Dr. R. Layla Salek knows
firsthand the financial strain that families experience when struggling to help
a loved one with mental illness or autism. As the daughter of a mother
diagnosed with bipolar disorder, Dr. Salek ‘s passion for working with children
with mental illness started very young. She has also worked with children with
autism spectrum disorders since 2001.
As a behaviorist and
daughter of mental illness, Dr. Salek understands the plight of millions of
families in need of support, medication, counseling, health insurance, and
respite care. “It is apparent to me that these services are expensive and no
one agency has enough funding, staff, knowledge, or compassion to help these
families in need,” she says.
What can be done? Dr. Salek
found a solution that combines her love of helping children and her love of
photography. She takes artistic photographs of toys, such as paint brushes,
puzzle pieces and stuffed animals, which she then prints on children’s clothes
and stationery. The project is called Susie Bean. Thirty percent of all profits
go to charities and thoroughly researched service providers that create
scholarships for families with children with autism or mental illness in need
of financial assistance. “We do not want parents to deny their child
life-changing services due to lack of funds,” says Dr. Salek. “Our goal is to
offer scholarships in every city around the world.”
Organizations that
want to participate in the Susie Bean scholarship project must be able to identify families
needing financial support for their child’s services, be willing to offer scholarships for necessary services to those
families in need, and provide accurate, honest financial records regarding how Susie
Bean scholarships are allocated on a bi-annual basis. Those who do meet these
criteria are asked to send a request letter to rlsalek@susiebean.com, outlining the
services they provide to either children with mental illness or autism spectrum
disorders.
Donations can also be made at Susie Bean’s website. As the site
exclaims, “Change can come in any size!”