Judith Martinez ’14 Teams With Pop Star Selena Gomez to Expand Mental Health Services in Educational Settings
Santa Clara is represented in Gomez's new national mental health college ambassador program.
Last year, when Judith Martinez ā14 was asked to join Selena Gomezās new beauty brand committed to breaking down unrealistic standards of perfection, she quickly recognized a natural intersection between Gomezās mission at , and Martinezās own nonprofit, .
Founded in 2014, InHerShoes works to empower young girls and women to redefine their futures and live authentic lives through one question: āWhat would you do if you were 1 percent more courageous?ā&²Ō²ś²õ±č;
But Martinezās personal mental health awakeningāand its connection to her identity and socio-cultural expectationsāwas another, more personal incentive for the ĢĒŠÄ“«Ć½ alum to sign on with the pop star, who has been upfront with fans about her depression, anxiety, and a bipolar diagnosis.
āMental health is personal to her,ā says Martinez of the global icon celebrated for her singing and acting, who is no stranger to the spotlight, or trying to live up to impossible standards. Shaping positive conversations about self-acceptance and mental health has been Selenaās way of ādrawing a line in the sand,ā and destigmatizing mental health, says Martinez. āRare is more than a beauty brand. Itās about helping everyone get to a place of self-love and acceptance. Itās about owning what makes you rare.ā&²Ō²ś²õ±č;
The cosmetics companyās mission to increase access to mental health services in educational settings happens through its non-profit arm, the One percent of Rare Beatyās sales go to the Fund, which aims to raise $100 million over the next 10 years. Additional donations from philanthropic foundations, corporate partners, and individuals already has helped the Fund distribute at least $1.2 million to eight U.S. mental health organizations.
In her new role as a global Social Impact Manager, Martinez is not only working with Gomezās Rare Beauty team, but its of experts from several leading universities, organizations, and companies focused on mental health for young people. She's involved with more than a dozen Rare Impact Fund grantees across continents, spearheading educational mental health content for the brandās 3.4 million-plus global audience, and is helping to develop and launch innovative programs such as the program dedicated to youth mental health advocacy with colleges and universities.
Martinez constantly draws on her own 1 percent more courage in her work to destigmatize mental healthāparticularly in an industry that has historically been known to foster stigma.
First Lady Jill Biden (far left), forum participant, and Selena Gomez, at the Mental Health Youth Action Forum.
Gen Zās mental health struggles
The Los Angeles native is acutely aware of the need to bolster mental health solutions on higher ed campuses where students are still grappling to adjust to life after the isolation of the pandemic.
āThereās something about finding safety in environments where weāre able to talk about how weāre really doing, and that itās OK not to be OK,ā says Martinez.
She knows the statistics: 46 percent of Generation Z, those ages 10 to 25, experienced increased mental health struggles during the pandemic, according to a by the American Psychological Association. But she and others suggest that the COVID-19 period came with a silver lining.
āI think the pandemic has given people permission to talk about mental health,ā she says. From her work with Rare Impact, the studies sheās read, the experts sheās talked to, and the conversations sheās had with members of Gen Z over the last year, a few themes have emerged.
āOptimism, vulnerability, and connection,ā says Martinez. āPeople are craving vulnerability and connection, and being allowed to tell their stories is a way to de-stigmatize the subject of mental health and how we view it,ā she says.
She points to a recent report about Gen Z and mental health in the U.S. that notes 87 percent of Gen Z in the U.S. say that school and work hinders their mental health. But 80 percent also say they currently use āself-careā as a form of mental health care, including therapy and mindfulness.
āSelf-care in college was never a priority for me let alone a way of life,ā she says. āIt was a foreign concept for me while I was in school, and Iām grateful it doesnāt have to be that way anymore.ā
Happyāon the outside
Growing up in a multi-generational home in Southern California, Martinezās concept of self-care was just learning how to cope with her immigrant familyās ups and downs. āSurvival was my self-care,ā she says. So she focused on becoming a perfect student, and received a scholarship to Santa Clara, a first-generation member of her Filipino-American family to attend college. At ĢĒŠÄ“«Ć½, the philosophy and pre-law major continued to study hard, earned good grades, made friends, and joined clubs. By senior year, she was elected student body president.
