Tony Mantor: Why Not Me ?

Tony Mantor: Why Not Me ?

Tony Mantor
アメリカ合衆国
言語 EN-US
エピソード数 224
最新 26.06.2026

A podcast about autism, mental health, advocacy, and human stories. It aims to embrace autism and mental health worldwide, discussing conditions like anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and psychosis. The show celebrates neurodiversity and works to break down stigma, creating a safe space for listeners to learn and grow.

エピソード

  • Meg LeDuc: Journey Through Serious Mental Illness:Living Beyond the Diagnosis 26.06.2026 27分
    Show Notes What happens when the diagnosis changes, the struggle feels endless, and hope seems impossible to find? In this episode of Why Not Me?, Tony Mantor sits down with writer and journalist Meg LeDuc to discuss her personal journey through depression, anxiety, psychosis, suicide attempts, self-harm, recovery, and ultimately healing. Meg shares how years of misdiagnosis, hospitalization, and mental health challenges shaped her life—and how determination, faith, support, and the right treatment helped her rebuild it. This honest conversation explores what it feels like to live with serious mental illness, the realities of psychosis, the impact of stigma, and why recovery is possible even after the darkest moments. Whether you're living with mental illness, supporting someone who is, or simply looking to better understand the human experience, this episode offers insight, compassion, and hope. In This Episode: Meg's journey through anxiety, depression, and psychosis The challenges of diagnosis and finding effective treatment Living with suicide ideation and surviving multiple attempts Self-harm, shame, and learning to heal The role of faith during recovery Relationships and mental illness How stigma affects people living with serious mental illness The difference between receiving help and choosing healing Recovery, resilience, and rebuilding a meaningful life Why psychosis is not a life sentence Memorable Quote "It's a piece of the puzzle. It's not the entire puzzle. There's so much more to me than illness." About Meg LaDuke Meg LaDuc is a Detroit-based freelance journalist, creative writer, and contributor to mental health publications. Drawing from both lived experience and professional reporting, she writes about mental health, disability, recovery, and resilience. She is currently working on a memoir chronicling her journey through serious mental illness and recovery . https://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Dr Aaron Meyer and Ann Marie Council part 2: Breaking the Cycle: Why Serious Mental Illness Deserves Better Than Jail or the Streets 24.06.2026 26分
    Send us Fan MailShow NotesWhat happens when the systems designed to help people with serious mental illness become the very barriers preventing care?In Part 2 of this important conversation, Tony Mantor welcomes Dr. Aaron Meyer and Anne Marie Council for a candid discussion about the failures and possibilities within America's mental health system. Together, they explore why so many individuals spend years cycling through emergency rooms, jails, homelessness, and crisis without ever receiving the long-term treatment they truly need.The conversation examines the gap between policy and practice, the importance of housing with wraparound support, and why accountability—not simply creating more laws—may be the key to meaningful change.This episode challenges listeners to rethink assumptions about involuntary treatment, homelessness, public safety, and compassion while offering practical ways communities can advocate for a better behavioral health system.If you've ever wondered why so many people fall through the cracks, this conversation provides insight, hope, and a call to action. In This EpisodeWhy the "10-year loop" delays treatment for countless people living with serious mental illnessHow emergency rooms and jails have become default mental health providersThe importance of continuous support instead of one-time stabilizationWhy existing mental health laws are often not fully implementedThe need for more psychiatric beds and comprehensive treatment optionsHow housing combined with wraparound services can change livesThe role families and caregivers play in advocating for better careWhy stigma continues to prevent people from receiving helpThe importance of investigative journalism and public accountabilityPractical ways listeners can become advocates for change in their own communitiesWhy empathy and person-centered care must become the foundation of mental health policyKey TakeawaySerious mental illness is not a moral failing or a criminal issue—it is a healthcare issue. Until communities invest in accessible treatment, supportive housing, and systems that prioritize people over bureaucracy, too many individuals will continue cycling through crisis instead of recovery.Connect with Why Not Me?If this conversation resonated with you, please follow, rate, and share the podcast. Every listener helps expand understanding, reduce stigma, and create meaningful conversations about autism and mental health around the world.https://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Dr Aaron Meyer and Ann Marie Council: Bridging the Mental Health Gap: Policy, Psychiatry, and the Fight for Early Intervention 17.06.2026 22分
