forward in a way to improve health and well-being.

And our final mission is to research in the basic underpinnings of creative expression and health and why it works and how it works.

What are you here to talk about today?

It’s a pleasure to be here today, in particular, to talk about loneliness and isolation, a growing personal and public health challenge. And when we speak to the community later today I’ll introduce three big ideas.

The first really goes back to the mission for the foundation, the big idea that creative arts expression can improve health and well-being. So that the arts, in addition to being something that intrigues us and entertains us and distracts us, actually can improve our health.

The second big idea is that loneliness and isolation is the silent epidemic of the 21st century. Many of us understand loneliness and isolation as something that can make you feel a little sad sometimes, a little rejected. We know it’s a big risk for suicide, depression and substance abuse. But many people are not aware that loneliness can actually have other harmful health effects. So that the early mortality, for instance, of people who are lonely, is often as high as for people who smoke cigarettes. So, again: loneliness isn’t just something that makes you miserable. It can kill you.

The third, which we’re very eager to explore in the talk today, is that there is something about the creative expression that can connect us, foster a sense of belonging and community and push back against that loneliness epidemic.

We’d love to hear more about initiatives that the foundation has carried out to date and that might be relevant. Can you tell us, for example, about The UnLonely Film Festival?

The UnLonely Film Festival launched last May, as an effort to really create awareness on the topic of loneliness and its importance to individuals and to communities. The UnLonely Film Festival is part of our signature initiative, The UnLonely Project, which we actually launched two years ago. So that UnLonely Project takes the broad view in trying to create awareness in general on the importance of loneliness, and then the film festival is a very purposeful offering to the community to put 35 short films, out for open viewing, that really cover topics many people find uncomfortable – loneliness and isolation – but in watching those films, people engage with the topic, feel more educated about it, can actually have dialogues with other people about it and feel more connected.

I’m aware that your foundation has been around for 15 years or so, is that correct? Did you know going into it that loneliness would become or be a focus of the foundation? 

Well, interestingly, when we started the foundation, which really got started after 9/11, we were very focused on trauma. We were very impressed with the effectiveness of our therapy in traumatized kids, in particular, after 9/11, who were watching the media clips over and over of the planes going into the buildings and were quite disturbed. And even simple art therapy techniques of “Draw what’s on your mind” helped those kids a lot get over that trauma. So we were intrigued by that, and then went on to work with returning service members and veterans from Iran and Afghanistan, and again with very good effect in trauma.

As we expanded our efforts to address other challenges of everyday life, many of them around chronic illness or severe illness or end of life, we actually took those same techniques and were intrigued that what a lot of people talked about was how the arts and creative expression made them feel more connected and less lonely. Interestingly, we were not looking for that result. We thought, “Okay, it’ll give people more of a sense of self-esteem” or it’ll educate them more about themselves and the world. But almost invariably, people felt very connected through their use of the arts, particularly in sharing it with other people and receiving the art of other people. So that observation is what led to The UnLonely Project. And of course, the urgency of that project was made even more clear to us as medical science started revealing this risk of early death from loneliness and as how social commentators and others have pointed out: loneliness is getting worse. Those three things came together and that’s what got The UnLonely Project started.

Any thoughts about how come loneliness is getting worse in this culture?

Right, so why is loneliness getting worse? It’s really a great question and I don’t think anyone has the full answer. But for one thing, we know that migration from place to place, driven by politics, economics, where you leave your city of origin, your country of origin, this is increasing worldwide. So we know there are migration patterns which take people away from their homes and familiar places of origin.

The other aspect that seems to be increasing is a kind of divisiveness in society itself. For race, gender, class reasons, more and more people feel polarized from people who are not like them. This increase of divisiveness is no doubt fueling this sense of loneliness and isolation.


The final, intriguing question is: social media, Facebook, Instagram, the digital world that at some level connects us, may actually keep us from being connected, and we’re very interested in the risk of that negative impact, particularly in young adults and adolescents, whose worlds are more and more shaped by social media.

Here at SAIC, we’re interested in belongingness as a concept and idea that we are thinking through, and what it means to belong here on our campus. Who feels like they belong? Who doesn’t? Can you help us to understand how belongingness and loneliness are connected and are related to each other?

You know, we think belonging and connection is actually the flip side of the same coin, that on the other side is loneliness and isolation.

Imagine it visually: Is there a seat for you around the table? Do you feel welcome? Do you feel anticipated by the community you want to be a part of, recognized for who you are? If you do, you often feel connected and you feel a sense of belonging. If you don’t, you feel isolated and disconnected.

And just to share with you: some of the populations we know are most impacted by loneliness are older adults and caregivers for those older adults. Often struggling with the challenge of managing those complexities, they withdraw more and more from their community, even family and friends, and as results are even less able to deal with the stress of what they need to manage on a daily basis.

