Marilyn Peppers-Citizen

Biography

Marilyn Peppers-Citizen, PhD, MBA, MS, NBC-HWC, C-IAYT, is a certified yoga therapist, national board-certified health and wellness coach, and assistant professor in the Master of Science in Yoga Therapy program at the Notre Dame of Maryland University School of Integrative Health. She specializes in aging well and has supported various communities to include veterans and their families and caregivers in health and well-being.

Nia Willis

BIOGRAPHY

Nia obtained her bachelor's and master's degrees in art therapy from Notre Dame of Maryland University. She has experience collaborating within a multidisciplinary approach in inpatient psychiatric, medical, and private practice settings to provide services to adolescents and adults. Nia has experience addressing various client concerns, including mood disorders, personality disorders, pain management, and eating disorders.

Author and NDMU alumna Penny Zang '04 reads from her new book, Doll Parts, a novel following two college friends, Nikki and Sadie, as they navigate young adulthood, grief, identity and more, from their small all-women's campus into an ever-deepening mystery.
 

 

PJ Lombardo

Eichner Fellow of Writing

Join the Campus Mission for a special mass celebrating Women's History Month.

Rudy Dehaney

Campus Minister
410-535-5565

Join the LNDL for a special conversation between award-winning journalist Shoshana Walter and bestselling and award-winning author Barbara Kingsolver as they chat about Walter’s book Rehab: An American Scandal. In this work, Walter, a Pulitzer finalist, exposes the country’s failed response to the opioid crisis, and the malfeasance, corruption, and snake oil which blight the drug rehabilitation industry.

Today, more people have access to treatment than ever before. So why isn’t it working? The answer is that in America—where anyone can get addicted—only certain people get a real chance to recover. Despite record numbers of overdose deaths, our default response is still to punish, while rehabs across the United States fail to incorporate scientifically proven strategies and exploit patients. 

In this book, you’ll find the stories of four people who represent the failures of the rehab-industrial complex, and the ways our treatment system often prevents recovery. April is a black mom in Philadelphia, who witnessed firsthand how the government’s punitive response to the crack epidemic impeded her mother’s recovery—and then her own. Chris, a young middle-class white man from Louisiana, received more opportunities in his addiction than April, including the chance to go to treatment instead of prison. Yet the only program the judge permitted was one that forced him to perform unpaid back-breaking labor at for-profit companies. Wendy is a mother from a wealthy suburb of Los Angeles, whose son died in a sober living home. She began investigating for-profit treatment programs—yet law enforcement and regulators routinely ignored her warnings, allowing rehab patients to die, again and again. Larry is a surgeon who himself struggled with addiction, and would eventually become one of the first Suboxone prescribers in the nation, drawing the scrutiny of the Drug Enforcement Administration. 

Be sure to register now to participate in this urgent conversation and learn insight on how we might fix the system to save lives.

About the Author: 
Shoshana Walter is a reporter for the Marshall Project covering the criminal justice system. Her reporting has been honored as a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and Selden Ring, and she has won the Knight Award for Public Service, the Edward R. Murrow Award, and the Livingston Award for Young Journalists. She started her work on the treatment system at The Center for Investigative Reporting, where her work appeared in The New York Times Magazine, in newspapers, and on NPR stations across the country. She is based in Oakland, California.

About the Guest Host: 
Barbara Ellen Kingsolver is a Pulitzer Prize-winning American novelist, essayist, and poet. Her widely known works include The Poisonwood Bible, the tale of a missionary family in the Congo, and Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, a nonfiction account of her family's attempts to eat locally. In 2023, she was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for the novel Demon Copperhead. Her work often focuses on topics such as social justice, biodiversity, and the interaction between humans and their communities and environments.


You’re invited to join the LNDL for a virtual conversation with acclaimed author Kate Quinn about her latest fantastical work, The Astral Library, which poses the question: Have you ever wished you could live inside a book? Welcome to the Astral Library, where books are not just objects, but doors to new worlds, new lives, and new futures.

Alexandria “Alix” Watson has learned one lesson from her barren childhood in the foster-care system: unlike people, books will never let you down. Working three dead-end jobs to make ends meet and knowing college is a pipe dream, Alix takes nightly refuge in the high-vaulted reading room at the Boston Public Library, escaping into her favorite fantasy novels and dreaming of far-off lands. Until the day she stumbles through a hidden door and meets the Librarian: the ageless, acerbic guardian of a hidden library where the desperate and the lost escape to new lives...inside their favorite books.

The Librarian takes a dazzled Alix under her wing, but before she can escape into the pages of her new life, a shadowy enemy emerges to threaten everyone the Astral Library has ever helped protect. Aided by a dashing costume-shop owner, Alix and the Librarian flee through the Regency drawing rooms of Jane Austen to the back alleys of Sherlock Holmes and the champagne-soaked parties of The Great Gatsby as danger draws inexorably closer. But who does their enemy really wish to destroy—Alix, the Librarian, or the Library itself?

Join us for Health Professions Exploration Day at Notre Dame of Maryland University, an in-person, on-campus event designed for prospective students interested in graduate and professional health programs. This experience offers the opportunity to explore programs in Occupational TherapyPharmacyNursingFamily Nurse Practitioner (FNP)Adult-Gerontology Nurse Practitioner (AGNP)Physician Assistant StudiesMaster of Arts in Art Therapy, and our School of Integrative Health. Attendees will tour state-of-the-art facilities and simulation labs, meet program leadership and faculty, and connect with other students pursuing advanced integrative and allied health care degrees, all while gaining valuable insight into academic pathways and career opportunities in the health professions. 

RSVP Here for Physician’s Assistant, Occupational Therapy, Nursing, Pharmacy, or Master of Arts in Art Therapy programs.  

RSVP Here for School of Integrative Health Programs.