jw91017
jw91017
Jw1017
77 posts
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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Proud to be Korean🇰🇷👍
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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The Legend of 1900(1998)
My Artwork🎬
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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Laos ✈️🇱🇦👍💓😘
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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Rest In Peace 🙏🏻 My Love
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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Love This Song💕
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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Stranger Things Pop-Up Store in Korea👍
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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Stranger Things Pop-Up Store in Korea💕
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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Florida Project💕
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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Stranger Things x H&M Collab💕
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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SKIPPY💗 Peanut Butter Flavor!
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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Sweet Potato Flavor Ice Cream in Korea👍🇰🇷
백제 신라 고구마💕
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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Love this Song💕
Best Collab Ever!👍
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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Miss Stevens💕
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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Black Mirror Season 5👍
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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Pictured: Students protesting. Photography courtesy of the Asian American Federation
APAHM Spotlight: Asian American Federation
As part of Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, we’re highlighting some amazing organizations that are positively impacting the community. Asian American Federation is a pan-Asian nonprofit leadership organization that represents and supports a network of 70 Asian American community service organizations in New York. They’re focusing on mental health needs in the Asian American community, as a whole, as it’s been affecting a lot of people in the community. We sat down with Deputy Director Joo Han.
The Asian/Pacific Islander community is not monolithic. What are some common misconceptions about this ethnic group?
The Asian American community comprises 16 ethnic groups (including the Arab community who are included in our research) — that speak over 36 Asian languages.
The model minority myth really obscures the diversity and need in the community. For example, Asians are the poorest racial group in New York City, with 25 percent living in poverty (a rate that grew by 44 percent from 2000 to 2016). The majority, or 70 percent, are immigrants, with 70 percent also having limited English proficiency. If you disaggregate the data, you’ll also see that some Asian groups, like Cambodian, Laotian, and Hmong, have higher status dropout rates (the percent of 16-24 year olds who aren’t enrolled in school and don’t have a high school diploma) than non-Hispanic Whites.
Mental Health is a journey that many of us go through. Unfortunately, many people of color do not have the accessibility for mental health/resources. How is the stigma towards mental health hurtful in the Asian/Pacific Islander community?
Deep cultural stigma is one of the greatest barriers to accessing mental health services in the Asian American community.
A study found that even though a higher percentage of Asian American high school and college students reported experiencing depressive symptoms compared to their White counterparts, Asian Americans are the least likely group to report, seek, and receive medical help for depressive symptoms due to cultural stigma. This stigma stems from the belief that mental healthcare is “only for crazy people” — or the seriously ill — and comes from honor/shame cultures that suppress negative experiences in order to “save face” or not be a burden to others.
Also, Asian Americans, who bear the additional burdens of the model minority myth and imposter syndrome, can further feel they are “weak” or “inadequate” when they struggle with stress, anxiety, depression, and so forth, which may deter them from reaching out for help.
How can we de-stigmatize mental health needs?
One of the best ways that we can de-stigmatize mental health needs is to develop and spread mental health literacy. Part of spreading mental health literacy also comes from sharing our own stories about how mental illness has touched our lives, whether personally or through a family member or friend, so that we can normalize mental healthcare as we would physical healthcare.
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Pictured: AAF’s Executive Director Jo-Ann Yoo & New York Council members. Photography courtesy of the Asian American Federation
How can people continue to support the Asian/Pacific Islander community?
Plug into Asian-led, Asian-serving community-based organizations where you live. There is tremendous need for Asian Americans who can commit their time, expertise, and resources to serving the fastest-growing population in the U.S. And really commit—by volunteering to teach a class in something you’re skilled at, joining a board, or offering to hold a fundraiser. By serving the community, you’re actually investing in resources that will uplift you, your family, and the community as a whole.
Thank you for your time, Joo Han. We appreciate all your work with the Asian American Federation. Tumblr, how do you handle your mental health as a person of color? Use the hashtag #APAHM to share your story.
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jw91017 · 6 years ago
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The Grand Budapast Hotel Wallpaper💕 #10
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