Smilow Wellness Workshop: Can I Grow through Difficult Experience like this Pandemic?
February 28, 2022Smilow Wellness Workshop: Can I Grow through Difficult Experience like this Pandemic?
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February
Dr. Kristine Olson, YNHH Chief Wellness Officer, and YNHH Director of Spiritual Care, Kendall Palladino, share ways to foster post-traumatic growth despite illness, grief, the pandemic, and being a caregiver.
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- 00:19I'm just gonna wait a minute to see.
- 00:22Looks like more people are.
- 00:24Logging into our zoom so.
- 00:27Hang tight for a moment.
- 00:29We will start. In just a moment.
- 00:47OK, let's begin and good
- 00:50afternoon and welcome everyone.
- 00:51My name is Bud Wasil.
- 00:54And I am the moderator for today's session.
- 00:57We're very happy you could join us
- 00:59for this informative presentation
- 01:01on can I grow through difficult
- 01:04experiences like this pandemic?
- 01:06With Doctor Christine Olson,
- 01:08Chief Wellness officer at Yale,
- 01:10New Haven Hospital.
- 01:12And Kendall Palladino,
- 01:14director of pastoral care at Yale,
- 01:16New Haven Hospital.
- 01:17So on behalf of the Smilow
- 01:19Wellness Workshop Committee,
- 01:21we welcome you both our presenters and
- 01:24very much looking forward to to your talk.
- 01:27And of course,
- 01:28welcome to our audience.
- 01:29We very much appreciate you being
- 01:31here today and hope you are well.
- 01:33Just a quick word too,
- 01:35about Smilow Wellness workshops.
- 01:37We offer these periodically to patients,
- 01:41their family volunteers,
- 01:43and staff with the mission of
- 01:46empowering individuals to take control
- 01:48of their own health and Wellness.
- 01:50The program features free
- 01:52interactive workshops.
- 01:53For now on zoom we do about
- 01:55three or four per year that
- 01:57reaffirm the importance of caring
- 01:59for the person as a whole.
- 02:01Body, mind and spirit.
- 02:03Designed to complement traditional
- 02:05lectures and health talks,
- 02:07each workshop focuses on Wellness.
- 02:10The committee who plans and conducts these
- 02:13workshops consists of diesel Boxleitner,
- 02:15Nicole Larissa, Denise Romano,
- 02:18Danielle Sagnella,
- 02:19Beverly Block and myself.
- 02:21And I would also like to recognize
- 02:23and thank Mark Casey from our
- 02:26audiovisual department who helps
- 02:28us with the technological side.
- 02:30So let us know if you have any
- 02:32suggestions for future topics.
- 02:33We're always looking for good ideas and
- 02:36remember to complete the evaluations
- 02:38that we're going to give at the end,
- 02:41so we really value your feedback.
- 02:44One other housekeeping note,
- 02:46we do ask that you use the
- 02:48question and answer feature
- 02:50throughout the presentation.
- 02:52I will be keeping an eye on that and
- 02:56imposing those questions and there
- 02:58will be an opportunity for you to
- 03:00share a little bit midway through.
- 03:04So let me introduce our speakers.
- 03:06Doctor Christine Olson,
- 03:07MD and Masters of Science,
- 03:10is a native Minnesotan graduate of the
- 03:13University of Minnesota Medical School.
- 03:16She's a returned peace core volunteer
- 03:19experienced in international
- 03:20health in post conflict zones.
- 03:23In conflict zone,
- 03:24she met her first role models of
- 03:27resilience and began studying the
- 03:29science of thriving and the systems that
- 03:32support it or detract detract from it.
- 03:34Doctor Christine Nelson came to
- 03:36Yale New Haven Hospital to train in
- 03:39internal medicine and Pediatrics,
- 03:41followed by a fellowship in health services,
- 03:43research and epidemiology at
- 03:46Weill Cornell Medical College.
- 03:48As a fellow,
- 03:50she studied how health policies and
- 03:52health system affect professional well
- 03:55being and how professional well being
- 03:57is an indicator of organizational
- 03:59performance in providing reliable
- 04:02access to cost effective, high quality.
- 04:05Patient centered care.
- 04:07She is nationally recognized for
- 04:09her work and combating burnout.
- 04:11In fostering joy in medicine.
- 04:14Doctor Olson was named Chief
- 04:16Wellness officer at Yale,
- 04:17New Haven Hospital in 2020,
- 04:19and she is committed to creating
- 04:22systems that allow those in it to
- 04:24flourish while in service to others.
- 04:29Kendall palladino.
- 04:31Was motivated to enter the field of
- 04:34spiritual care after having worked
- 04:36for Saint Teresa in Calcutta, India.
- 04:40Kendall is currently our Director of
- 04:42Spiritual Care or Pastoral Care at Yale.
- 04:45New Haven hospital. Uhm?
- 04:48He was encouraged by Mother Teresa
- 04:53in 1994 to consider the physical,
- 04:56spiritual, and emotional poverty
- 04:58that exists in the United States
- 05:01before returning to work at a leprosy
- 05:04hospital in southern Thailand.
- 05:06As a result,
- 05:07Kendall enrolled in clinical
- 05:09pastoral education and found a
- 05:11deep and abiding love for the
- 05:12mission of spiritual care.
- 05:16Kendall became interested in post
- 05:19traumatic growth when he noticed
- 05:21significant growth in outcomes data
- 05:23in grieving adult and children at
- 05:26the Healing Heart Center in Danbury,
- 05:28CT between 2000 and 2010,
- 05:31and in order to fully more to
- 05:35understand more fully what was
- 05:37happening in these people.
- 05:38He earned a doctorate in 2012 at
- 05:41the Princeton Theological Seminary
- 05:43with a dissertation on the subject
- 05:45of post traumatic growth.
- 05:47And loss.
- 05:48Clients who were impacted by major
- 05:51traumatic events like September 11th
- 05:54in the Sandy Hook school shootings,
- 05:56as well as more specific individual
- 05:59losses from long term illness,
- 06:01suicide car accidents and other
- 06:04causes were showing dramatic and
- 06:07unexpected growth in their lives.
- 06:10He is currently the director
- 06:11of spiritual care for you only
- 06:12have an hospital as I mentioned,
- 06:13and a board certified Chaplain,
- 06:16chaplain, educator.
- 06:17So I think you agree we couldn't find
- 06:21anyone more qualified than Kendall,
- 06:24Chaplain Palladino,
- 06:26and Christine doctor Christine Olson.
- 06:29I think of them as our special case,
- 06:32and we're very,
- 06:33very lucky to have them here at Yale,
- 06:35New Haven Hospital,
- 06:36and just on a side note,
- 06:38as a person would say,
- 06:40worked with Doctor Olson,
- 06:42and Chaplain Palladino.
- 06:44Several projects over the course of the
- 06:47pact to enhance our employees well being.
- 06:50And they are both amazing,
- 06:54caring, energetic,
- 06:55creative and dedicated professionals.
- 06:58So we're very,
- 06:59very lucky to have them talk to us today.
- 07:02So thank you for joining us at this point.
- 07:04I will turn it over to Doctor
- 07:06Olson and Chaplain Palladino.
- 07:12Thank you buddy, I really appreciate that.
- 07:16Yesterday, the New York Times published
- 07:19an article by Doctor Senita Khoury
- 07:24entitled We must Learn to look at
- 07:27grief even though we want to run away.
- 07:30I recommended it to you because it
- 07:33discussed post traumatic growth
- 07:35through this pandemic through illness,
- 07:38grief caregiver hurdles only,
- 07:40embracing our human potential for
- 07:43post traumatic growth by honest
- 07:46reflection on our real lived
- 07:49experiences with others will suffice.
- 07:52No titles, no education, no experience,
- 07:56no positive ITI or any other
- 07:59external factor can help us grow.
- 08:02We gather here together as people
- 08:05facing the human experience of illness,
- 08:08grief, caregiver hurdles,
- 08:10and the COVID-19 pandemic.
- 08:12And first of all,
- 08:15we want you Doctor Olson and I want you to
- 08:18bring your humanity to this conversation.
- 08:21It's the only thing that will
- 08:24really carry the conversation
- 08:26and the discussion forward.
- 08:28One thing we wanted to do is
- 08:30invite you in the Q&A feature as I
- 08:33continue to open up this dialogue
- 08:36and this discussion is to write in
- 08:40why you have chosen to join us.