Can you see some opportunities with say, a college student population, to effect that in any way?

We’re very interested in so-called “intergenerational programs.” Imagine a scenario where an older adult who has a lifetime of experience, strong opinions, a heart filled compassion and empathy and wants to share that with someone else in a useful way, has a chance to have a conversation with a young adult who may be struggling with identity or discrimination or some other circumstance. It’s very clear to us and there are many programs that have been successful, that having an opportunity for intergenerational story-making and story-sharing actually brings everyone together and provides a sense of belonging and community even in groups that may previously have not had much to do with each other.

Something that you’re really focused on is story making and storytelling. Can you say more about the central place that has in your foundation’s work and in the creative art therapies?

In many ways, we are our stories. And one of the powerful uses of creative expression is an entry point into finding our story, shaping our story and sharing our story. And so we think it’s fundamental to connection and belonging to have those stories, to feel proud and entitled and an agent of your own story, and to have that story when you share it be welcomed by other people. And both sides benefit. The people listening to the story also feel connected and feel like they belong in a sense to the larger narrative that’s created by the sort sharer.

You’re both a physician and a poet, an artist. Can you say more about how those two identities come to play in your thinking on these matters, and what kind of advantages come from being both?

You know, it’s interesting. In my both formal training to be a physician as well as the practice of medicine, you’re always trying to pay attention, see what’s going on with the patient, what’s going on with the illness, really understand the complexity of the experience. In a sense, poetry is exploring in similar ways. What’s below the surface? What’s going on here? What do I need to know about this situation and how can I reveal it? How can I be helpful? So in an interesting way, I think they have similar goals.

Anything else you’d like to add?

Just to share that I think the work you’re doing here at SAIC, first of all, to declare the importance of belonging, celebrate that, support it, draw the attention of both the SAIC community and perhaps even the broader community to the importance of connection and belonging is a huge public health opportunity. We think the epidemic of loneliness and isolation isn’t going to stop, so we need to come up with creative, effective, scalable and sustainable ways to address it.

We appreciate the work your foundation is doing to highlight loneliness as an idea that we need to talk about and pay attention to as well. I think there’s a great value in that and we’re interested in continuing to think through how these concepts of compassion and belonging and loneliness interact and are related to each other. I think fleshing all of those out can only benefit our students and really all our community members here at SAIC. Appreciate the work you’re doing with the foundation. It’s genuinely inspiring.

Thank you and it’s a pleasure to be here and be part of the work you’re doing.

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Film: My Baby You’ll Be https://www.artandhealing.org/film-my-baby-youll-be/ Mon, 23 Oct 2017 17:34:58 +0000 https://artandhealing.org/?p=9426 The post Film: My Baby You’ll Be appeared first on The Foundation for Art & Healing.

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My Baby You’ll Be

About the Film

When Charles’ mother asked him to help her transfer home movies to her hard drive, his reaction was, “What home videos?”  Watching the 20 hours of family memories and realizing he had 38 unopened voicemails — many from his mother—lead him to realize the extent to which the two, once so undeniably close, had grown apart. He realized, too, that with the videos and the voicemails he had the perfect media with which to explore the situation creatively.

“I watched every clip, end to end,” he said. “I cried, I laughed, and then I wondered, what happened? Why aren’t we as connected as we used to be?”

Many ask Charles about his mother’s reaction to the film.  And the answer involves tissues and unconditional love.

“She urged me not to be so hard on myself!” and told him he’d been there for her and she knew he always would be.

The film has received accolades at Festival viewings around the country and received the UnLonely Online Film Festival Spotlight Award, selected by guest juror Mike Paseornek of Lionsgate Films.

About the Filmmaker: Charles Frank

We were thrilled to discover this young filmmaker. His cinematic grace and particular sensitivity to the qualities of distance, closeness, and yearning in our relationships to each other and to our larger communities were so striking that we selected three of his films for our festival, each of which captures a very different theme and aspect of loneliness and isolation.

Charles grew up in Western Massachusetts, in a tiny town a couple of hours outside of Boston.  Recollecting his boyhood, he says “Besides making trick shot videos, I was a dishwasher for a summer and an avid member of the A2Z Yo-Yo Team. I studied in a rigorous academic environment and spent my free time making corny short films, and at 16 I worked on my first feature.”

After a gap year in Portland, Oregon, he planned to attend NYU Film School but ended up taking a position with a production company before co-founding Voyager Creative, a Brooklyn, NY enterprise with a range of corporate and personal projects rooted in documentary, verite approach.

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The Therapeutic Power of Creative Expression through Paper https://www.artandhealing.org/the-therapeutic-power-of-creative-expression-through-paper/ Mon, 05 Dec 2016 23:57:19 +0000 https://artandhealing.org/?p=8201 The post The Therapeutic Power of Creative Expression through Paper appeared first on The Foundation for Art & Healing.

