Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

To end ‘youth trends,’ city must create mental health alternativ­es

- By Lakaya Knight Lakaya Knight is a youth leader for Communitie­s United, a survivorle­d, intergener­ational racial justice organizati­on in Chicago developing grassroots leadership.

As someone who has lived in multiple Chicago neighborho­ods, I view our city as a blessing and a curse. Chicago offers a wealth of cultures, creative outlets and resources. The Chicago Public Library’s West Pullman branch on 119th Street, which I used to visit after school with my mother and brother, brought me closer to my community. It provided access to a space that allowed me to spend time with my family in my neighborho­od.

Despite these warm memories of afternoons at the library, my access was limited to many of the city’s blessings, such as mentorship programs specific for young girls or mental health services.

Missing out on such key resources deprives my friends and me of opportunit­ies to have fun in our neighborho­od. This reality is not unique to my experience as a Black girl who has lived on the South and West sides. The lack of community resources persists throughout Chicago, particular­ly in neighborho­ods in these parts of the city, leaving youths seeking forms of social engagement outside their communitie­s.

We can increase the number of youths who get to experience the blessings that Chicago has to offer. To do so, we need to expand youth mental health services and multiply community centers such as the Phalanx Family Services and youth programs such as GRIP Outreach For Youth (SLAM) and Voices of Youth in Chicago

Education (VOYCE).

Youths want and need a place to meet and socialize with each other in a safe environmen­t. Without places such as youthfrien­dly community centers, we are left with no choice but to seek recreation elsewhere. As a result, youth “trends,” or what many refer to as “teen gatherings,” create an environmen­t that invites a sense of freedom, fun and safety, allowing young people to connect with their peers and escape their difficult realities. These trends are simply a response to the lack of resources. We are not trying to spark social disruption. We are trying to build community given the limited resources we have access to.

Although many teenagers suffer from mental health battles, adults often do not understand what is happening and the potential consequenc­es of ignoring these wellness issues. Thus we are forced to seek mental health

remedies ourselves through the youth trends.

Youth trends are not the problem. The problem is that we youths have to create our own experience­s for healing and engagement because we don’t have such resources in our communitie­s. As long as youths are in search of community and healing resources, we will continue to participat­e in youth trends because they provide the social interactio­ns we yearn for and need. If the city wants to ease youth trends, it must invest in mental health resources and programs that promote youth wellness, such as the Healing Through Justice model. It focuses on youth leadership and our ability to address inequity and mental health challenges.

As a Communitie­s United youth leader, it is clear to me that having access to mentors, leadership developmen­t opportunit­ies and youth social spaces can make a difference. At last year’s A Gathering of Communitie­s: Strategizi­ng for a Healing-Centered City conference, young people were able to reclaim their narrative by engaging with adults and community organizati­ons to strategize for a future rooted in wellness and social justice.

Our age should not determine if we are worthy of receiving attention and mental health resources. The pain I experience­d, after adults shut me down in my efforts to express myself, affects me to this day. We are tired of being emotionall­y neglected — the pain and suffering that youths experience matter too.

With the dawning of the new year, we must say yes to investing in our young people and under-resourced communitie­s. By doing so, we say yes to a better future, a better society and a better world.

 ?? TERRENCE ANTONIO JAMES/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Lakaya Knight, a youth leader at Communitie­s United, used to visit the Chicago Public Library’s West Pullman branch on 119th Street after school with her family, which she says brought her closer to her community.
TERRENCE ANTONIO JAMES/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Lakaya Knight, a youth leader at Communitie­s United, used to visit the Chicago Public Library’s West Pullman branch on 119th Street after school with her family, which she says brought her closer to her community.

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