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Student Success Staff:

Pam Bartlett (530) 622-5081 ext. 7253
Senior Director, Student Success

Judy Prescott (530) 622-5081 ext. 7253
Administrative Assistant (Non-Conf)

Kari Buhman (530) 622-5081 ext. 7240
Secretary III

 

Zoe Samborski (530) 622-5081 ext. 7217

Program Specialist


Credentialed School Nurses:

Janie Grantham-Carlson (530) 677-2281, ext. 7140
PHS, D.O.
 
Callie Joiner (530) 622-3634, ext. 7103
IHS/UMHS/PCA
 
Amber Uber (916) 933-6980, ext. 7114
ORHS
 
Melissa Lampe (530) 622-3634 ext. 7137
EDHS


School Psychologists:

Haley Rodriguez
(916) 933-6980, ext. 3036
 
Jenny Glaspell
(530) 622-5081 ext. 7217
 
Amanda Sharpe
(530) 677-2281, ext. 2368
 
Darren Husted
(530) 622-3634, ext. 1032

Teen Suicide: A First-Person Message for Teens

Teen Suicide: A First-Person Message for Teens

Teen Suicide: A First-Person Message for Teens

From the Society for the Prevention of Teen Suicide, by Stacy Hollingsworth, College Student

I used to think that depression and suicide were things that happened to other people, that the way I approached my life somehow prevented me from becoming a victim of mental illness. I realized just how incorrect that assumption was when my own life was turned upside down by major depression.

I first noticed that something was wrong in 8th grade. Apparently, so did one of my teachers, because she asked me if anything was wrong. Unfortunately, she did so in front of the whole class. From that day on, I put up a wall to protect myself from the embarrassment of having a stigmatized illness. I wore a mask - a facade - to cover up what I was actually going through. I didn't feel comfortable sharing my feelings with any adults in my life at that time.

My depression continued in high school. I was hoping that someone - anyone - would bring up the topics of depression and suicide, so that I wouldn't have to. In school, there were always lessons about alcohol, drugs, and safe sex - but never ONCE were depression or suicide mentioned. Maybe, just maybe, if the adults in my life had been educated in these topics, I would have felt comfortable asking for help, and I would have been spared years of suffering.

But I'm one of the lucky ones. I did get help. I'm here today as the voice of those who are not yet being heard - the child who's sitting in a class full of students thinking he or she is the only one feeling this way ...or the teen who can't focus in school because he or she is trapped by the isolation and pain of depression.

Help IS available - ask your friends, your resource staff at school, your parents, or call the suicide hotline at 1-800-273-TALK (1-800-273-8255). The right resources are there - look for them - because they CAN save your life!