Every set has a dress code. Make mental health part of yours👕🎬. Our Calltime t-shirt is out now. Every purchase supports our work and keeps this conversation alive. We couldn’t do it without you!
Here are a few ways you can join: ✨ Wear an Orange Shirt and share the message 📖 Explore the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s 94 Calls to Action and reflect on how we can respond. 📚 Read and uplift the voices of Indigenous authors and creators. 🎶 Join local events in your community.
🧡 September 30 – National Day for Truth and Reconciliation 🧡
This day invites you to pause, reflect, and honor Survivors of residential schools, their families, and communities. It’s a time to listen, learn, and commit to meaningful action in the spirit of reconciliation.
🌱 Rebuilding connection during downtime doesn’t have to be complicated. A text. A coffee. A shared laugh with someone who understands the rhythm of this industry.
💜 Naloxone saves lives. Carrying a kit and knowing how to use it can reverse an opioid overdose. Supporting harm reduction and checking in on each other matters.
🎬 To our film and entertainment community: let’s protect each other, talk openly, and keep this conversation alive.
Since 2016, more than 16,000 people in BC have died from toxic, unregulated drugs. That’s an average of 5 lives lost every day. Most were between 30 and 59 years old, and the majority were men.
At Calltime, we believe no one should carry this grief alone. We’re committed to being part of the fight: speaking up, standing together, and taking action for a future free from overdose. 💜
The awareness doesn’t end with August. Neither does our care.
International Overdose Awareness Day (Aug 31) is one day on the calendar. For many, the impact of overdose is felt every single day. Families, friends, and whole communities are grieving.
✨ Speak up if you hear anti-LGBTQ+ comments in the workplace. Silence isn’t neutral. ✨ Bring LGBTQ+ and non-LGBTQ+ friends and family together in shared, welcoming spaces. ✨ Follow and support pro-LGBTQ+ organizations on social media. Get involved. Stay informed.
Being an Ally Means Showing Up, Every Day! Allyship isn’t just a Pride Month thing. It’s everyday actions that build safer, more inclusive spaces for 2SLGBTQ+ folks at work, at home, and online. Here are a few ways you can practice real allyship: