To Open or Not to Open? Navigating the Camp Opening Decision in the Time of COVID

To Open or Not to Open? Navigating the Camp Opening Decision in the Time of COVID

Introduction to Mindfulness Meditation and Yogacalm for Grieving Children, Teens and Adults!

*This playback is available to active NACG Members Only.

Designed to “End the Suffering About Money” and Build a Base of Individual Donors to Sustain Your Mission and Your Organization

*This playback is available to active NACG Members Only.

What Lies Beneath – Understanding the Basic Needs of Children

Exploring Día de los Muertos as a Way to Support Bereavement Programming

*This playback is available to active NACG Members Only.

From Grieving Children to Contented Old Men: How True Friendship Rescued Us

Establishing a Trauma-Informed Parent-Child Relationship in the Wake of Covid

For some grieving families, Covid-19 was the catalyst for nonstop stress, distress, and trauma. Literature shows that under persistent states of stress, family systems can become compromised in areas such as parenting practices, communication, routines, structure, and emotional cohesion (Sheidow, et al., 2014). Research shows that strong family cohesion, positive parenting practices and structure are associated with building resiliency in youth (Haine et al., 2008). Incorporating an evidence-based framework of Attachment, Regulation, and Competency (ARC), attendees will be able to increase their knowledge in these three domains and receive applicable interventions to utilize in a group setting that help facilitate the restoration of familial cohesion between caregivers and youth (Blaustein & Kinniburgh, 2018). The ARC framework is effective with diverse populations, across various developmental stages, and can be applied in clinical and nonclinical settings (Arvidson, et al., 2011). Each domain of ARC is concurrently supported with the evidence-based practices used to support grieving youth and families.”

Gender & Sexuality: Awareness & Responsiveness

 

This training provides healthcare professionals with the necessary skills to offer more mindful, resourceful, and inclusive support to their clients. There is a focus on the intersectionality of biological sex, gender, and sexuality as it pertains to identity development. We will also explore the necessity of trauma-informed care as it relates to the clinical implications of marginalization, and how we can utilize our positions to create safer spaces for our clients.

Motherless Daughters and the Long Arc of Grief: How Women’s Stories of Early Loss Evolve Over Time

Living Well in the Face of Death: A Conversation with Hospice and Palliative Care Physician B.J. Miller