- 08:44People may be coming from different places,
- 08:46so right into the Q&A feature and
- 08:50Bud Whistle will look at that
- 08:53and he will help guide us.
- 08:57You might put something in the chat.
- 08:59Like examples,
- 09:00I face illness and want to
- 09:02understand how I might grow or I'm
- 09:05exhausted by the pandemic and want
- 09:08to understand what that means,
- 09:10or I'm I'm grieving my loss of
- 09:13health and normalcy and I I don't
- 09:15know what's going to come next.
- 09:17Those kinds of questions,
- 09:18whatever it is that you bring,
- 09:19put it in the Q&A and and we'll
- 09:22be able to get a sense for where
- 09:25people are coming from.
- 09:27So we were talking about
- 09:29something more than resiliency.
- 09:31Here,
- 09:31resiliency is described as bouncing back,
- 09:36while resiliency is important.
- 09:38It is not the subject of
- 09:40our conversation today.
- 09:42What we are talking about.
- 09:45Is how by honestly looking at our experience.
- 09:50There is potential for growth.
- 09:52Imagine 3 balls in your mind.
- 09:56First imagine a basketball.
- 10:00When you bounce a basketball,
- 10:02it bounces right back into your hands.
- 10:07That might be a description of what
- 10:10resiliency is like when you go down,
- 10:13you come right back up to
- 10:15where you were before.
- 10:17Second, I want you to imagine a bowling ball.
- 10:22When you put a bowling
- 10:24ball down on the floor,
- 10:25it doesn't bounce back.
- 10:28And this may be an example,
- 10:31at least for a time of post traumatic stress.
- 10:36We're not talking about post
- 10:38traumatic stress so much today.
- 10:40What we are talking about is post
- 10:43traumatic growth and I want you to
- 10:46imagine in your mind's eye for a moment,
- 10:48one of those rubber bouncy balls.
- 10:51You know that kids play with and
- 10:53you take the bouncy ball and
- 10:55you throw it down and it bounces
- 10:57higher up above your head.
- 10:59That is what we are talking about
- 11:03today with post traumatic growth.
- 11:06We want to understand your
- 11:09motivations so you know,
- 11:11please. I hope you've added some of your
- 11:14reasons for being here, and I don't know.
- 11:17But if there's anything in the Q&A
- 11:19that we can share at this point.
- 11:22Yes, there is Kendall. We've got a
- 11:27number of excellent sharing's here.
- 11:32Just to give you a sampling of some divorce.
- 11:36Chaplains who help patients and
- 11:38families and deal with deal with
- 11:40difficult daily experiences.
- 11:42Grief, death, burnout.
- 11:46Tired of being on high alert mode?
- 11:49I need to get back to having
- 11:51hope and living in peace.
- 11:55I can go through all these,
- 11:56but not sure if you wanted to respond,
- 11:58but here's here's an interesting
- 12:00one I'm joining due to several
- 12:03traumatic and difficult events
- 12:05over the last couple of years.
- 12:07My own traumatic experience as a patient.
- 12:14With the birth of my daughter
- 12:15resulting in both of us in ICU stays
- 12:19the pandemic during the pandemic.
- 12:22Dealing with serious safety events.
- 12:24Death of an art hasn't.
- 12:27And death as an RN long like chronic illness.
- 12:31So number of. Pretty serious traumatic.
- 12:35Experience. Is there a nurse
- 12:38providing care 8 to 10 hours daily?
- 12:40Emotionally exhausted,
- 12:42compassion deleted.
- 12:43Loss a number of losses
- 12:45in the last few years.
- 12:48Like to help staff navigate post
- 12:51pandemic challenges and life changes
- 12:53and how to make them feel better and
- 12:56not feel these changes as all negative.
- 12:59Pandemic is here to stay so we
- 13:01better thrive during our journey.
- 13:03A couple more. I know this is a lot,
- 13:06but I want to get this all out there.
- 13:08I want to be able to help patients
- 13:10and family members who are
- 13:12struggling and emotionally.
- 13:13I love that description that says post
- 13:16traumatic growth versus stress and
- 13:19then finally I'm joining after having
- 13:22survived stage four tongue cancer.
- 13:24Seeking insight on how to recapture
- 13:28myself again.
- 13:29So that's the range of what we've got so far.
- 13:34Thank
- 13:34you very much, but that's that's very
- 13:37helpful now. Doctor Olsson, thank you.
- 13:42Could you advance the slide one please?
- 13:47Thank you so we we hear from the reasons
- 13:50that we have gathered here today that
- 13:53we've come for many different reasons.
- 13:56The pandemic has opened up has been
- 13:59a collective type of X traumatic
- 14:02experience that we've had together,
- 14:04which opens up the conversation.
- 14:06But you can see from the comments
- 14:09that people we are experiencing
- 14:12in the people in our lives in
- 14:15our Community are experiencing.
- 14:17Very difficult times.
- 14:19Traumas of their own throughout the pandemic,
- 14:23before the pandemic.
- 14:24And now that's just added to it that
- 14:27we have the pandemic and people who
- 14:30may have recovered from previous
- 14:31experiences in their lives that
- 14:33were traumatic for them may have
- 14:35learned things from their experience
- 14:37in the past that they also bring
- 14:40to this space as we here have this
- 14:43collective wisdom as we come together
- 14:45to think about how do we move.
- 14:48Through this and what kind of frameworks
- 14:51might help us to move through this
- 14:54more easily so we did explore this in
- 14:57both that individuals and organizations
- 14:59can use these types of frameworks to
- 15:03grow and learn through this experience.
- 15:06Today we're going to concentrate on us as
- 15:09individuals collecting here to move through,
- 15:11and how we might think about
- 15:14post traumatic growth.
- 15:16So here we have a health care worker holding
- 15:19up the world in this mural and post.
- 15:23Traumatic growth is a was described
- 15:26by two psychologist Dr.
- 15:28Tedeschi and Calhoun and they
- 15:31are people who've observed us.
- 15:33As we live our lives and some of the
- 15:36things that people did experience
- 15:38where they were able to not only come
- 15:41back but to grow through these times,
- 15:44things that we would not wish upon
- 15:46ourselves or wish upon other people.
- 15:48But through which they have gone
- 15:51through and it's we experience,
- 15:53post traumatic growth,
- 15:54not despite the troubles and the and
- 15:57the trials and tribulations in life.
- 15:59But because of them.
- 16:00And we're going to talk a little
- 16:02bit about how we struggle with
- 16:04those trials and tribulations.
- 16:06And it can be our teacher, and we can grow.
- 16:10So if we could advance one more slide.
- 16:15So many of you may have seen this
- 16:17as we've talked about the pandemic.
- 16:19You can see where we start pre disaster
- 16:22at a certain emotional level and we may
- 16:26have started perhaps stress to begin with.
- 16:30Or anyway was our status
- 16:32quo and when something?
- 16:35Disrupts our life so profoundly
- 16:38that we call it traumatic.
- 16:41And especially with the pandemic and
- 16:43and some things we've gone through,
- 16:45especially if it threatens.
- 16:48If we've been exposed to or
- 16:50threatened our own life or the OR the
- 16:52lives of others or those we love,
- 16:54those we've experienced that
- 16:56can really shake us up,
- 16:57and we may at first our adrenaline
- 17:01kicks in and we rise to the occasion.
- 17:03But then we can sometimes feel when
- 17:06everything is shifted around us,
- 17:08that the rugs been pulled out from
- 17:10underneath us and our worldview
- 17:13has been shattered.
- 17:14Maybe it has really affected
- 17:16how we feel about our
- 17:17identity or our security.
- 17:19Or the way the world works.
- 17:21Somehow we might find
- 17:23ourselves kind of free falling,
- 17:25and we may be down where you see the
- 17:28low parts of the emotional curve there.
- 17:31We may find ourselves there
- 17:33first before we can even think
- 17:35about moving on to anything else,
- 17:38or what we might learn from it.
- 17:40And that may be a time of grief.
- 17:42We made bury.
- 17:44We may be grieving and the word bereavement
- 17:47means if you look up in the dictionary,
- 17:50it means to be.
- 17:52Deprived of or robbed or Caesar taken
- 17:55away something that was very dear to you,
- 17:58someone or something that
- 17:59was very dear to you.