    Send us Fan MailIn this important episode of Why Not Me? Embracing Autism and Mental Health Worldwide, Tony Mantor sits down with Dr. Alan Meyer, psychiatrist and Behavioral Health Officer for the City of San Diego Fire-Rescue Department, and Ann Marie Council, retired Senior Deputy City Attorney and mental health policy advisor, for an in-depth discussion about the challenges facing today's mental health system. Together, they explore why so many individuals with serious mental illness fall through the cracks, the disconnect between policy and real-world implementation, and how communities can better support those in crisis before tragedy strikes.The conversation covers assisted outpatient treatment, California's CARE Act, healthcare burnout, homelessness, autism, schizophrenia, and the urgent need for earlier intervention and stronger collaboration between healthcare providers, lawmakers, first responders, and community organizations.This is the first of a two-part series that shines a light on the people working to create meaningful change in mental healthcare.In this episode you'll learn:Why mental health and physical health must be treated togetherThe barriers preventing people from receiving timely careHow policy often fails frontline healthcare workersThe role of cities, counties, and states in behavioral health servicesWhy assisted outpatient treatment remains difficult to accessHow technology and AI could improve mental health accessThe importance of prevention instead of waiting for crisisWhy community partnerships are essential for lasting solutionsHow burnout is affecting healthcare professionals and first respondersWhat changes could transform the future of mental healthcareOur GuestsDr. Alan MeyerPsychiatrist at the University of California, San DiegoBehavioral Health Officer for the City of San Diego Fire-Rescue DepartmentSpecialist in complex behavioral health and high-utilizer emergency response systemsAnn Marie CouncilRetired Senior Deputy City Attorney for the City of San DiegoFounding Partner and Mental Health Policy Advisor at Quarter Turn StrategiesAdvocate for legislative reform and improved mental health policyKey TakeawayReal change begins when healthcare, government, first responders, and communities stop working in silos and start working together. Early intervention, compassionate care, and practical policy reforms can save lives and restore hope for individuals and families navigating serious mental illness.If this conversation inspires you, follow the show, leave a review, and share this episode with someone who believes mental health deserves greater understanding and action.#MentalHealth #Autism #BehavioralHealth #Psychiatry #HealthcarePolicy #EarlyIntervention #SeriousMentalIllness #WhyNotMePodcast #TonyMantor #MentalHealthAwareness #Homelessness #CommunityCarehttps://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • John Rolls: What If Inclusion Worked Better Than Quotas 10.06.2026 23分
    Send us Fan MailWe talk with John Rolls about the Gremlin Club’s Sunday open mic in Camarthen and how it grows from a rehearsal night into a welcoming community where people leave their troubles at the door. We dig into what real inclusion looks like for autism, mental health, and disability when the room treats everyone as equal and still makes space for what people need. • how the Gremlin Club open mic starts as a Welsh Factor practice night • why the night becomes about community building over competition • John stepping in to run it after Elise’s bowel cancer diagnosis • building confidence for nervous newcomers through crowd support • making space for autistic singers and people with mental health challenges • handling disability and access needs while keeping the same respect for everyone • why the event is not branded as karaoke and how the format keeps it fun • filming for nostalgia and feedback while choosing not to live stream • word-of-mouth promotion and small grassroots marketing efforts If this kind of conversation matters to you, follow the show so you don't miss what comes next. https://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Jerri Clark: Ambiguous Loss and When Mental Illness Steals Someone You Love 03.06.2026 26分
    Send us Fan MailWe sit with author Jerri Clark as he explains how severe mental illness can create a “gone but not gone” grief that families carry in silence. We talk about ambiguous loss, why closure often never comes, and how to keep living with love and meaning even when the outcome is out of our control. • Jerri’s story of losing his son through psychosis, system failures, and suicide • What ambiguous loss means and why the ambiguity is unfixable • The guilt families feel when they grieve someone still living • Naming the losses: relationship, future, safety, predictability • Coping as a nonlinear process that does not deliver resolution • Learning to live with grief without letting it become your only identity • “This is not my fault” as a practical starting point • Adjust mastery and revising attachment when you cannot control outcomes • What readers can expect from the book’s “do now” reflections and exercises • Why community, empathy, and support networks matter for healing If this kind of conversation matters to you, follow the show so you don't miss what comes next. https://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Patrick Kennedy: Part 2 : A Real Mental Health Strategy 29.05.2026 24分
