logo
#

Latest news with #BrookeEby

Ice Bucket Challenge Returns with Mental Health Focus
Ice Bucket Challenge Returns with Mental Health Focus

Arabian Post

time14-05-2025

  • Health
  • Arabian Post

Ice Bucket Challenge Returns with Mental Health Focus

A decade after its viral debut, the Ice Bucket Challenge has re-emerged with a renewed mission: promoting mental health awareness and suicide prevention. Spearheaded by students at the University of South Carolina, the 2025 iteration, dubbed the #SpeakYourMIND Challenge, has rapidly gained traction on platforms like TikTok and Instagram. The campaign was initiated by Wade Jefferson, a junior at USC, following the tragic loss of two friends to suicide. Organized through the university's Mental Illness Needs Discussion Club, the challenge encourages participants to douse themselves with ice water, share the experience online, and nominate others to do the same or donate to Active Minds, a nonprofit dedicated to youth mental health. Since its launch, the movement has surpassed expectations, raising over $345,000 for Active Minds. The organization's website has experienced a significant surge in traffic, reflecting the campaign's widespread impact. The original 2014 Ice Bucket Challenge, aimed at raising awareness for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis , garnered global attention and raised over $220 million for research. While the current focus has shifted to mental health, the ALS Association has expressed support for the new initiative, highlighting the shared goal of fostering awareness and support for critical health issues. However, some members of the ALS community have voiced concerns about the challenge's new direction. Brooke Eby, an ALS patient and influencer, expressed frustration on social media, emphasizing the ongoing need for ALS research and the risk of diluting the original message. Despite differing opinions, the #SpeakYourMIND Challenge has garnered participation from various public figures, including Peyton Manning and James Charles, further amplifying its reach. Live television segments, such as ITV's 'This Morning,' have also featured spontaneous participations, bringing the challenge to broader audiences. See also AI Browser Shift Sparks Alarms Over Online Privacy

Brooke Eby
Brooke Eby

Time​ Magazine

time08-05-2025

  • Health
  • Time​ Magazine

Brooke Eby

Brooke Eby was just 33 when she was diagnosed in 2022 with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis—ALS, otherwise known as Lou Gehrig's disease. For a couple months, she hid in bed eating M&Ms. Then, even though she really didn't want to go, she emerged to attend a close friend's wedding with her trusted pals. But she and the bride's grandmother were using identical walkers. Eby remembers telling her friends, ''We gotta go. I can't do this. This is way too embarrassing,'' she says. 'At that point, I would just burst into tears because I was not ready to talk about it.' But Eby, who has no family history of the neurodegenerative disease—which has no cure—took her friends' advice and stuck around. Within a couple hours, the bride was doing the limbo under Eby's walker, and Eby was giving people walker rides all over the dance floor. Everyone was laughing with her, and for the first time, she felt comfortable with her new normal. Four years later, Eby has more than 400,000 followers across her social media accounts. She's gained that following by posting frank, often laugh-out-loud funny videos about life with a terminal disease. Eby maintains her sunny humor through it all—a 'coping mechanism,' she recognizes, but one that draws people into her world. Some videos have centered on the unique challenges of dating with a terminal illness; others share the adaptive clothing and tools that help her function. In one recent video, Eby declared that she wouldn't wish ALS on anyone—but did wish 'people could have it just for a day.' Her videos are perhaps the best way to drop thousands of strangers into the life of a young person sentenced to death from a disease often associated with, as Eby puts it, 'grandpas.' Eby also started a patient community, ALStogether, which is a space for patients and caregivers to connect and support one another. 'It's like a virtual headquarters for the ALS community,' she says, and has grown to include more than 1,200 members. Still, Eby doesn't think of herself as an influencer. 'I see it as a video diary,' she says. 'I'm not doing this for any reason other than to share my story and hope that it gets people connected to ALS.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store