- 18:00That sense of your future has been
- 18:02robbed from you as you thought it was
- 18:05going to be what you thought your
- 18:06life was going to be may have changed.
- 18:08So it's a time where we are.
- 18:12Coming to terms with that,
- 18:14and it's important to honor that and
- 18:17this the there's a term now that
- 18:19people are talking about toxic positivity.
- 18:21We are not trying to.
- 18:24Move through something that you
- 18:26first have to honor the loss and
- 18:28the grief that you have.
- 18:30And one thing you want to do
- 18:32while you are honoring that and
- 18:35experiencing that grief,
- 18:36is to recognize when you are then
- 18:40moving into adaptive coping,
- 18:42perhaps reaching out of thinking.
- 18:44Who can help me through this?
- 18:45Who can support me?
- 18:47Who might understand what I've
- 18:49been through and who can show me
- 18:51some of the ways that they've grown
- 18:53and learn or rolled modeled?
- 18:55Versus maladaptive coping,
- 18:56where you might find yourself numbing
- 18:59or avoiding or cutting yourself
- 19:02off from people and shutting yourself down.
- 19:05And then as we as we think about.
- 19:08What do we do now with these feelings
- 19:11that we have as we're ruminating
- 19:13and thinking over what is the world
- 19:16now as we think about that,
- 19:19we'll move into how that choice of
- 19:21how we think about that can help us
- 19:25move into. Post traumatic growth.
- 19:27If we could just go to the next slide here.
- 19:33So when we think about the pandemic,
- 19:36we didn't have any way around it.
- 19:38There was no shortcuts.
- 19:39You couldn't go over it under it round it.
- 19:43We had to go through it.
- 19:44There wasn't really any other way to
- 19:47avoid it as a healthcare community.
- 19:51And same with some of the things
- 19:53that we faced in our lives,
- 19:54we never would have wished it
- 19:56upon ourselves or other people.
- 19:57But we had to move through it.
- 20:00And then this creates a lot of tension.
- 20:03And a lot of stress.
- 20:05And then the question is who's driving
- 20:08is the stress driving you where that
- 20:11kind of searching for that ground?
- 20:14Again?
- 20:14Searching for the answers where
- 20:16you are looking for is it
- 20:19driving you to withdraw to numb,
- 20:21to move away from it, not face it?
- 20:24Or are you driving it?
- 20:26Is it trying to tell you something
- 20:29where it might point you to the answers
- 20:32and point you to the way through?
- 20:34Can it be a teacher if it's
- 20:37not too overwhelming?
- 20:38If it is overwhelming, you might need a.
- 20:42Someone to go through that with you.
- 20:44That's where you're looking
- 20:45for those trust individuals,
- 20:46even a health care professional who
- 20:49can help you move through that if it's
- 20:52if it's very overwhelmed to do alone.
- 20:56And then we will go to the construct
- 20:59of what Tedashii and Calhoun found.
- 21:03So today she and Calhoun found that
- 21:06some people who were going through
- 21:10traumatic experiences and moving
- 21:12through this stress as they tried to
- 21:15reorder things and try to find a new
- 21:17narrative trying to find a new way forward.
- 21:20They found some themes that these people
- 21:23were experiencing and that they were open.
- 21:27To one is they.
- 21:28Many of these people who experience
- 21:30post traumatic growth had a greater
- 21:33appreciation of life because of
- 21:35what they had gone through there.
- 21:37Experiencing a greater clarity about things.
- 21:41They were open to new possibilities
- 21:43of what the future may hold as they
- 21:47transformed the trials to triumph,
- 21:50and they found that there were
- 21:53deeper relationships that they
- 21:54discovered that they had to rely on.
- 21:57People and people were there for them.
- 21:59Or there were people who'd been through
- 22:01things like they'd gone through and
- 22:03that they were able to find those.
- 22:06Alliances that comfort that support
- 22:09by being open and a bit vulnerable
- 22:12to those they could reach out to.
- 22:15They found that they had a greater
- 22:17sense of strength that it seemed
- 22:19like something so insurmountable
- 22:21that they were never going to get
- 22:23through it or find a way forward.
- 22:26When when it first,
- 22:27when they were first faced with this and
- 22:30then they found new and creative ways to.
- 22:34To be and they discovered us a well
- 22:36of strength within themselves that
- 22:38they didn't know that they had,
- 22:40which was remarkable,
- 22:42and some have experienced a
- 22:46spiritual deepening,
- 22:47not necessarily in the religious sense,
- 22:50but in the sense of a transformational
- 22:52meaning of what a deepening of
- 22:54what was clear and true for them,
- 22:56what their values were, and what it
- 22:59meant to be almost transcendent beyond.
- 23:03The self and what they were going through,
- 23:06so these were some of the the
- 23:10experiences that people who experience
- 23:13post traumatic growth did demonstrate.
- 23:16Now it. It's suggested that maybe
- 23:19if we were aware of these domains
- 23:22that it would be possible that more
- 23:25people could experience them if
- 23:28we were awake to the possibility.
- 23:30So that's yet to be seen and
- 23:33we will learn as a community.
- 23:35And I'm going to now turn it over
- 23:37to Chaplain Palladino.
- 23:38Who can help us with moving through grief?
- 23:45Thank you Doctor Wilson.
- 23:49So I'd like to talk a little bit
- 23:51about grief and post traumatic growth.
- 23:54Partly what grief is and what
- 23:56it isn't and what we're talking
- 23:59about specifically with grief.
- 24:01You know when we have a loss,
- 24:04whether it's the loss of security.
- 24:07The loss of health.
- 24:09The loss of a loved one.
- 24:12Whatever it may be, we have a reaction
- 24:14and that reaction is holistic.
- 24:17It's not only emotional,
- 24:18but it is that it's not only spiritual,
- 24:21but it is that it's social.
- 24:22Also, financial, physical, mental.
- 24:25It's our complete response to a loss.
- 24:30And grief hits people in waves.
- 24:33It's cyclical, more than stage,
- 24:35like a lot of times the early
- 24:38education on grief was confused and and
- 24:42talked about it in terms of stages,
- 24:44as if there was a beginning and an end.
- 24:47But grief is more cyclical and
- 24:50hits us in waves,
- 24:51and we alternate between
- 24:54a sense of reconstruction.
- 24:56And loss, so we're feeling more.
- 24:59The emptiness of the loss at sometimes
- 25:02and other times we're feeling more.
- 25:04A sense of reconstruction or change,
- 25:07and it alternates between those two things.
- 25:10Grief is supposed to change and improve,
- 25:13but it may not end unless we can get back
- 25:17that person or that thing that we've lost.
- 25:20For example,
- 25:21the security of knowing that I'm
- 25:24healthy or having no pandemic at all,
- 25:28unless we can get those
- 25:30things back altogether,
- 25:31we will continue to have some reaction,
- 25:35some holistic response to the loss.
- 25:39But it does improve and change overtime,
- 25:43so it doesn't mean that we're in
- 25:46the midst and throes of active grief
- 25:49and very early grief all the time,
- 25:52but it does continue.
- 25:54Grief is very personal and
- 25:57specific to each of us.
- 26:00The loss.
- 26:01And the relationship we had to that
- 26:05thing to that person who we've
- 26:07lost is going to be very different,
- 26:10as different as any relationship is.
- 26:14So in a family,
- 26:15if somebody loses a father and
- 26:17another sibling loses a father,
- 26:20that loss is going to look different.
- 26:23They're both in the same family and
- 26:25it's they both the same person,
- 26:26but the relationship was different
- 26:28and the loss will be the size of the
- 26:31relationship you have to that person,
- 26:34or that thing that you've lost.
- 26:38In grief,
- 26:39most people benefit from feeling cared for,
- 26:43loved and supported.
- 26:45And in grief,
- 26:47that's a normal natural human
- 26:49response to loss,
- 26:50and most people do not need
- 26:53therapy or counseling.
- 26:54It's a normal reaction human reaction.
- 26:58Some people do benefit from
- 27:01groups and others don't.
- 27:03Only a very small number, who grieve,
- 27:06require professional therapy,
- 27:08new meaning and purpose and
- 27:10nurturing fond memories of
- 27:12what we lost are important.
- 27:14And there are a very small number
- 27:16of people who get caught in
- 27:18complicated grief where it becomes
- 27:20a pattern that they get caught in
- 27:23and have a hard time getting out of.