    Send us Fan MailWe sit down with former U.S. Representative Patrick Kennedy to get specific about what a real national mental health strategy looks like and why the current system wastes money while people end up isolated, hospitalized, incarcerated, or living on the streets. We dig into integrated care, schools-based prevention, telehealth, and the rising risks of AI so listeners walk away with practical policy ideas and a clear sense of what needs to change next. • the need for a national blueprint that links housing, healthcare, and community supports • aligning financial incentives so integrated care becomes the default • why siloed budgets drive higher costs in ER use, incarceration, and homelessness • reducing stigma by integrating mental health into standard medical care • building mental health literacy through routine screening and early help in schools • expanding effective therapy access through telehealth and proper reimbursement • fixing cross-state licensure barriers to match patients with the right clinicians • rebuilding social connection as a core mental health intervention • using AI for personalized care while guarding against isolation and lost agency • preparing for AI-driven job disruption and the mental health impact of lost purpose If you know someone who has a story to share, tell them to contact us at why notme.world. INTRO/OUTRO Music: T. WildMantor Music BMIhttps://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Patrick Kennedy: Part 1: We Can Fix Mental Health Care If We Build Power 27.05.2026 25分
    Send us Fan MailWe talk with former U.S. representative Patrick Kennedy about why mental health parity still fails in practice and what it takes to make insurers and employers cover care that actually works. We keep coming back to one idea: real change happens when we build power and design a system that rewards early help, long-term outcomes, and community support. • Barriers to full enforcement of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act • Why payers respond to penalties more than long-term value • How lobbying, regulation and legal appeals weaken consumer protections • Building political power by organizing families and breaking silos • The business case for early intervention and recovery supports • Why supportive housing and community services can beat revolving-door crisis care • The 90-90-90 by 2033 framework for screening, evidence-based care and recovery • Lessons from the Community Mental Health Act and the cost of dividing communities • Moving from over-medicalized solutions to integration, purpose and connection If you know someone who has a story to share, tell them to contact us at why notme.world.INTRO/OUTRO Music: T. WildMantor Music BMIhttps://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Sen Judy Amabile: When Psychosis Hits, Families Need A System That Works 25.05.2026 26分
    Send us Fan MailWe sit down with Colorado State Senator Judy Amabile to connect one family’s painful path through serious mental illness to the laws that decide whether people get treatment or get pushed into homelessness and the courts. We talk honestly about psychosis, stigma, and the hard policy choices behind civil commitment, Medicaid rules, and building enough beds to stop the cycle.• Her son’s schizoaffective disorder and the road to diagnosis• Early signs like paranoia and thought broadcasting• Family anger and confusion turning into empathy• NAMI Family-to-Family as a bridge to advocacy• Why mental illness feels like the “no casserole disease”• The jump from lived experience to writing policy• Civil commitment and AOT as a contested safety net• Competency waitlists and why they don’t equal treatment• The “churn” between jail, hospitals, and the street• Medicaid changes that allow longer inpatient staysIf you know someone who has a story to share, tell them to contact us at why notme.world.One last thing, spread the word about why not me.MUSIC INTRO/OUTRO: T. WildMANTOR MUSIC BMIhttps://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Senator Creigh Deeds: How A Virginia Senator Turns Grief Into Behavioral Health Law 22.05.2026 26分
