Southland Recovery Coalition

Southland Recovery Coalition WELCOME TO THE PATHWAY TO RECOVERY & AWARENESS! WELCOME TO THE PATHWAY TO RECOVERY! (RET-INC). SRC is building a holistic, comprehensive network of services.

The Southland Recovery Coalition (SRC) is comprised of four organizations which include: Cornerstone Community Development Corporation, NFP (Cornerstone CDC); Indigenous Community Service Center (ICSC); Together We Cope (TWC); and Reassemble Education and Training, Inc. SRC endeavors to create a recovery-oriented system of care in the south suburban region of Cook and Will Counties. These municipalities include but are not limited to:
Alsip • Blue Island • Bridgeview • Calumet City • Chicago Heights • Chicago Ridge • Country Club Hills • Crestwood • Evergreen Park • Ford Heights • Glenwood • Harvey • Hazel Crest • Hickory Hills • Hometown • Homewood • Lansing • Lynwood • Markham • Merrionette Park • Midlothian • Oak Forest • Oak Lawn • Orland Hills • Orland Park • Palos Heights • Palos Hills • Palos Park • Posen • Robbins • Sauk Village • Tinley Park and Worth. SRC also serves the southeastern corridor of Will County, which includes parts of Park Forest, Steger, and University Park; along with Crete, Monee, and training/community workshop(s) in Joliet. Our partners have been hard at work to provide a supportive recovery community and formed this ROSC Council to significantly help to expand access to resources for south suburban individuals and families impacted by substance use. SRC is putting in systematic efforts to develop a robust public health approach that focuses on the prevention of substance use problems in the general population. The Southland Recovery Coalition is changing communities and restoring lives!

07/27/2024

🛑 allowing access to your personal, emotional, & mental real estate.

— Dr. Orr

She was r***d at the age of 8. Her ra**st was found guilty, but spent only one day in jail. After he was released, he wa...
06/17/2024

She was r***d at the age of 8. Her ra**st was found guilty, but spent only one day in jail. After he was released, he was murdered. Because of this, she became mute for almost 5 years, believing her "voice killed him." "I killed him that man. because I told his name. And, then I thought I would never speak again, because my voice would kill anyone ..."

Her name was Marguerite Ann Johnson. Later in life, she would change her name . . . to Maya Angelou.

The Peace Page has shared many stories of Maya Angelou, but this is the story that many people return to each year. Thank you for sharing Her story.

During this time, this period of suffering, this period of shame and guilt, this period of silence that she "developed her extraordinary memory, her love for books and literature, and her ability to listen and observe the world around her." A teacher and friend of the family helped Angelou speak again, introducing her to the world of books with authors such as Charles Dickens and William Shakespeare.

When she finally did speak, she said she had a lot to say.

Maya Angelou became a voice for women, a voice for the black community, garnering respect and admiration for her honesty.

She would say, "There is no agony like bearing an untold story inside of you."

Angelou was challenged by her friend, author James Baldwin, to write an autobiography, which became "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings". The book would be critically acclaimed, but banned in schools and libraries because of its honest depiction of r**e.

When asked by an interviewer why she wrote about the experience, she indicated that she wanted to demonstrate the complexities of r**e. She also wanted to prevent it from happening to someone else, so that anyone who had been r***d might gain understanding and not blame herself for it.

She would also later write another book titled "Letter to My Daughter", which was dedicated to the daughter she never had but sees all around her.

In the book, she says, "You may not control all the events that happen to you, but you can decide not to be reduced by them."

She would also write in her poem, "And, Still I Rise":

"Did you want to see me broken?
Bowed head and lowered eyes?
Shoulders falling down like teardrops.
Weakened by my soulful cries...

You may shoot me with your words,
You may cut me with your eyes,
You may kill me with your hatefulness,
But still, like air, I'll rise..."

Update: This story, originally published in 2017, has recently gone viral again, with more than a million people reached. Thank you for remembering Ms. Angelou, her words, her life, her heart.

~ jsr, from the Jon S. Randal Peace Page

01/16/2024

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Ford Heights, IL

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