- 27:27These results are from.
- 27:29My doctoral work and also from a review
- 27:35of the existing literature on grief.
- 27:38So how do we work through grief as
- 27:41a part of post traumatic growth?
- 27:43For as you saw in Doctor Olson.
- 27:46A presentation that we
- 27:48we go through a process,
- 27:50a process when we face a certain
- 27:53traumatic event or circumstances
- 27:55and our emotions are at high levels
- 27:58and low levels at different points.
- 28:02At some point though,
- 28:04we have to deal with the reality of the
- 28:08loss and when we do that we go through grief.
- 28:13Grief is our normal human
- 28:15response to that loss,
- 28:16and how can we do it in a healthy way.
- 28:19So I've made a new monik that
- 28:22relies on my doctoral research.
- 28:25And the new monik.
- 28:27Is this the first thing to do is I
- 28:31just came back from Belize where
- 28:33I went with my son and one thing I
- 28:37I'll note and many people mentioned.
- 28:39One person in particular who's
- 28:41lived there 10 years but was from
- 28:43the United States is that that
- 28:46country and other countries are less
- 28:49individualistic than the United States.
- 28:51We tend to be very individualistic.
- 28:54We tend to try to want to.
- 28:56Nice things to try to do it alone.
- 29:00To try to be the giver and not the receiver,
- 29:04we try to be an ace.
- 29:06When really if you add an F to the ace,
- 29:09really what we need to do or what's
- 29:12helpful to do is to face the reality
- 29:15of the loss, the real emotions,
- 29:17the real effects, the emotional,
- 29:20spiritual, social, financial,
- 29:21physical, all those things.
- 29:23And to do it in community.
- 29:26Not to try to do it alone.
- 29:28But to do it with others,
- 29:30so that's really one of the first
- 29:33things about grief is can you do it?
- 29:36Not trying to do it alone as a
- 29:39sole individual. Can you do it?
- 29:41Not trying to be the so-called strong one.
- 29:45Four in grief,
- 29:47if I can use an analogy of a hurricane.
- 29:51You want in grief, not to be the oak tree.
- 29:55Which stands tall and strong many times,
- 29:58but in the hurricane gets knocked down.
- 30:00But you wanna be the palm tree?
- 30:03For the palm tree bends and
- 30:06moves in the storm.
- 30:08And with grief we need to do that as well,
- 30:11because as we said, grief comes in waves.
- 30:15So that's the first thing that you want to
- 30:18do when facing or when moving through grief,
- 30:21not to do it alone, not to be an ace,
- 30:24but to face the true reality
- 30:27of what you're experiencing.
- 30:29The second thing.
- 30:30Is a lot of times when we feel
- 30:34emotions that are difficult.
- 30:37We try to avoid them in different ways.
- 30:40Some of those are maladaptive ways.
- 30:43You know,
- 30:44perhaps by hiding our emotions by
- 30:47drinking a lot of wine after after
- 30:50work or or at different times.
- 30:52Or, you know sometimes that's OK,
- 30:55but sometimes that can become problematic.
- 30:59So we also try to avoid by
- 31:02binge watching on
- 31:03Netflix or by doing many things
- 31:05that will make us not think.
- 31:08About the difficulties
- 31:10that we're experiencing.
- 31:13Again, that can be a way in which
- 31:15we like and he'll try to slip away
- 31:18from the difficult aspects of grief
- 31:20rather than moving through it.
- 31:22And as Doctor Olson said,
- 31:24with the pandemic, we couldn't do that.
- 31:27With major traumatic experiences,
- 31:30we cannot avoid them.
- 31:32We need to move through them.
- 31:35And it's difficult to see others
- 31:38go through hard experiences.
- 31:40It's difficult to go through
- 31:43hard experiences,
- 31:44and yet we need to not be like the eel,
- 31:46but we need to feel supported.
- 31:50Not that we need to feel every emotion,
- 31:54but that we need to feel supported
- 31:58through the emotions of loss.
- 32:00So whatever that is that
- 32:02supports you to seek it out,
- 32:05whether that is the efr here or
- 32:08whether for employees or whether
- 32:10that's counseling or whether that is a
- 32:14friend who will listen to you really
- 32:17listen to you and walk with you.
- 32:20But to feel supported.
- 32:22Then in time in feeling supported through
- 32:25the loss as you walk through that loss,
- 32:29there is a relationship sized
- 32:31hole that comes with loss.
- 32:34So whatever or holes depending on the
- 32:36law says that a person experiences,
- 32:39so our loss of security,
- 32:41our loss of health,
- 32:43our loss of many other things.
- 32:45I've divided up what people came
- 32:47here about and A5 categories.
- 32:50People talked about secondary trauma.
- 32:53In compassion, fatigue, burnout.
- 32:55They talked about high alert mode.
- 32:57They talked about illness,
- 33:00chronic or otherwise.
- 33:02They talked about wanting to help
- 33:04others and talked about grief
- 33:06and rediscovery of self.
- 33:07So those are the five general
- 33:09categories that brought people
- 33:10here whatever they're grieving,
- 33:12whether it's divorce or or loss
- 33:15or death or whatever.
- 33:17And one of the things that we need
- 33:19to do is really look carefully and
- 33:21reflect carefully on how a loss
- 33:24might have affected us and where
- 33:26there may be a gap or a whole.
- 33:29We don't do this early in grief because
- 33:32it's too early to really do that.
- 33:34You need support early in grief,
- 33:36but in time you begin to notice that
- 33:38there is a hole and that is the vacuum
- 33:41in which post traumatic growth has an
- 33:44opportunity to thrive and to come about.
- 33:47In our lives because as we
- 33:50rebuild our lives as one would
- 33:52rebuild a town after a hurricane,
- 33:55nobody wishes that the hurricane would come.
- 33:58But when it does come,
- 33:59sometimes it's rebuilt.
- 34:01Better, newer,
- 34:02stronger than before,
- 34:05and so there is a opportunity,
- 34:07and that's what we're going to talk about.
- 34:08A little bit here a little bit more
- 34:11about what those opportunities
- 34:13might be for post traumatic
- 34:15growth in the midst of grief.
- 34:17And lastly,
- 34:18there's the idea of we we are
- 34:21well in grief when we've said
- 34:23farewell to the pain of grief,
- 34:26the bitter pain of grief,
- 34:28and we've been able to say
- 34:30goodbye to what cannot return.
- 34:32And what cannot be there any longer?
- 34:35We've adapted to the fact that we may
- 34:38never get out of that this pandemic,
- 34:41back to with the way things were we.
- 34:43There's a new normal that we embrace,
- 34:46but really, there's a way in which we need
- 34:49to be with the world or exist in the world.
- 34:53That means we are well.
- 34:55So after saying farewell,
- 34:56we want to make sure that we're
- 34:59in a position to be able to give.
- 35:03To be able to receive from others.
- 35:06Some autonomy, so if we really
- 35:09relied on the person or the thing,
- 35:11maybe it's health.
- 35:13Maybe it's amputation or leg, you know?
- 35:15Whatever it may be that we've lost
- 35:18to to come to a place where we can
- 35:21function without that which we've lost.
- 35:25Also community.
- 35:26When we are able to not just give or receive,
- 35:31giving puts you in the giving position.
- 35:34Receiving puts you in the receiving position.
- 35:36Neither of them are equal positions.
- 35:39Community is a peer to peer support.
- 35:43Having community and connection with people.
- 35:46When it's a mutual arrangement,
- 35:49it's not a a a situation in which you are
- 35:52always the giver or always the receiver.
- 35:55And then lastly expectation.
- 35:57When we have expectation again
- 36:00meaning hope or meaning,
- 36:02the ability to expect.
- 36:04That's something new might occur.
- 36:07Those are signs.
- 36:09In that new monik giving receiving
- 36:12autonomy Community expectation that we are,
- 36:15well, that grief doesn't end,
- 36:18but we are through the grief as
- 36:20much as we can be.
- 36:22And we've learned its lessons.
- 36:25So that is an example of grief and
- 36:27some of the things that we would
- 36:30want to look for in grieving.
- 36:35So we have a lot of great questions
- 36:37and why people have been here or
- 36:39why people have come and we have
- 36:41a wonderful opportunity to talk
- 36:43about those a little bit more.
- 36:47But we also have an opportunity to.