    Send us Fan MailWe sit down with Virginia State Senator Creigh Deeds to talk about how personal loss turns into a long-term push for mental health reform that actually survives the news cycle. We focus on what legislation can change, what funding really buys, and why the mental health workforce crisis is the wall every good idea hits. • his path from rural public service to mental health advocacy after his son’s diagnosis and death • why he builds a legislator-led commission so reforms do not die on a shelf • taking lawmakers into hospitals, crisis units, and schools to see gaps firsthand • expanding community mental health services statewide through budget-driven mandates • investing in long-term supportive housing as a stability tool for serious mental illness • assisted outpatient treatment limits when there are not enough clinicians to deliver care • loan forgiveness, residency expansion, and pay increases to strengthen the behavioral health workforce pipeline • handling constituent calls and the emotional weight families carry when the system fails • the mental health and criminal justice intersection, including CIT training and Marcus Alert • normalizing mental health care as health care and reducing stigma so people get help earlier If you know someone who has a story to share, tell them to contact us at why notme.world. One last thing spread the word about why not me.https://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • John Nutting; Treat Brain Disorders Like Any Other Illness 20.05.2026 27分
    Send us Fan MailWe sit down with former Maine State Senator John Nutting to talk about why serious mental illness belongs in the medical system, not the jail system, and how court ordered treatment can keep people alive and communities safer. We walk through Maine’s Progressive Treatment Plan, the fight to fund and implement it, and what families can do to push for mental health legislation that actually works. • John Nutting’s background in public service and the case for treating brain disorders like any other medical condition • What Maine calls AOT and how the Progressive Treatment Plan works in practice • Why anosognosia changes the ethics and logistics of “voluntary” treatment • The gap between family needs and what policy often delivers • How cycling through hospitals and jails destroys bed capacity and budgets • Lessons from other states, including Kendra’s Law, Kevin’s Law, and concerns about voluntary-only models • What separates real legislation from bills that look good but fail in implementation • Concrete ways to advocate, find your state laws, and speak to the right lawmakers If you know someone who has a story to share, tell them to contact us at why notme.world. One last thing spread the word about why not me. INTRO/OUTRO Music: T. WildMantor Music BMIhttps://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Rep Ann Meyer: How A State Lawmaker Builds Mental Health Support That Works 18.05.2026 25分
    Send us Fan MailWe talk with Iowa State Representative Ann Meyer about how mental health legislation gets built and why access to care still fails families in crisis. We dig into provider shortages, the fight for mandatory follow-up after commitment, and how constituents can move lawmakers with personal stories and local relationships. • her path from nursing to the Iowa House and why constituent stories changed her focus • why access to mental health care breaks down during a crisis and what “waiting” really means • the provider shortage problem and steps to grow psychiatry and therapy capacity • incentives that help recruit and retain clinicians in rural states • why 30 days of treatment is often not enough for severe mental illness • the case management follow-up bill that passed the House then stalled in the Senate • how law enforcement and ERs absorb the cost when the system fails • homelessness, shelter rules, and the overlap with substance use disorder • how to speed change through education, budgeting strategies, and persistent advocacy • why reaching out to your state legislator works and how to do it with a personal story If you know someone who has a story to share, tell them to contact us at why notme.world. One last thing spread the word about why not me. INTRO/OUTRO Music: T. WildMantor Music BMIhttps://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Senator Christine Cohen and advocate Denise Paley Legislating Mental Health Care 15.05.2026 32分
    Send us Fan MailWe sit down with Connecticut State Senator Christine Cohen and advocate Denise Paley to unpack how mental health legislation gets built, watered down, and sometimes rescued through strategy and coalition work. We focus on crisis intervention training, prison mental health care, and the hard questions around rights, re-entry, and what real accountability looks like. • Senator Cohen’s personal path into mental health advocacy • why mental health bills stall between chambers and committees • compromise as a necessity and a long-term risk • budget priorities and the fight to fund care • stigma around mental illness and incarcerated people • how advocates and legislators build trust and momentum • crisis intervention team training as a practical reform • re-entry realities and why untreated illness drives recidivism • staffing shortages for corrections officers and mental health providers • Assisted Outpatient Treatment and the ethics of forced care • anosognosia and why refusal is not always choice • prevention through school-based mental health support • coalition building and making marginalized people visible If you know someone who has a story to share, tell them to contact us at whynotme.world. One last thing spread the word about why not me. INTRO/OUTRO Music: T. WildMantor Music BMIhttps://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Senator Cindy Friedman Explains What It Takes To Fix A Broken Mental Health System 13.05.2026 28分
