On January 21, 2016 I received a most unusual award
– a David Award – that was described to me as follows:
For each of the
past 15 years, every January Networking® magazine has honored
eight exceptional men – “Renaissance Men” who have performed generous and
unselfish acts for the benefit of us all. The David Awards are named for David,
the giant slayer, who represents the Renaissance Ideal Man memorialized by
Michelangelo’s famous 16th century statue of David. Each of our honorees has
been a true Renaissance man having excelled in business or academics and also
accomplished outstanding heroic and humanitarian acts.
I thought that I would make this column a little
more personal than usual and share my remarks here.
Having been selected for this honor led me to consider, "If I am
David, then who is Goliath in my life?" I can think of many but I’ll share
just two with you.
On the same day in late September that Networking Magazine publisher Christine
Sheehan delivered the good news to me about this honor, my doctor called with
the results of a biopsy and PET scan. She said that my cancer, which had been
in remission for five years, transformed into something more aggressive. It was
rapidly spreading and required immediate treatment.
In fact, if the David Awards breakfast was held just one week earlier to
the day, instead of my sitting on the dais you would have found me seated in a
recliner at Sloan Kettering, hooked up to an IV, and receiving what I am hoping
will be my last infusion.
I tell you about my personal Goliath not for your sympathy. I tell you
because I know I am not alone in this room of more than 500 people. I salute my
fellow cancer survivors and family members of those who have battled cancer.
Although my first Goliath is more personal, and now public, my second
Goliath is more insidious. It cannot be slayed by science and medicine, and it
demands the attention of our hearts, minds and souls.
My second Goliath is stigma – the stigma that brings shame to people with
mental illnesses and addictions; the stigma that denies them the sympathy and
support that I have received in abundance while battling cancer.
Please understand that no parent would hesitate for even a moment to get
help for a child with cancer. However, parents who have a child suffering from
a mental illness or addiction wait weeks, months and even years to ask for
help. Stigma causes many to hide and retreat, rather than stand and advance.
Stigma has two co-conspirators. They are the government and the health
insurance industry. Government neglect and corporate greed represent nothing
less than institutional child abuse and neglect that prevent sufferers from
choosing and accessing life-saving treatment options. This is a clear denial of
civil rights.
Defeating the Goliath stigma is a good start. It requires that we make a
collective commitment to treating illnesses above the neck the same as
illnesses below the neck.
If my being a David Award winner helps to inspire that, then I will truly
feel a worthy recipient. Thank you.
https://longislandweekly.com/david-and-goliath/
Bio: Andrew
Malekoff is the Executive Director of North Shore Child & Family Guidance
Center, which provides comprehensive mental health services for
children from birth through 24 and their families. To find out more, visit www.northshorechildguidance.org.
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