The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Frigid fundraiser

Need to expand support for youth highlighte­d by polar bear dip

- JOHN MCPHEE THE CHRONICLE HERALD jmcphee@herald.ca @HaliJohnMc­Phee

Dozens of hardy supporters of Jack.org plunged into the frigid Halifax Harbour after raising more than $10,000 for the organizati­on’s national Brainfreez­e polar bear dip campaign.

“It was just a big rush of adrenaline, it was crazy fun!” said Nicola Downward of Bedford, who was wearing a pink birthday hat in celebratio­n of her turning 18.

She went into the water with her friend Kenzie Coffin who, despite the -10 C windchill factor, was fairly blase about the whole thing.

“It wasn’t as cold as it looked,” Coffin said with a laugh.

The light-hearted aspect of the event was in contrast with the serious issues at the heart of the Jack.org campaign. Suicide is the second-leading cause of death among 15- to 25-year-old people in Canada. According to Statistics Canada, 539 Canadians in that age bracket took their own lives in 2018.

The Jack.org campaign was started in 2010 by the parents of a young Ontario man, Jack Windeler, shortly after his death. The organizati­on provides training for youth leaders across the country.

“His friends didn't know how to identify struggle and they wanted to change that,” Clayton Murphy, Nova Scotia's Jack. org team leader and host of the Brainfreez­e event in Halifax, told participan­ts who gathered at Black Rock Beach in Point Pleasant Park. “It's an important conversati­on, it's important skills that we have to have. That's why we're here today.”

In an earlier interview, he said one of his main goals as a Jack.org leader is expanding access to mental health services in rural Nova Scotia.

“Not all of our resources should lie in the metro region. We need to be having the conversati­on about how our services can be more accessible.

“Our overall goal is to create a positive mental health landscape for youth, we want to talk about how people aren't getting the help that they need, they aren't able to access the services.”

Another Jack.org volunteer, Patrick O'Connell, was the top fundraiser in the local Brainfreez­e campaign with $1,384 out of the total $10,300. Nationally the campaign raised about $130,000.

In an interview before the event, he said the support from the community has been “overwhelmi­ng.”

“The money for all of the programmin­g here goes directly to Jack.org,” said O'Connell, an informatio­n tech sales rep who has supported community health campaigns in Ontario and over the past several years since he's lived in Nova Scotia.

“They're the only charity that actually trains and certifies young leaders, their mandate is to revolution­ize mental health in every province and territory.”

Before the participan­ts hit the water, Taylor MacGillvar­y, a co-host of the health podcast Sickboy and a certified yoga instructor, led the group in a “strip yoga” exercise as they shucked their warm outerwear for their swimming attire.

Lauryn Sherry said the event was a fun way to support mental health services for young people.

“I've been through it,” the 30-year-old Clayton Park resident said.

“I remember growing up how hard it was, as a teenager and even as a young adult, I work at a Tims with a lot of teenagers and I just see the struggles that some of them have ... with anxiety, depression and all that stuff. So the more support the better."

 ?? JOHN MCPHEE • THE CHRONICLE HERALD ?? Dozens of people endured a -10 C wind chill and the frigid waters of Black Rock Beach in Point Pleasant Park in support of the mental health advocacy group Jack.org on Saturday morning.
JOHN MCPHEE • THE CHRONICLE HERALD Dozens of people endured a -10 C wind chill and the frigid waters of Black Rock Beach in Point Pleasant Park in support of the mental health advocacy group Jack.org on Saturday morning.

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