    Send us Fan MailWe sit down with Massachusetts Senator Cindy Friedman to talk about how mental health laws change real access to care, and why families still hit walls even when “parity” exists. We dig into AOT, crisis diversion, insurance limits, and the practical fixes that keep people out of ERs and jails. • her personal path into serious mental illness advocacy and why systems matter • what changed after the Mental Health ABC Act 2.0 and why outpatient demand rises • why reimbursement rates still skew against behavioral health despite parity laws • how crisis-first funding leaves ongoing care underpaid and hard to find • trauma as a driver of worsening illness and the gap in trauma-informed support • why Massachusetts has no AOT law and how old legal standards shape treatment today • addressing fears of coercion while explaining least restrictive court-ordered services • co-responder teams that pair police with social workers for de-escalation • restoration centers as an alternative to ER screening and quick discharge • mental illness inside county jails and how sheriffs can shift outcomes • rural mental health access challenges plus telehealth parity and community clinics • why psychiatric meds are not one-size-fits-all and how insurers resist trial periods if you know someone who has a story to share tell them to contact us at whynotme.world one last thing spread the word about why not me our conversations our inspiring guest the show you are not alone in this world https://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Senator Manka Dhingra: A Senator Maps The Gap Between Passing A Bill And Actually Helping People 11.05.2026 26分
    Send us Fan MailWe talk with Washington State Senator Manka Dhingra about why mental health care so often lands in the justice system and what it takes to change that through smart legislation and real implementation. We dig into funding, workforce, 988 crisis response, diversion programs, and how communities can push practical mental health reform that actually reaches people. • her path from prosecutor work to mental health court and forensic mental health • why jails and prisons function as default mental health hospitals • the biggest legislative roadblocks: funding levels and views of individual liberty • assisted outpatient treatment in Washington and why implementation varies by county • how Washington built a stakeholder-driven model to implement 988 • oversight, metrics, and the workforce shortage that blocks care even with funding • rural mental health access, telehealth, and consultation lines like PAL • diversion options from first law enforcement contact through jail re-entry supports • sharing best practices across states through conferences, data, and evidence • community-driven policymaking and contacting elected officials with solutions If you know someone who has a story to share, tell them to contact us at why notme.world. One last thing spread the word about why not me. INTRO/OUTRO Music: T. WildMantor Music BMIhttps://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Dr Tim Murphy: How A Psychologist In Congress Rewired Mental Health Policy 08.05.2026 30分
    Send us Fan MailWe sit down with former Congressman and psychologist Tim Murphy to show how mental health laws really get made and why “good ideas” often get changed or stripped before they ever help families. We dig into Medicaid rules, treatment access, psychosis risks, and the hard truth that silence is how broken systems stay in place. • the real path of a bill from idea to compromise to final vote • why mental health policy creates intense conflict between groups • assisted outpatient treatment as an alternative to repeated hospitalization • how “gravely disabled” standards shape who can get care • Medicaid payment rules that discourage psychiatric beds and longer stays • why Congressional Budget Office scoring can derail reforms • what happens when severe mental illness is handled in jails • solitary confinement as a driver of worsening symptoms and suicide risk • high potency marijuana and the rising risk of psychosis • the estimated $340B to $380B annual cost of schizophrenia • families left holding the system together without guidance • HIPAA and confidentiality blocking parents from sharing critical history • why large organizations lose focus and stall action • how autism and schizophrenia advocacy can find common ground • practical steps to educate legislators through emails letters and visits If you know someone who has a story to you, tell them to contact us at why notme.world. One last time, spread the word about why not me. INTRO/OUTRO Music: T. WildMantor Music BMIhttps://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • NSSC: Voices of Change Part 3: Serious Mental Illness, Missed Care, and the Criminal Justice Gap 06.05.2026 29分
