Poem, lyrics, and similar, please submit it to NAMI’s You Are Not Alone, if your submission is a personal story.
Blog submissions, moreover, must include tangible tips and messages for readers to take away.
You Are Not Alone is the NAMI Blog’s artsy sibling, where personal stories live. Normally, research is increasingly showing diet’s effect on mental health, as well, good nutrition By the way, a special section in Clinical Psychological Science highlights the different approaches that psychology researchers are taking to know the many ways in which nutrition and mental health intersect. We process submissions from our readers on a rolling basis, that means. We feature fresh insights with detailed and practical tips. We talk about the latest research, stories of success, ways to end stigma and strategies for living well. Then, the NAMI Blog is a resource for people who are interested in mental health.
Decades of research have shown the importance of proper nutrition in preventing and treating the ill effects of inflammation and stress, physiological processes that are intimately linked with mental health. Despite this clear connection, diet and metabolism typically do not feature in studies that examine facts of psychological ‘wellbeing’. How about to let your inner journalist out. Similar to the NAMI blog, Advocate pieces should lead readers through difficult and intimidating pics in a supportive way. Advocate pieces can take a deeper dive into their pic descriptions of the latest research and studies, interviews with mental health professionals, and more. Advocate submissions might be between 1000 and 2000 words and could be high quality, informative pieces. Successful submissions will feature one or more of the following. Works should discuss experiences associated with mental health conditions, advocate for improving the lives of people with mental health conditions or explore mental health all in all. Blog submissions might be between 500 and 800 words. Just think for a moment. While leading them through difficult and intimidating pics and breaking them down in a language that they can understand, our blog is a friendly guide to our Web visitors.
Use plain language and avoid academic language and jargon. We like our blogs to be casual and conversational. Basically the aim of this collection of articles is to showcase the diversity of studies being conducted in a tally new, rapidly emerging field of nutrition and mental health, write guest editors Julia Rucklidge and Bonnie Kaplan in their introduction to the special section. However, every issue covers a lot of pics relating to mental health, from research to pop culture to personal stories. NAMI’s Advocate is published at least twice a year, on a seasonal schedule. Just think for a moment. I know that the Advocate is a print magazine that is mailed to members across the country and read by an estimated 165000 people. We not only feature the blog on our homepage but also promote the p stories in our monthly newsletter, NAMI and promote stories on Facebook and Twitter to more than 250000 followers.