OUT OF OUR RIGHT MINDS: Trauma, Depression and the Black Woman
Women and men from all walks of life speak openly and candidly about depression, mental illness, anxiety, self-esteem, and the need to address a topic that continues to be taboo in the African American community.
"I find that there's a shadow, a cloud of sadness amongst women of color, from all walks of life," says Stacey Muhammad of Wildseed Films. She continues, "It's time to have this discussion. My commitment is to not only explore our behavior but to also examine the environment in which we've been embedded for more than 400 years and to encourage us to begin to examine what this environment has done and continues to do to people of color."
Published on May 28, 2012
http://www.staceymuhammad.com/ A riveting documentary by the incomparable Stacey Muhammad. A Must See!!!

...'Directed by award winning Independent Filmmaker / documentarian Stacey Muhammad, a native of New Orleans, LA, this film explores depression and the overall feeling of sadness that plagues many black women in this society of all ages, social and economic backgrounds.
Statistics regarding depression in African American women are either
non-existent or uncertain. Part of this confusion is because past published clinical research on depression in African-American women has been scarce.
This scarcity is, in part, due to the fact that African-American women may not seek treatment for their depression, may be misdiagnosed, or may withdraw from treatment because their ethnic, cultural and / or gender needs have not been met."...
My people knowledge is power. Jen Fad