    Send us Fan MailWe bring together seven voices to face the hardest question families live with: when severe mental illness and psychosis take over, what does “choice” really mean. We share what it looks like when schools, hospitals, and law enforcement treat brain illness like behavior, and we lay out concrete steps that can shorten the gap to real care.• capacity and consent when someone refuses help during psychosis• power of attorney and psychiatric advance directives plus where they fall short• anosognosia explained through dementia comparisons and street homelessness• the “10-year gap” to diagnosis and why mandatory care and AOT come up• early warning signs of psychosis and why peers and schools need training• privacy barriers and why HIPAA is often misread or over-restricted• CIT training realities and the need for the right officers• frustration with professional leadership and the call for more beds and workforce training• legislative paths including HR 4022 and ending the IMD exclusionBefore we jump in, if you haven't already, I invite you to tap follow.If you know someone who has a story to share, tell them to contact us at why notme.world.One last thing. Spread the word about why not me.Music INTRO?OUTRO: T. WildMantor Music BMIhttps://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • NSSC: Voices of Change Part 2: Serious Mental Illness, Missed Care, and the Criminal Justice Gap 04.05.2026 28分
    Send us Fan MailWe sit with seven voices to name what happens when psychosis and serious mental illness are misunderstood, under-treated, and pushed into jails, courts, and the streets. We challenge the quiet standard of neglect and outline what it takes to turn awareness into policy, funding, and care that actually saves lives. • failures in jail-based competency restoration and medication continuity • why anosognosia is under-taught and widely misunderstood • the life expectancy gap for schizophrenia and why it should alarm all of us • first-episode psychosis dismissed at intake unless suicide is stated • families carrying trauma in silence and why tragedies stay out of public view • reframing “crime” as illness when actions happen during psychosis • culture change through education and responsible media storytelling • courts naming behavioral health as a top driver of caseloads and cost • coalition-building across chambers and parties to move stalled bills • cost comparisons of hospitalization and incarceration versus treatment up front • homelessness as a revolving door and the role of AOT • the Medicaid IMD exclusion as a barrier to beds, housing, and long-term care Before we jump in, if you haven't already, I invite you to tap follow. If you know someone who has a story to share, tell them to contact us at why notme.world. Spread the word about why not me. INTRO/OUTRO: T. WildMantor Music BMIhttps://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • NSSC: Voices of Change Part 1: Serious Mental Illness, Missed Care, and the Criminal Justice Gap 01.05.2026 28分
    Send us Fan MailWe bring together seven voices to talk honestly about serious mental illness and why families are pushed to wait for crisis before help is allowed. We challenge outdated laws, uneven state systems, and stigma while naming practical fixes that can make outpatient care real and measurable. • mental health codes built for inpatient care in an outpatient world • step-up assisted outpatient treatment and why earlier petitions matter • accountability gaps when AOT lacks judge involvement • voluntary programs colliding with anosognosia in schizophrenia • stigma and discrimination treating brain disease differently than other medical emergencies • early intervention standards shifting from “dangerousness” to “risk of harm” • discharge planning and why follow-up community treatment changes outcomes • Arizona and California as opposites on laws, funding, and hospital beds • criminal justice and forensic systems filling the void left by civil care • medication non-adherence, substance use, and the revolving door to rehospitalization • recruiting and training psychiatrists and clinicians to handle the hardest cases • families as full-time caregivers with little support and no consistent standard of care • building statewide councils to align stakeholders and move legislation I invite you to tap follow. If you know someone who has a story to share, tell them to contact us at why notme.world. One last thing, spread the word about why not me.https://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Dr Rachel Moseley: Autistic Voices, Challenges, Joys, and Research Empathy 29.04.2026 29分