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The Therapeutic Power of Creative Expression through Paper

December 5, 2016

“The Paper and Packaging – How Life Unfolds™ campaign recognizes the ways letter writing can bring people together,” said Mary Anne Hansan, Paper and Packaging Board executive director. “These survivors choose peace every day and choose to see the world in a positive light. We hope their handwritten letters can inspire others to do the same. This program provides a platform for people to share their own messages on social media using #lettersofpeace.”

The campaign also partnered with experts in the field of journaling and creative expression to explore the benefits that paper-related activities can have on peoples’ physical and mental well-being. “Paper is taking on new significance as a means of helping people feel better by allowing them to express their feelings through writing and art,” states Jeremy Nobel, MD, MPH, president and founder of the Foundation for Art & Healing and faculty member at the Harvard Medical School. “A key benefit of expression on paper includes connecting with people in meaningful ways. Expression through the written word can build trust and bonds with others in unthreatening ways that help develop tools for living happier, more stable lives.”

Dr. Nobel goes on to say, “The Letters of Peace campaign describes the lives of some really remarkable individuals who have been able to move past their own loss, their own challenges, their own pain, and shares their stories on paper in a way that not only allows them to heal, but offers a healing opportunity to anyone that the campaign touches.”

This observation is described by one letter-writer, Patrick Downes, “It feels like I’m engaging in a conversation with people. There is something so personal about writing something down. It’s almost like an imprint of our DNA on paper, as a message from me to you.” Downes, who survived the Boston bombing continues, “It captures another element of my story that may grab people who see the campaign in a different and unique way.”

Learn more about How Life Unfolds at the following links:
http://www.howlifeunfolds.com
http://www.facebook.com/howlifeunfolds
http://www.twitter.com/howlifeunfolds
http://www.instagram.com/howlifeunfolds

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Being UnLonely with Eileen Rockefeller https://www.artandhealing.org/unloneliness-with-eileen-rockefeller/ Tue, 21 Jul 2015 23:43:38 +0000 http://www.marketingnavigators.com/FAH2/?p=6130 Eileen Rockefeller, author, public speaker, and venture philanthropist talks to the Foundation of Art & Healing about the importance of healing in the community. When we come together, she says, we can "turn from the place of isolation to one of belonging."

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Being UnLonely with Eileen Rockefeller

 
July 21, 2015
 

Eileen Rockefeller, author, public speaker, and venture philanthropist talks to the Foundation of Art & Healing about the importance of healing in the community. When we come together, she says, we can “turn from the place of isolation to one of belonging.” Rockefeller is known both as a member of one of America’s most legendary families, but also an innovator in the field of mind/body health, and healthcare practices that incorporate social and emotional well-being.

In 1983, Rockefeller founded the Institute for the Advancement of Health, which she founded in order to bring awareness and credibility to mind/body health at a time when it was not widely accepted by medical professionals. Thought that work, Rockefeller discovered that, regardless of illness or condition, “community is essential.”

In 2013, she published her memoirs, Being a Rockefeller, Becoming Myself, in which she reflects upon how her intuitive understanding as a child that mood and social situation impacted her physical health fed her drive to better understand that connection later in life. Eileen Rockefeller is widely credited with bringing social and emotional health to national and medical attention, and remains an active advocate for its utilization.

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Being UnLonely with Edward Hirsch https://www.artandhealing.org/unloneliness-with-edward-hirsch/ Mon, 20 Jul 2015 19:54:49 +0000 http://www.marketingnavigators.com/FAH2/?p=6055 The celebrated poet Edward Hirsch talks to the Foundation of Art about the connective power of language and poetry. "Poetry is the social act of a solitary person," he says. The act of writing and reading poetry, he suggests, helps alleviate loneliness even when when we are physically isolated.

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Being UnLonely with Edward Hirsch

July 20, 2015

The celebrated poet Edward Hirsch talks to us about the connective power of language and poetry. “Poetry is the social act of a solitary person,” he says. The act of writing and reading poetry, he suggests, helps alleviate loneliness, even when we are physically isolated. “When you’re reading a poem you’re not alone with your own feelings,” he explains, “I have always found that comforting.”

Edward Hirsch was born in Chicago in 1950 and has had a lifelong devotion to poetry. Hirsch has published eight collections of poems since 1981, as well as five books of prose. He has also edited numerous poetry anthologies. For his work, Hirsch has received such distinguished awards as a MacArthur Fellowship, a Guggenheim Fellowship, an Ingram Merrill Foundation Award, a Pablo Neruda Presidential Medal of Honor, the Prix de Rome, and an Academy of Arts and Letters Award.

Hirsch is the President of the Guggenheim Foundation. He teaches in the English Department at Wayne State University, and Creative Writing at the University of Houston.

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