Oakville Beaver, 21 Jun 2018, p. 12

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in si de ha lto n. co m O ak vi lle B ea ve r | T hu rs da y, Ju ne 21 ,2 01 8 | 12 JAPANESE MAPLE BLOODGOOD 2 gal. pot $3999 BOUGAINVILLEA HANGINGBASKET 10" pot $1499 SAVE $40 SAVE $25 $1299 ROSES 2 gal. pot - Assorted Hybrid Tea, Grandiflora, Floribunda, Climbing $999 75 PER STORE 2 gal. pot - Assorted Hybrid Tea, 150 PER STORE 150 PER STORE 100 PER STORE JUST ADD COLO URUST ADD COLO URLOU R LOL U R SALES PERIOD | JUNE 21- 27, 2018 No rain-checks or layaways. Selectionwill vary from store to store. 50% OFF July 5 -18 DD C 40% OFF June 28 -July 4 UUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUJUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUSU JJJJJJUUUS JNo rain-checks or layaways.Selectionwill vary from JNOW 30% OFF June 21- 27 GREATTIMETOPLANT! ENJOYSAVINGSON TERRA QUALITY PRODUCTS! YOUDECIDE... WHEN&HOWMUCH YOUWANTTOSAVE! 40 9'PUSHBUTTON TILTHEXAGON UMBRELLA $10000 3999Reg. $79.99 Reg. $39.99 9 Reg. $18.99 Reg. $229.99 Reg. $29.99 SAVE $9 SAVE $130 SAVE $17 100 PER STORE ASTILBE ASSORTED 2 gal. pot $999 Reg. $24.99 SAVE $15 0 40 PER STORE THERE'S SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT AND FRESHSTOCKARRIVING WEEKLY!4WEEK SALEWHERE SAVINGSGROW!SHOP EARLY FOR THE LARGEST SELECTION.SALE ITEMSARECLEARLYMARKED.WHILE SUPPLIES LAST. FRIDAY2DOORCRASHERS SATURDAY2DOORCRASHERS SUNDAY2DOORCRASHERS GERANIUM PLANTER 10"10" potpot LES PERIOD | JUNE 21- 27, 2018 FOLLOW US ON: www.terragreenhouses.com CHECK ONLINE FOR UPCOMING TERRA WORKSHOPS &SEMINARS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Mon - Tues 8 am - 6 pm | Wed - Fri 8 am - 8 pm Sat - Sun 8 am - 6 pm 2DOOR CRASHER SPECIALS FRIDAY, SATURDAY& SUNDAY starting at 8:00am while quantities last! tions. She died by suicide on Oct. 25, 2017; Samantha was 25. Her mother, Bonnie Sailes, said her daughter had started something by sharing her story with others and she felt obligated to keep it going. That's why Bonnie will be speaking at the Dis- tress Centre Halton's inaugural Walk2Talk event Saturday (June 23) at Bronte Heritage Water- front Park in Oakville.front Park in Oakville.f According to Bonnie, Samantha had been bat- tling her mental health illnesses since age 15, when she first attempted suicide. There would be another attempt during her third year at Mount Allison University, in Sackville, N.B., where she was studying linguistics. That one would've proven fatal, noted Bonnie, if her daughter hadn't called her at 3 a.m. and Bonnie didn't then call an ambulance to her resi- dence. Over the span of a decade, Samantha was hos- pitalized on three occasions and would stay there for weeks at a time, her mother said.for weeks at a time, her mother said.f Samantha would eventually move to a Toron- to apartment and start working at a spa for a time. "Honestly, I'm still dealing with it; still trying to process it," Bonnie said of her daughter's death. "Initially, it was utter shock, denial, be- cause I did think she was getting help and things had improved." In January 2017, Samantha started getting "real help," as her mother described, from a To- ronto hospital that taught her life skills to com- plement the medication she had been taking for a decade - the dosages and drugs prescribed would change over the years. "Medication is a bit of a process. The doctors don't have a magic wand they wave to prescribe something and you feel better," said Bonnie. "It's not a quick fix; you have to be patient." She also said taking the medication could be a challenge to those battling mental health issues - it was for Samantha, at times, who would tell her mother there were times she wouldn't want to go out to get her medication. And that's why Bonnie said she believes teach- ing people life skills is just as important to help them recognize their illness and deal with it. "I would tell her she could call the pharmacy and they could deliver her medication to her," she noted. Both Bonnie and Samantha (in her videos) de- scribed depression as a way of seeing the world, and the people involved in their lives, differently. "Their views are distorted," Bonnie ex- plained. "We had conversations over the years about certain things I had said to her while she was growing up and how her brain would inter- pret things in a completely warped way; taking them to the extreme and the negative." Samantha's bipolar disorder would have her completely depressed one morning and then hours later she would be fine, described Bonnie. "You would pass it off as she's a teen, but it was extreme," she said. "You could see when she'd fall in different periods, the absolute chaos, and then she would be able to pick herself up." In one of her online videos, Samantha de- NEWS lContinued from page 3 Samantha was hospitalized on three occasions in 10 years l See SAMANTHA, page 15

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