    Send us Fan MailDr. Rachel Moseley on Autistic Suicide Prevention, Masking, Misdiagnosis, and Autistic Menopause Host Tony Mantor in Nashville welcomes returning guest Dr. Rachel Mosley to discuss her UK-based research on autistic suicidality, self-injury, masking/burnout, misdiagnosis, and menopause. Mosley explains that changes in autistic suicide rates are hard to track due to delayed and incomplete reporting, and cites data indicating suicide as the leading cause of death in autistic children in the National Child Mortality Database, likely undercounted due to missed diagnoses. Autistic participants in her research emphasize suicide prevention requires systemic societal change addressing stigma, discrimination, bullying, education accessibility, employment, financial security, and healthcare. They discuss clinicians mistaking autism for mental illness, common misdiagnosis as borderline personality disorder, the safety-driven nature of masking, and the complex emotions and relief of late diagnosis. Moseley challenges the “lack of empathy” narrative and highlights autistic joy through passions, sensory joy, and stimming. She also presents her book, "Autistic Menopause," featuring interviews with 16 autistic people. Show Welcome Meet Dr Rachel Mosley Suicide Research Update revention Needs System Change Misdiagnosis And Cure Myths Mental Health And Masking Autistic Girls And Early Diagnosis Late Diagnosis Emotions Empathy Myth Debunked Autistic Joy And Flourishing Changing Systems And Policy Autistic Menopause Book Final Thanks And Outro INTRO/OUTRO: T.Wild Mantor Music BMI The content on Why Not Me: Embracing Autism amd Mental Health Worldwide, including discussions on mental health, autism, and related topics, is provided for informational and entertainment purposes only. The views and opinions expressed by guests are their own and do not reflect those of the podcast, its hosts, or affiliates.Why Not Me is not a medical or mental health professional and does not endorse or verify the accuracy, efficacy, safety of any treatments, programs, or advice discussed.Listeners should consult qualified healthcare professionals, such as licensed therapists, psychologists, or physicians, before making decisions about mental health or autism- related care.Reliance on this podcast's contents is at the listener's own risk. Why Not Me is not liable for any outcomes, financial or otherwise, resulting from actions taken based on the information provided.https://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • John A. King: Trauma to Triumph by Giving a Voice to the Voiceless 27.04.2026 27分
    Send us Fan MailTransforming Trauma into Purpose: John King's Journey on Why Not Me In this episode of Why Not Me, embracing Autism and Mental Health Worldwide, host Tony Mantor interviews John King, a trauma recovery advocate, author, speaker, and survivor. John shares his compelling journey from being trafficked and abused as a child to becoming a prominent advocate for trauma recovery, neurodiversity, and anti-human trafficking. He discusses his recent autism diagnosis, the challenges of masking, and his methods for healing and resilience. John emphasizes the significance of authenticity, self-discipline, and relentless resilience in transforming trauma into a purpose-driven life. He also talks about his foundation, Give Them a Voice, and his future aspirations as a writer. This episode offers profound insights and practical advice for anyone facing similar struggles and endeavors to inspire and empower listeners worldwide. 01:08 Meet Today's Guest: John, a Trauma Recovery Advocate 02:00 John's Journey and Diagnosis 03:22 Steps to Healing and Managing Trauma 04:30 Understanding Trauma in the Body 05:52 Navigating Social Interactions and Self-Discipline 06:54 John's Recent Autism Diagnosis 08:43 The Venn Diagram and Living Authentically 10:37 Handling Bad Days and Emotional Challenges 14:10 John's Mission to Help Others Heal 16:24 Changing the Stigma Around Male Trauma 18:43 Reframing the Inner Narrative 20:44 Four Key Steps to Getting Back on Track 22:43 Give Them a Voice Foundation and Future Work 25:49 Conclusion and Final Thoughts INTRO/OUTRO : T. Wild Mantor Music BMI The content on Why Not Me: Embracing Autism amd Mental Health Worldwide, including discussions on mental health, autism, and related topics, is provided for informational and entertainment purposes only. The views and opinions expressed by guests are their own and do not reflect those of the podcast, its hosts, or affiliates.Why Not Me is not a medical or mental health professional and does not endorse or verify the accuracy, efficacy, safety of any treatments, programs, or advice discussed.Listeners should consult qualified healthcare professionals, such as licensed therapists, psychologists, or physicians, before making decisions about mental health or autism- related care.Reliance on this podcast's contents is at the listener's own risk. Why Not Me is not liable for any outcomes, financial or otherwise, resulting from actions taken based on the information provided.https://tonymantor.comhttps://Facebook.com/tonymantorhttps://instagram.com/tonymantorhttps://twitter.com/tonymantorhttps://youtube.com/tonymantormusicintro/outro music bed written by T. WildWhy Not Me the World music published by Mantor Music (BMI)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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