Martinez seemed happy. And much of the time she was. But a handful of close friends witnessed a more troubling side of her life over the years, from the crying jags after a painful breakup, to sobbing grief following a dear childhood friendās death from an overdose, to her worrisome lack of appetite and utter exhaustion.
āMy roommate and a handful of floormates in Dunne Hall, they were my life rafts during my freshman year,ā says Martinez. In her senior year, she says, she began to realize she was depressed. Driving much of her despair was a painful truth: after years of working towards law school and her parentsā dream for her success, Martinez knew she didnāt want to be a lawyer. Yet like many others, the idea of sharing her feelings of guilt and the emotions surrounding that decision with outsiders, āairing your dirty laundry,ā as those around her called it, made her reluctant to seek professional help.
āIt (depression) never even crossed my mind, I thought it was normal. I figured I was just sad,ā recalls Martinez. āBut the thing that was going through my mind was, āI should feel happy, right? Look at all these things Iām doing! Iāve checked off all the boxes! So, whatās āwrongā with me?āā She didnāt know it then, but these and other experiences would lead to her lifeās work today.
āAuthentic and vulnerable conversationsā
Her struggle to overcome the expectations of others inspired Martinez, shortly after graduation, to decline her law school acceptance and take a huge chance by starting InHerShoes in 2014. Since then, her platform that strives to build womenās courage and confidence in themselves and their futures has taken her around the country and the world, attracting partnerships with high-profile companies and celebrities advocating for women, such as Stuart Weitzman, Coach, and Kate Spade, and tennis star and entrepreneur Serena Williams.
Martinez is now doing the same on behalf of the Rare Impact Fund. The last year has been full of events, whether joining forces with for the first-ever Mental Health Youth Action Forum, to Rare Beautyās first Mental Health Virtual Event. As chair of InHerShoes, Martinez beams with pride as her staff continues the day-to-day operations, and alumni of their programming have joined their ranks.
In all of her work, Martinez says the key to de-stigmatizing mental health is to encourage people to have āauthentic and vulnerable conversationsā about what theyāre going through.
āPart of it, too, comes from a lack of education about mental health. These complex terms are things that we might hear about, but maybe don't really know what they mean,ā she explains.
āWhat is a bi-polar disorder? And what's the difference between anxiety and depression, and maybe you're just having a bad day? How do we talk about our emotions and can we even identify what we are feeling? Is it really sadness, or is it grief?ā says Martinez. āThere are nuances, and it takes courage to engage in mental health, especially our own.
President Joe Biden takes a selfie with youth participants at the Mental Health Youth Action Forum.
The ambassador program
To that end, this year she created and launched the , which has brought together 28 college and graduate students across the U.S. to be mental health champions on their campuses.
Together with the Rare Impact team and each campusās mental health partners, the students will focus on mental health advocacy, community building, and personal growth. As part of the program, these Ambassadors will also have the opportunity to be Youth Delegates at this yearās Youth United Nations General Assembly, contributing their voices, ideas, and solutions to some of the worldās most pressing mental health challenges for youth.
āI wanted Santa Clara to be a part of this program,ā says Martinez, who reached out to some of her former mentors at ĢĒŠÄ“«Ć½ for their thoughts and suggestions about the idea. āI would be remiss to not go back to my roots and see how I can contribute in some way.ā&²Ō²ś²õ±č;
Ariel Perlman ā23, who is president of Santa Claraās student-based Peer Health Educators Program, was a natural choice for ĢĒŠÄ“«Ć½ās 2022-23 ambassador, says Martinez.
āWhat I would love to see Ariel and the other students do,ā she says, āis be able to translate and use this experience as a blueprint for how they can make a difference through the lens of mental health, whether itās through your campus communityāor at the dinner table with loved ones.ā
Judith Martinez '14 in Washington D.C. in May, where Selena Gomez, and the pop starās Rare Impact Fund team, attended the Mental Health Youth Action Forum, hosted by First Lady Jill Biden at the White House.