- 36:51Right in the chat.
- 36:53Some of the questions that are on the top
- 36:58row of what is on the presentation here.
- 37:01These are different aspects of when
- 37:04we're in the filling process of grief
- 37:07and as Doctor Olson had talked about
- 37:10in the process of reconstruction.
- 37:12The process of post traumatic growth.
- 37:15These are the domains that
- 37:18she talked about earlier.
- 37:20Development of deeper relationships.
- 37:22Openness to new possibilities,
- 37:24greater sense of strength,
- 37:25stronger sense of spirituality,
- 37:27greater appreciation.
- 37:28So those are some questions that
- 37:31you can answer in the chat.
- 37:34As we begin to to really look
- 37:37at some of the questions of of,
- 37:40you know why you're here.
- 37:41Maybe we can have an opportunity to
- 37:43answer and discuss Doctor Olson and I,
- 37:45and if you can put in the chat the chat.
- 37:48Different answers to those
- 37:49questions you know.
- 37:50How might you have changed this
- 37:55difficulty into a triumph or into a
- 37:59growth who have been role models for you?
- 38:03You know,
- 38:04have you discovered an experience bigger
- 38:08than yourself or new meaning through this?
- 38:11So those types of questions are listed here.
- 38:14If you would add them and to my colleague Dr.
- 38:17Cole doctor Olson.
- 38:19Yes, and I I want to thank the people who
- 38:23have been sharing what brought them here.
- 38:26One you have made yourself vulnerable
- 38:28in willingness to share and have
- 38:31been a role model to other people.
- 38:33And as I read through these,
- 38:35you know there are things that I identify
- 38:37with or others have identified with.
- 38:40And by just you offering that
- 38:42you are human and you are going
- 38:45through these things yourself,
- 38:48you have comforted someone else.
- 38:50Someone else who didn't feel like
- 38:52they could put themselves out
- 38:54there and now because you have
- 38:56shared you have made someone else
- 38:59feel more normal and less alone.
- 39:01And and then you you've brought
- 39:03us together as a community,
- 39:05and you've been a role model and already
- 39:08you are contributing to the healing
- 39:10of our community and other people.
- 39:13So I want to thank those who
- 39:16who were brave to share in this
- 39:18venue and to help us to do this.
- 39:24So let me just interject a quickly.
- 39:27Please use the question and answer format
- 39:30to to do that to Chapman Palladino
- 39:32ask you if you had some answers to
- 39:35some of those questions that you see
- 39:37there on the top row of that slide,
- 39:40there was a question that I wanted to
- 39:42pose to both at Chaplin Palladino.
- 39:45I think you were talking about
- 39:47grief and that many times people
- 39:50do not require therapy for.
- 39:55For certain grief kinds of events,
- 39:59but there was a question that said,
- 40:00are we meant to think we are not normal?
- 40:03If we do require therapy for grief.
- 40:06So yeah, so I I did.
- 40:08I thought it might address that a
- 40:10little bit because I was hearing you
- 40:13say that there's lots of different
- 40:14ways that we can get support from
- 40:16lots of different people and and
- 40:17build our support systems.
- 40:18Therapy may be one very helpful one.
- 40:21Yes, thank you I I can
- 40:24definitely answer that question.
- 40:25My my dad died several years ago.
- 40:30And I reached out to the efr.
- 40:34And I don't understand myself as
- 40:37being unusual or abnormal in any way.
- 40:41My grief response was normal.
- 40:44And the efr, which is an employee support
- 40:47system and not everybody has access to that,
- 40:51but it's therapeutic.
- 40:52And and it was a therapist that I went to.
- 40:54Why did I do that?
- 40:56I did that because I was
- 40:59noticing that I was crying a lot.
- 41:01I was getting waves of tears and I did that
- 41:04because in my line of work as a chaplain.
- 41:07I'm also an educator and I went to
- 41:10show my students I was Co leading a
- 41:13group and I went to show my students.
- 41:15How to do a visit and they were
- 41:17new students and they thought I'd,
- 41:19you know, did fine and everything.
- 41:20But I looked at the video tape of
- 41:23the actor I was working with and I
- 41:26said I avoided that person's grief.
- 41:29And it's because my dad.
- 41:32Died two weeks before.
- 41:35And I wanted to go to therapy
- 41:39because I needed to really look at
- 41:42my own loss so that I could then
- 41:45be with people who were grieving.
- 41:48So yes,
- 41:49grief is is absolutely a normal response.
- 41:53And yes,
- 41:53I myself have gone to therapy for
- 41:56grief and I consider myself to have a
- 41:59normal response to to the loss of my dad.
- 42:01So there's no nothing but encouragement.
- 42:06To utilize therapy,
- 42:08that being said.
- 42:10Sometimes people have pathologized
- 42:13grief and and so my comments
- 42:16are are meant to normalize grief
- 42:19as a normal human response.
- 42:22And if therapy can be a support
- 42:24to you as it was to me,
- 42:26then I would encourage you to go.
- 42:30And if you can find support in other ways,
- 42:34that is fine.
- 42:37And I I will double down on that.
- 42:39There is never anything wrong with
- 42:41taking care of your mental health,
- 42:43just as you would any other
- 42:46aspect of your health.
- 42:48If you are curious if it be helpful,
- 42:51you should feel comfortable to go and
- 42:54take care of your your whole self,
- 42:56including your mental health.
- 42:59Absolutely nothing wrong with tending
- 43:02to your well being and your mental
- 43:05health is is just as much a part of.
- 43:08Of all of your yourself and your
- 43:10well being as anything else.
- 43:14The part of my my comments to our reaction
- 43:18to a government report years ago,
- 43:22there was a grief, some grief work
- 43:25done in the 80s in Boston and it was.
- 43:31From that there was the belief that people
- 43:34in less they felt certain emotions,
- 43:36anger or or or sadness after loss that
- 43:39they needed to go to therapy and and
- 43:42people were being sort of pressured
- 43:45at that time I got a government
- 43:48report 'cause I had a a bereavement
- 43:50center that I started called healing
- 43:53hearts and that had thousands of
- 43:56people coming to it each year and a
- 43:59government report came out saying.
- 44:01It is now can be problematic if people
- 44:03get the message that there's something
- 44:06wrong with them or that they need to
- 44:09grieve in a particular kind of way,
- 44:12and so the encouragement not to pathologize
- 44:16grief is really coming from that place.
- 44:20But an equal encouragement should be stated
- 44:24that therapy should not be pathologized.
- 44:28It's a wonderful thing,
- 44:29and it's part of.
- 44:31Community that we all need,
- 44:34and particularly Americans,
- 44:35because we are so individualistic
- 44:38that we need people and therapy
- 44:41sometimes is the best way to get that.
- 44:46And there's a couple of comments also
- 44:49in the question answer supporting
- 44:52that and so thank you both for
- 44:55for clarifying and answering that.
- 44:57You know therapy and medication,
- 44:59which I have was never keen on,
- 45:01made a huge difference for me.
- 45:02So there is one right there and
- 45:05this is a great point I think nor
- 45:08normal in grief is very subjective.
- 45:11What is normal to me may not be
- 45:13normal to marry or to someone else.
- 45:15So great point there too now.
- 45:18Here's here's a.
- 45:19There's some great comments here.
- 45:21Doctor Olson and Chapman Palladino.
- 45:24I'm going to start with this one.
- 45:26You had asked, you know,
- 45:27what are some of the things.
- 45:29Some of the answers that you've
- 45:30come up with then,
- 45:31so this one has a number of things
- 45:34priority setting to put my family first.
- 45:39Much stronger than I thought,
- 45:41but also more vulnerable.
- 45:44That's kind of an interesting
- 45:47observation right there.
- 45:48Really put family values first,
- 45:50but also makes us a little
- 45:53bit more vulnerable,
- 45:54so any comments about that
- 45:57particular observation?
- 45:59Yeah, I think.
- 46:02I think being clear about your values.
- 46:05UM, sometimes does feel vulnerable
- 46:07because sometimes it can feel
- 46:10like it's you think it's up
- 46:12against someone elses values,
- 46:14but I think that's what these things can do.
- 46:17Going through these events can
- 46:19really clarify for us for ourselves,
- 46:22like what is our best life with our values?
- 46:24Where do we need to prioritize?
- 46:27That I think that's really important
- 46:29and that we support one another
- 46:31to live our best lives as we can.
