Page 36 - Dr Pamela Peeke
P. 36

By Judith A. Habert













     Vivi Cortez can honestly say that she owes her life and   first time in her life that anyone had paid her a compliment.
     survival to the San Diego Center for Children.  In particular,    It was then that the music began healing her heart.  Vivi has
                                                              remembered one very important lesson that she learned at
                                                              SDCC from Sundiata.  “He told me to ‘Reach for Excellence,’
                                                              because anything else is just a waste of time.”  Today Vivi
                                                              is a grown woman with three young daughters of her own.
                                                              It has been over 15 years since she left the center, but she
                                                              has continued to follow those wise words from Sundiata and
                                                              today she has gone through some tough times a lot stronger
                                                              thanks to SDCC and Sundiata.
 36                                                           This is just one of the many stories that have come out of
                                                              this incredible facility located on 8 acres in Kearny Mesa.
                                                              We  often hear about the many “walks” and charity functions
                                                              going on in and around San Diego every weekend, but this is
                                                              one charity that is rarely mentioned yet has been responsible
                                                              for turning around the lives of so many children and fami-
                                                              lies in San Diego.  Founded in 1887, SDCC is San Diego’s
                                                              oldest accredited non-profit organization. Today, SDCC has
                                                              become a leader in providing mental health services to chil-
                                                              dren and families within our community. They offer a variety
                                                              of programs for children facing behavioral, emotional, social,
                                                              and educational challenges.

                                                              SDCC programs support Individualized Education Plans
                                                              (IEPs) and re-establishes the learning process while meeting
                                                              the specific mental health needs of the children and adoles-
                                                              cents of San Diego

                                                              Aside from their main facility in Kearny Mesa, there are
                                                              satellite facilities throughout San Diego County.  Other sites
                                                              include five day treatment programs serving both children
     the music program which has been run for the past 40 years   and adolescents, an outpatient program in two separate East
     by Sundiata Kata, the dedicated music program director.    County Locations, a school readiness program that serves
     Before coming to SDCC Vivi was a sexually abused child   children ages 0-5, a Foster Family Agency, a counseling cen-
     who went from program to program always knowing how      ter, one non-public school serving children and adolescents,
     to “work the system” and tell the counselors whatever (she   two residential treatment programs for children ages 6-13,
     knew) they wanted to hear, until they let her go home and   one residential treatment programs for Adolescents ages 13-
     back to her world - full of fear and anger.  Sundiata reached   17 located on the Kearny Mesa campus, and a wraparound
     through the barriers Vivi had constructed to keep herself   program to assure that a child’s return to their community is
     safe.  The first time Sundiata told her she had a beautiful   successful and that families have the tools needed to help
     singing voice Vivi broke into tears, realizing that this was the   their children to succeed
                                                      Issue 2, 2009
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