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Taraji P. Henson Announces Two-Day 'Can We Talk?' Mental Health Summit

Actress Taraji P. Henson announced that her Boris Lawrence Henson Foundation (BLHF) will hold a two-day summit โ€œto exchange ideas around normalizing the conversation of mental illness in the African-American community.โ€ The first โ€œCan We Talk?โ€ Conference and Benefit Dinner will take place in Washington, D.C., on June 7-9, People reports. Suggested Reading The Root…

Actress Taraji P. Henson announced that her Boris Lawrence Henson Foundation (BLHF) will hold a two-day summit โ€œto exchange ideas around normalizing the conversation of mental illness in the African-American community.โ€ The first โ€œCan We Talk?โ€ Conference and Benefit Dinner will take place in Washington, D.C., on June 7-9, People reports.

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The Empire star, who has been a vocal advocate for de-stigmatizing mental illness, has been candid about her own mental health challenges, acknowledging having dealt with bouts of depression and anxiety. Henson established the foundationโ€”named for her father, Boris Lawrence Henson, who came home from the Vietnam War with mental health problemsโ€”in 2018.

โ€œWeโ€™re walking around broken, wounded and hurt, and we donโ€™t think itโ€™s okay to talk about it,โ€ she recently told Variety. โ€œWe donโ€™t talk about it at home. Itโ€™s shunned. Itโ€™s something that makes you look weak. Weโ€™re told to pray it away. Everyone was always asking me, โ€˜Do you have a charity?โ€™ Well, dammit, this is going to be my calling, because Iโ€™m sick of this. People are killing themselves. People are numbing out on drugs. Not everything is fixed with a pill.โ€

The forum in June will feature panel discussions with therapists, medical and policy experts, community-organization representatives, and other professionals and influencers who can push the conversation deeper into spaces where action can happen. Organizers are also making it a point to address the need to increase resources for inner city youth, a particularly vulnerable community. Dr. Altha J. Stewart, the first African-American to be named president of the American Psychiatric Association, will deliver the keynote address.

Henson and BLHF are also aiming to raise $500,000 through the benefit dinner June 7, the first evening of the conference. Proceeds will go towards helping first-timers enter into professional therapy.

โ€œYou can talk to your friends, but you need a professional who can give you exercises,โ€ Henson said. โ€œSo that when youโ€™re on the ledge, you have things to say to yourself that will get you off that ledge and past your weakest moments.โ€

Additional guest speakers and performances will be announced soon.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eDn2SSJmuA

Correction: May 11, 2019, 12:49 a.m. ET: Dr. Altha Stewart is the first African-American president of the APA but not the first female president. The story has been updated to reflect that change.

Correction: Sept. 19, 2019, 7:22ย p.m. ET: This story has been edited to remove unattributed text and to add fuller sourcing.

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