- 46:33City can be very vulnerable to be open.
- 46:36Yep,
- 46:38we kind of feel a little bit
- 46:39like a fish out of water.
- 46:41It's a little wild getting used to that.
- 46:43Uhm? For sure also realigned
- 46:47choices with my values pushed a
- 46:50job change and return to school.
- 46:53How's that for a big positive change, right?
- 46:56Yes, yeah, yeah. Good for you.
- 46:59And I think that also brings up another
- 47:02point of what is this pandemic meant to
- 47:04our country and to us as healthcare and
- 47:07to our Community is that people with
- 47:10a great resignation in the country.
- 47:13People are thinking about their priorities
- 47:15and things are becoming. Clearer to them,
- 47:17and how do we grow as a community?
- 47:21You know to make this.
- 47:24The place for us.
- 47:26That that we're thriving here.
- 47:29Like what what are we being?
- 47:31What? How is this woken us up as a
- 47:34community to support one another?
- 47:38Just what we need these days, right? Yeah,
- 47:41absolutely I I am had something to
- 47:45to say but about the vulnerability.
- 47:49Thank you when when I did my my doctoral
- 47:53research it was on people in in Connecticut.
- 47:57And it was a qualitative study,
- 47:59so we we did a lot of in depth diving
- 48:02into people who've experienced post
- 48:06traumatic well traumatic experiences,
- 48:08particularly grief and one of the
- 48:11things that came out of that study,
- 48:13was the importance of vulnerability.
- 48:16That the surprising way in which to be
- 48:21vulnerable actually was indicative of post
- 48:25traumatic growth more than anything else.
- 48:28So there were a lot of things that could
- 48:31be said about resiliency or other factors.
- 48:35Other grief factors, whatever,
- 48:37but with regard to growth.
- 48:40Growth tends to occur when we
- 48:44allow ourselves in Community.
- 48:46Cluding therapy or including friends
- 48:49or whatever to be vulnerable.
- 48:51And so my encouragement to to everybody here,
- 48:55whether we want to help others more.
- 48:59Or we want to get past burnout?
- 49:03Or we want to, you know,
- 49:05deal with our own illness,
- 49:07whatever it may be, to,
- 49:09rather than run from vulnerability and
- 49:12community to actually run toward them.
- 49:16But to not do it alone because you need
- 49:18to find people who will listen to you.
- 49:22And when you help others,
- 49:24being a listener is the best
- 49:27thing you can do.
- 49:28So some of the questions talked
- 49:31about really wanting to be positive
- 49:33and seeing people get hope.
- 49:35The best thing you to do is just to listen.
- 49:38And if somebody is struggling not
- 49:41to give them any answers or try
- 49:44to give them something positive
- 49:46because we're uncomfortable with
- 49:48them feeling or struggling,
- 49:50but to just be an excellent listener,
- 49:52whether it's to be silent or to ask
- 49:54questions or just to walk alongside them,
- 49:57that is the best thing that you
- 49:59can do for anybody going through
- 50:01any of these experiences,
- 50:02and that's the best thing you can
- 50:04do for yourself. So vulnerability.
- 50:06I'm all for it, but it's not easy.
- 50:10It really validates ones experience
- 50:13to be heard and then understood.
- 50:17And and it's such a gift.
- 50:22Here's a here's another good
- 50:25one with some great suggestions.
- 50:27As ways to to grow out of this.
- 50:32The I feel a pandemic has given me
- 50:35the opportunity to take the very
- 50:37best care of myself like I have
- 50:39never done before. And she goes.
- 50:41A person goes on to say I'm connecting to
- 50:44others in deeper ways and have a strong
- 50:48connection to source consciousness.
- 50:50I also feel clarity with living my truth.
- 50:54I'm living my passion and purpose
- 50:56now in my life.
- 51:00I feel like I need to spend time
- 51:01with that person, maybe just rub
- 51:04off role modeling. Yes, yes.
- 51:08Here's a question that I want to pose
- 51:10to both. Since you know we're in our.
- 51:13Smilow community and and some people have
- 51:17mentioned going through some very difficult
- 51:21challenges with illnesses and cancer
- 51:24diagnosis and treatment and so forth.
- 51:27Wonder if you could talk to that a
- 51:30little bit in terms of. How can we?
- 51:34Do apply some of these concepts to
- 51:37either cancer or chronic illness.
- 51:39Getting through that very difficult.
- 51:42I'm. Stage in her life.
- 51:47I think one way is to for role models
- 51:52who who've been able to do this.
- 51:57You know, whatever the struggle we
- 51:58we've heard some of the struggles
- 52:00here and people have been through
- 52:03different unique struggles.
- 52:04Fertility struggles,
- 52:05all sorts of different struggles is.
- 52:08To find someone who.
- 52:12Who've been able to get through
- 52:14it and have shown that ability to
- 52:17navigate it and see what you can
- 52:19learn from them. That's one way.
- 52:24OK, thank you.
- 52:28Could you stop sharing there for a moment?
- 52:30Is that the end of the slides?
- 52:32That was the well, actually there is.
- 52:34There was one other slide.
- 52:36Now that I think about it.
- 52:37So maybe I should share that.
- 52:40And while you bring that up,
- 52:41there's another comment here
- 52:43that I think is a good to.
- 52:46To bring up, I think it's.
- 52:50It it shows a lot of openness and and
- 52:54honesty. Being caregiver for years and
- 52:57helping people with these problems and
- 52:59saying the right things to help them.
- 53:02But when I tell myself the same
- 53:05things that I know that should
- 53:07help me doesn't help me like.
- 53:10Do what I say, not as I do.
- 53:14So you know, I mean,
- 53:16I can relate to that, I think.
- 53:18Anybody in a caregiving position
- 53:20could probably relate to that.
- 53:22But any thoughts about?
- 53:25That observation,
- 53:26sometimes as caregivers we it's
- 53:28hard to take our own advice.
- 53:31Yes, absolutely.
- 53:33We're we're known for it.
- 53:36We are no health care.
- 53:40Workers, professionals,
- 53:41caregivers were known to put
- 53:45others 1st and to not give
- 53:47the same kind of compassion
- 53:49and care to ourselves.
- 53:53And definitely it's been shown
- 53:55that if we can offer ourselves
- 53:57the same compassion and to not.
- 54:01Beat ourselves up over and over
- 54:04again over the same thing or be
- 54:06so hard on ourselves where we'd
- 54:09otherwise be gentle with others.
- 54:11That it can help to relieve burnout.
- 54:16So that's a good observation,
- 54:18and we and I think it's a good
- 54:21one for caregivers and health
- 54:23care to think about that.
- 54:26Yes, thank you Doctor Olsen I I think
- 54:29just the awareness of it is a step in the
- 54:31right direction to be able to say yeah,
- 54:33I mean this is not working.
- 54:35My my advice is not working for me so.
- 54:39Not be hard on ourselves and then
- 54:41figure out what are the next.
- 54:42Best things for me to do
- 54:44to take care of myself?
- 54:46Maybe a different answer
- 54:47or a different solution.
- 54:49We sometimes think of healthcare as a
- 54:53calling and we will pour ourselves into it
- 54:56sometimes at the sacrifice to ourselves.
- 54:59But callings can have shadow sides too,
- 55:02and it's important to be aware of those
- 55:06shadow sides and to tend to yourself
- 55:09and care for yourself for the long
- 55:11run and service that you're calling.
- 55:16Yeah, for for me I I wonder to
- 55:20a lot of times in our best.
- 55:24Attempt to help others too.
- 55:26Sometimes we say things that we don't
- 55:30realize may not help another person too.
- 55:33I I yet the bereavement center over 10 years.
- 55:37I listened to many people who lost
- 55:40children who lost parents who lost
- 55:42a loved one and whoever they were,
- 55:46there was so many recurrence stories
- 55:48about lovely, well intentioned people
- 55:51who came to say just the right.
- 55:54Saying to help them and they didn't have
- 55:56the heart to tell them that it didn't help.
- 55:59That all those attempts to take the
- 56:03sorrow away couldn't couldn't work.
- 56:05Because the person was really
- 56:08struggling and just needed to move
- 56:11through that difficult emotion.
