NEWS: Where There Is Tea, There Is Hope!

MWH Admin TeamNews

Christine Muir, Senior Communications Officer with Scottish Recovery Network, writes an uplifting article for ‘The Scotsman”

I remember sitting in a café waiting for a friend to arrive. On the table were the usual condiments and a vase in which stood a wooden heart on a stick. On the heart, written in black Sharpie, were the words ‘Where there is tea, there is hope’.

Of course I immediately photographed it and posted the picture to social media but the words have always stuck with me in a deeper sense. They bring to mind a whole range of people and places that have been part of my mental health recovery journey. People who have experienced similar things and understand. People who have ideas to share with me to help me cope and vice versa. People who have a passion for making things better.

There is no doubt that some of the best solutions come from informal conversations. Through my role at the Scottish Recovery Network I feel lucky to have been involved in the development of a new engagement toolkit that harnesses the very essence of that statement. Run your own Recovery Conversation Café helps organisations and services bring people together in welcoming spaces with a structure that helps people have great conversations about what is important to them.

People with lived experience of mental health problems have a wealth of experience, knowledge and skills to offer. Unfortunately they often find it difficult to have their voices heard. Providing a different approach to engagement a recovery conversation café moves away from the constraints of traditional consultation. Echoing the coffee houses of the past the approach brings people together in a way that deliberately disrupts power to welcome everyone as equals with valued knowledge and experience. People are not just passive responders but active participants, listening to each other and building on ideas.

At the recent launch of the Run your own Recovery Conversation Café toolkit the Minister for Mental Wellbeing and Social Care, Kevin Stewart MSP emphasised just how important the voice of lived experience is: “I am delighted to be involved in the launch of this resource. We need to recognise the value of the voice of lived experience and integrate it into all parts of our mental health system. Lived experience enriches our understanding in a way no second hand accounts can. The Recovery Conversation Café approach is a really good example of an innovative way to capture what is important to people, allowing us to work together to make sure the valuable insights and ideas from people with lived experience are heard and acted on.”

When I think about that wooden heart on a stick and those wise words ‘Where there is tea, there is hope’ it strikes me that where there is tea there is also connection, participation, involvement and activism. There are people who come together to tell us loud and clear what it is they need to support their mental health recovery and wellbeing.

Order your free Run your own Recovery Conversation Café toolkit from Scottish Recovery Network by calling 0300 323 9956 or emailing info@scottishrecovery.net or download from our website www.scottishrecovery.net

Christine Muir, Senior Communications Officer, Scottish Recovery Network

You can read the full article here

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