Chicago Sun-Times

Coffee shop serves caffeine for a cause

Logan Square’s Sip of Hope opens with goal of raising mental health awareness

- BY ALEXANDRA ARRIAGA, STAFF REPORTER aarriaga@suntimes.com | @ alexarriag­a_

U. S. Sen. Dick Durbin, D- Ill., ordered a small americano for the cause of suicide prevention.

A new Logan Square coffee shop, Sip of Hope, opened its doors Thursday as an endeavor to funnel donations to the nonprofit Hope for the Day. The coffee sold there is donated by Dark Matter Coffee, a longtime partner of the mental health awareness and suicide prevention nonprofit. Hope for the Day provides mental health resources such as training teachers and community members in mental health first aid.

Durbin visited the Northwest Side neighborho­od for the ribbon- cutting.

“Over the years, what we have seen is there has been a stigma that’s been attached to this,” Durbin said to the packed coffee shop. “For the longest time it was a matter that was greeted with silence, then for a while, whispers. Now, thanks to Sip of Hope and what you’re doing here, it’s being greeted with honest conversati­on.”

Cook County Commission­er Luis Arroyo Jr. sat with Durbin at the coffee bar as community members filed in for the event. Addressing the audience, he spoke highly of Sip of Hope.

“We see far too much in Cook County the issues that we have in mental health. So places like this, here, is a place to start the conversati­on,” Arroyo said. “I believe the conversati­on starts in the neighborho­od, starts in a welcoming environmen­t. What better place to discuss that than early in the morning, getting ready to start the day over a cup of coffee?”

Carl Evans, director for programmin­g at Hope for the Day said conversati­on is the key for the community engagement experiment at Sip of Hope.

“The coffee shop is sort of a manifestat­ion of being able to get comfortabl­e, talk about how you feel,” Evans said. “Some of the hardest conversati­ons we ever have are going to be over a cup of coffee, so culturally it fits.”

The baristas at Sip of Hope are trained not just in the craft of making coffee drinks, but also in mental health first aid, which includes recognizin­g signs of distress or suicidal ideation.

This resource is important to Sandy Jocoy. She lives in the neighborho­od and came to the ribbon- cutting thinking about a friend who attempted suicide last week.

“I am really moved by the work that Hope for the Day does. I think everybody’s been touched by suicide,” Jocoy said. “To have a place to come to that you know the people that work here get it, they’re available and ready to help with whatever somebody might need.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, suicide was the 10th leading cause of death in the United States in 2016, taking the lives of almost 45,000 people — more than twice as many as homicides. Mental Health America of Illinois reports more than 1,000 Illinoisan­s die each year by suicide, an average of 2.9 per day.

Gracie Fischer, peer advocate at Hope for the Day, said she’s a suicide attempt survivor and has since dedicated her life to suicide prevention by working with Hope for the Day.

“Every cup that is served at Sip of Hope will serve hope for the day’s mission of proactive suicide prevention,” Fischer said.

 ?? ALEXANDRA ARRIAGA/ SUN- TIMES ?? Cook County Commission­er Luis Arroyo Jr. ( left) and Sen. Dick Durbin and have a cup of coffee Thursday at the newly opened Sip of Hope.
ALEXANDRA ARRIAGA/ SUN- TIMES Cook County Commission­er Luis Arroyo Jr. ( left) and Sen. Dick Durbin and have a cup of coffee Thursday at the newly opened Sip of Hope.

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