- 56:13And particularly around childbirth,
- 56:15I heard some stories that were
- 56:18not helpful people saying, well,
- 56:20you can have another child and things
- 56:22like that at the moment of the death,
- 56:24hoping to take the pain away
- 56:27but actually causing hurt.
- 56:29And so I would say that that we have to
- 56:32all watch out as caregivers because we
- 56:35have a tendency to want to take pain away.
- 56:38And and help people and to fix.
- 56:41And that's what maybe got us
- 56:43into this in the 1st place.
- 56:44But sometimes it it absolutely
- 56:46isn't the right way to go.
- 56:49And when people are in the midst of of hurt,
- 56:51and when we are in the midst of hurt,
- 56:54sometimes what we need to hear
- 56:56doesn't sound like a solution at all.
- 57:00It sounds more like empathy.
- 57:03Like that really stinks.
- 57:05And I'm here with you.
- 57:08And so it's more about connection with
- 57:11other people than it is about a solution.
- 57:14And so I would say that.
- 57:16I would encourage us all to
- 57:19notice the things that help,
- 57:20because sometimes the things
- 57:22that help are what help others.
- 57:24And and sometimes we're different.
- 57:27Sometimes what we would have
- 57:29done for others doesn't help us,
- 57:31and that's OK because we're different.
- 57:34And finding out those things as Bud
- 57:37said that help us are really important.
- 57:41But just remember that it's empathy.
- 57:43It's being with somebody that matters
- 57:46the most through loss that matters
- 57:49the most through trauma that help
- 57:52people be vulnerable and actually.
- 57:55Fine growth many times in the
- 57:58midst of trauma.
- 58:01And I think that sometimes in
- 58:03in settings like this too,
- 58:05you might not have the opportunity
- 58:07to really have the conversation
- 58:10you want to have so and nothing
- 58:12here is meant to be prescriptive,
- 58:15and that's why we also invite the
- 58:18wisdom of the community to share,
- 58:21because through that sharing we find out
- 58:23we're not alone and people have found
- 58:26different answers in different ways,
- 58:28and we got to tap into that and.
- 58:30And part of that is also getting rid
- 58:32of the stigma of mental health care
- 58:35and what it's like to be a human
- 58:37and to be able to be compassionate
- 58:40towards ourselves and one another.
- 58:44So that we have each other when
- 58:45we need when we need each other.
- 58:48Well, and here are a couple of
- 58:51good comments that that segue from
- 58:53that and also ask the audience
- 58:55if you have any other questions,
- 58:57please feel free to put them in their Q&A.
- 58:59I think we still have a few more minutes,
- 59:02but here's one learning that it is
- 59:05so hard to pour from an empty cup.
- 59:09Give love to yourself.
- 59:12So that whole idea of really making
- 59:15sure we we do put ourselves.
- 59:18Not first, but you know, we're not it's.
- 59:21It's not being self indulgent
- 59:23or selfish to to.
- 59:25Fill up that cup for ourselves.
- 59:28I don't want to burnout,
- 59:30we want to go the distance.
- 59:32Right or life.
- 59:33Almost every religion in the world,
- 59:35and whether somebody's religious or not,
- 59:37has a love your neighbor as yourself.
- 59:39Kind of a maxim.
- 59:41And we're we are our closest neighbor.
- 59:45And not to forget our closest neighbor.
- 59:49So here's another comment on the heels
- 59:52of that. I hope that in the future the
- 59:55pandemic will unite the entire world.
- 59:59And I guess that's up to us
- 01:00:02if we want that to come true.
- 01:00:04We have to make it come true. Yes.
- 01:00:08So folks in the audience,
- 01:00:10any other questions.
- 01:00:11And while you're if you want to chat,
- 01:00:15type that in, I'm I.
- 01:00:16I thought of something
- 01:00:18I've been thinking about.
- 01:00:19The question about having a a cancer
- 01:00:22diagnosis or something you know seriously,
- 01:00:24say, say, maybe you've had COVID
- 01:00:26and you've and you're you know
- 01:00:28one of the the long haulers.
- 01:00:29For example, it's it's.
- 01:00:32It's still affecting you in some ways.
- 01:00:35That must be awfully hard to think
- 01:00:37about post traumatic growth.
- 01:00:39Going through something like that.
- 01:00:42But does it make sense?
- 01:00:43And I'm going to ask you guys this question.
- 01:00:47If there's one area that it feels
- 01:00:49like we really can't grow from.
- 01:00:51I mean we're feeling stuck in our body.
- 01:00:54For example,
- 01:00:54there's a problem with everybody.
- 01:00:55Can we work on the emotional side,
- 01:00:57the spiritual side,
- 01:00:59the social support side is that.
- 01:01:01Are those ways that we can kind of.
- 01:01:04Balance the equation in a sense.
- 01:01:06Does that make sense to see what I'm saying?
- 01:01:10Yeah,
- 01:01:11I hear what you're saying.
- 01:01:12So in all those different domains of
- 01:01:14Wellness, there are still other aspects
- 01:01:17that may not be affected as much that
- 01:01:20could strengthen that we could strengthen.
- 01:01:23Two to help support. That part of us
- 01:01:27that feels weak at the time. Correct?
- 01:01:33I, I think that's makes sense to me.
- 01:01:36I have you used that, but when people
- 01:01:39visit you at the AP, have you seen?
- 01:01:44Well, we we certainly try I I
- 01:01:47don't do any direct one to one
- 01:01:50counseling myself, but we do.
- 01:01:51We do interact with a lot of
- 01:01:54folks within that setting that
- 01:01:56that are going through all kinds
- 01:01:58of struggles and I know I mean,
- 01:02:00one of the things that we've.
- 01:02:01And it's been touched on a couple
- 01:02:03times that we've found particularly
- 01:02:04helpful is to help people with
- 01:02:06that self compassion side of it.
- 01:02:08And a couple people have commented
- 01:02:10on that sometimes we are, you know,
- 01:02:12we're hardest on ourselves.
- 01:02:14And if we can learn to that,
- 01:02:16we're all in this together,
- 01:02:17we're all going through very
- 01:02:19similar struggles.
- 01:02:20We're not alone,
- 01:02:21but also to be kind to ourselves
- 01:02:23and make sure we do some things
- 01:02:25that that really fill up.
- 01:02:27Whatever cups need filling.
- 01:02:30You know, for as much of a of
- 01:02:34a net that you have if you.
- 01:02:36If you can strengthen all of
- 01:02:38those other different parts,
- 01:02:39and if you can create a mesh,
- 01:02:42a meshwork of of Wellness,
- 01:02:44a meshwork of of security that that
- 01:02:49definitely can bolster stabilize,
- 01:02:52and help you to move through?
- 01:02:56When there's a disturbance and
- 01:02:58and so something so profoundly in
- 01:03:00another part of your well being
- 01:03:03right. I like that we're thinking of, yeah.
- 01:03:06I I would say one of the most important
- 01:03:10things for me personally has has been trying
- 01:03:14to find venues where I can truly be myself.
- 01:03:19In all my humanity, So what that means is
- 01:03:24I'm not trying to put any kind of face on.
- 01:03:27I'm not. I'm not trying to look good.
- 01:03:30You know, I'm I'm just myself.
- 01:03:33And if you can do that with people through
- 01:03:36the pandemic and just say you know what
- 01:03:40I'm exhausted because I've been exhausted.
- 01:03:42You know chaplains have
- 01:03:43been in the midst of it.
- 01:03:44As many caregivers have people who are
- 01:03:47struggling with illness are in the
- 01:03:50midst of it, and you get exhausted.
- 01:03:53And but it's OK to be human.
- 01:03:57It's OK to be exhausted.
- 01:03:58It's OK to not feel good.
- 01:04:01And to do that with other people is the key.
- 01:04:05And whether that's in a context
- 01:04:08like therapy or with a rabbi,
- 01:04:11a pastor, a friend, you know it,
- 01:04:15it it almost matters more
- 01:04:17that you can be yourself.
- 01:04:20Then it matters the venue,
- 01:04:21though some venues are better
- 01:04:24than others in certain cases.
- 01:04:26So I would encourage you if
- 01:04:28you're feeling exhausted.
- 01:04:29If you're struggling to find those
- 01:04:31people who you can be yourself with,
- 01:04:34and you can be exhausted and
- 01:04:36you can share all of that.
- 01:04:37And in all of its truth.
- 01:04:39And actually what I found for
- 01:04:41myself that when I do that and
- 01:04:43when I feel that or I even I weep
- 01:04:46about that or whatever it is,
- 01:04:47I feel so much better.
- 01:04:49You know,
- 01:04:50and and I actually get strength
- 01:04:52and I begin to reconnect with
- 01:04:54my calling and my sense of why
- 01:04:56I do this in the first place.
- 01:04:58You know,
- 01:04:59like rather than just feeling exhausted,
- 01:05:02I start to feel like you know what
- 01:05:04I've just shared with somebody that
- 01:05:06this is really hard and why I do this
- 01:05:08and I really feel invigorated now.
- 01:05:10And I can go at it again and
- 01:05:13I can do it again.
- 01:05:14So my main point or hope hope for
- 01:05:18all of us would be to to be real
- 01:05:21and to be with people through this
- 01:05:24and that's the greatest potential
- 01:05:26to get through illness.
- 01:05:28To get through anything that we need to
- 01:05:31go through and not to try to be strong.
- 01:05:34You know,
- 01:05:35in the face of others,
- 01:05:36but to actually be real.
- 01:05:39Yeah, I'm I'm definitely grateful
- 01:05:41for those who have noticed in me
- 01:05:44and shared something of themselves
- 01:05:46or just shared of themselves
- 01:05:48what they were going through.
- 01:05:50And then I was like, wow, that's right,
- 01:05:52that's exactly how I feel too.
- 01:05:55And it's such a profound thing
- 01:05:57when someone shares something with
- 01:05:59you and you're suddenly not alone
- 01:06:02and you're suddenly validated in
- 01:06:04it and you're suddenly you know,
- 01:06:07seen and heard and connected.
- 01:06:11So if if anybody has,
- 01:06:13it sees an opportunity to be
- 01:06:15that for someone, it's profound.
- 01:06:19And getting connected to one source
- 01:06:22of meaning, whatever that is,
- 01:06:24you know for some people that's
- 01:06:26more religious, but other people it
- 01:06:28could be art or nature or whatever,
- 01:06:31but whatever it is that brings
- 01:06:33a sense of purpose,
- 01:06:34meaning and connectedness to you.
- 01:06:36Through these difficult experiences,
- 01:06:38those are very, very important.
- 01:06:41So if you're facing a new cancer diagnosis
- 01:06:44or chronic illness or whatever it is finding.
- 01:06:48Whatever that is larger than you,
- 01:06:51what what you truly believe is critical.
- 01:06:55Because you can't do it alone and
- 01:06:58people are important and also something
- 01:07:01larger than people is important.
- 01:07:03Whatever that is for you.
- 01:07:07I also see the opportunity here while we have
- 01:07:11our audience here from our community is.
- 01:07:14In the this coming week,
- 01:07:17you know the March 4th through 11th
- 01:07:20we're having a week where it's about.
- 01:07:24Being seen, heard and valued,
- 01:07:26we call it weak of gratitude,
- 01:07:28but it's going to be about
- 01:07:29listening to one another.
- 01:07:31Being out there and seeing
- 01:07:32and hearing one another.
- 01:07:34And and anybody can do that
- 01:07:37for the people around them.
- 01:07:40And it will really provide that kind
- 01:07:43of mesh work like you're talking about,
- 01:07:45but that kind of network that keeps us.
- 01:07:49Feeling more secure and valued.
- 01:07:54Absolutely.
- 01:07:57Gratitude will definitely help us all,
- 01:08:00and I love that idea of it's
- 01:08:02not just the one level thing
- 01:08:04to the other level, you know.
- 01:08:06Thank you for what you do,
- 01:08:08but it's everybody you know.
- 01:08:09We have our coworkers.
- 01:08:11We have, you know, we have all the people
- 01:08:14that we interact with on a daily basis so.
- 01:08:19Totally, here's one last comment and
- 01:08:22I'll give one last call if there's
- 01:08:24any last questions or comments,
- 01:08:26but this one is is is excellent.
- 01:08:30I totally agree that we need to
- 01:08:32practice and honor our humanness.
- 01:08:34I believe that when we all begin to
- 01:08:37be vulnerable with our humanity is
- 01:08:39the key to peace and heaven on Earth.
- 01:08:44Yes, well said.
- 01:08:47So if there are there any other
- 01:08:49comments or questions from the
- 01:08:50audience and I don't know.
- 01:08:51Chaplain Palladino and Doctor Olson.
- 01:08:54If you have any final wrap up.
- 01:08:57Comments. But it doesn't look
- 01:09:00like there's anything right at the
- 01:09:02moment in the question and answer
- 01:09:05well. I want to come.
- 01:09:07I want to say it's great I I wish
- 01:09:10that I could have seen everybody
- 01:09:12but it's I feel the humanist I
- 01:09:14feel from the shares that have been
- 01:09:17given here that we came here as a
- 01:09:20community we shared as a community.
- 01:09:23The wisdom is in the community,
- 01:09:25and the wisdom is in our humanness
- 01:09:29and and all that we share together,
- 01:09:31because we've all had different
- 01:09:33experiences and are different
- 01:09:35places in our experiences,
- 01:09:36and have something to offer one another.
- 01:09:39So I want to thank this community
- 01:09:42for being here and and being human.
- 01:09:47Yeah, thank you I I.
- 01:09:50Really appreciate it as well,
- 01:09:51and I also feel the desire to
- 01:09:53just be with all of you you know.
- 01:09:56And and I know that you're not,
- 01:09:57you're you're not,
- 01:09:58you know, through zoom,
- 01:10:00it's it's harder to do that.
- 01:10:02But I'm just so grateful that you've come.
- 01:10:05I would like to end.
- 01:10:08You know, in 1980,
- 01:10:11ninety four Mother Teresa said something
- 01:10:14to me that I think really applies to
- 01:10:17to what we experience as human beings.
- 01:10:20And I had been working with people
- 01:10:23with leprosy and so when I explained
- 01:10:26to her my goals or my hopes,
- 01:10:28she said, you know,
- 01:10:30there is a leprosy in the West.
- 01:10:34And I call it loneliness.
- 01:10:37She says I want you to look around
- 01:10:40in Calcutta where we were at the
- 01:10:43time and we were looking down on a
- 01:10:46off of a balcony and she said I want
- 01:10:49you to look at all those people in
- 01:10:51that particular area where there was
- 01:10:53a lot of poverty and she says point
- 01:10:56out the people who don't have a smile.
- 01:10:58And I was shocked.
- 01:11:00I looked down and people were laughing.
- 01:11:03And smiling, and we're very poor.
- 01:11:08And she said,
- 01:11:09I have people coming from all over the world,
- 01:11:12and the richer country they come from,
- 01:11:15and the more freedom they have.
- 01:11:17The more sometimes they're
- 01:11:20separated from others.
- 01:11:21And she said the leprosy
- 01:11:23of the West is loneliness.
- 01:11:26And she said, we have sisters in Connecticut.
- 01:11:31And those sisters struggle more.
- 01:11:33With people who are shut into
- 01:11:36their houses and have no love.
- 01:11:38Then people who can't be fed.
- 01:11:43And so my encouragement based
- 01:11:46on what she said.
- 01:11:47Is that?
- 01:11:49We find that we can grow and
- 01:11:53thrive when we're not alone,
- 01:11:56and we're not trying to do it alone.
- 01:11:59And we're not trying to do it as autonomous.
- 01:12:03You know individuals that try to pull
- 01:12:05ourselves up by our own bootstraps.
- 01:12:08And that really is something
- 01:12:10that does not lead to to growth.
- 01:12:13But actually growth comes when we
- 01:12:17seek out others who can hear us,
- 01:12:20and we're part of a community and
- 01:12:22we can learn and grow and thrive.
- 01:12:25So my hope for all of us here
- 01:12:28myself and everyone else is that we
- 01:12:30not live in that kind of poverty
- 01:12:33but actually live in the riches.
- 01:12:35Of not being alone and not being
- 01:12:38lonely but being connected.
- 01:12:42And that's what I have to end with.
- 01:12:48Chaplain Paladino thank you very
- 01:12:50much for those closing words.
- 01:12:52Very touching Doctor Olson.
- 01:12:55Also, thank you for your wonderful
- 01:12:58insights and your knowledge.
- 01:12:59Both of you did a fantastic job and we
- 01:13:02all thank you very very much. And we.