Peak Speaks 2018
Innovative Responses to Suffering, Pain & Oppression
Join us in this experiential workshop where we will take apart ideas of ‘addiction’ and ‘trauma’ and respond to suffering with dignity and respect. Peak House is an all genders, live-in treatment program for youth seeking freedom from problematic substance use.
- Witnessing Youth Wisdom and Acts of Resistance
- A Decolonizing and Justice-Doing stance
- Staying with Connection, Resisting Disconnection and Enmeshment: The Zone of Fabulousness
Tue, 27 November 2018
9:30 AM – 4:30 PM PST
Location: STRETCH
180 East Pender Street
Vancouver, BC V6A 1T3
Witnessing resistance to “trauma” and interpersonal & political violence; a social justice approach
London, Manchester and Edinburgh, October 2018
In this experiential workshop Vikki presents an alternative approach to work with ‘trauma’, from an ethical stance for justice-doing, which focuses on the resistance of victims of violence and oppression. This is as opposed to attending primarily to the details of the trauma, which can be re-traumatizing for both the person and the front-line worker. Resisting the neutral and medicalized language of ‘trauma’, we will name rape culture, torture and political violence, poverty and other systemic contexts of social injustice that are often hidden in individualized talk. Honouring the wisdom of the people we work alongside in their resistance to abuses of power brings forward their agency and wisdom. Locating sites of resistance, and witnessing the resistance capacities of the people we work alongside, can create identities of knowledge, autonomy and strength, as opposed to victim/survivor identities, or other spoiled identities.
Workshop participants will:
- Engage in practice examples of a witnessing approach to work with people who have suffered violence, and look at the questions and dialogues that bring forward the person’s resistance, wisdom, knowledges, courage…;
- Consider alternative understandings of ‘trauma’, including seeing PTSD as a potential site of resistance;
- Locate problems of ‘trauma’ in the social world where we have not delivered on a ‘just’ society;
- Explore their own acts of resistance against power-over and domination;
- Learn how to structure safety for therapeutic conversations as a foundation of the work;
- Develop witnessing practices that offer new meanings of traumatic past events;
- Participate in a Solidarity Group practice that resists ‘vicarious trauma’ and ‘burn out’ in our work and enacts “shouldering each other up” in solidarity with collective care.
London: October 1st & 2nd 2018
Manchester: October 4th & 5th 2018
Edinburgh: October 8th 2018
(20% discount for self-funders)
2-day attendance: £200 + VAT
1-day attendance: £110 + VAT
It is possible to attend the first day of the two day workshop on its own, but it is not possible to attend the second day on its own.
A Systemic Cafe with
Sheila McNamee and Vikki Reynolds
I am hosting a two day Systemic Café at my house in Farnhill with my friends and colleagues, Sheila McNamee and Vikki Reynolds. It will take place on Friday 12th and Saturday 13th October 2018.
The programme:
Friday 12th October
Vikki Reynolds and Gail Simon
Dinner
Saturday 13th October
Sheila McNamee and Gail Simon
We will start at 9.30am each day and end about 4.30.
This will be informal and unstructured to open a space for people to share things that are on their minds – whether about work, the state of the world or whatever matters to you at this time. We can all be respondents in different ways.
The fee for the two days will be £240 and includes refreshments. Bring some food and drink towards dinner at my house for Friday evening. We will be about 10-12 people
Study day with Vikki Reynolds ‘Justice-doing’
Resisting oppression and structural or interpersonal violence
October 16, 2018
9:30 to 4:30
Het Rekreatief
Doornstraat 600
B-2610 Wilrijk
Antwerpen, Belgium
‘Save the Date: Saturday 27th October 2018’
Clanwilliam Institute will be hosting a day Workshop
Wynns Hotel
Dublin, Ireland
9.30 -4.30 pm
Justice-Doing in Community Work and Therapy
Facilitated by: Dr.Vikki Reynolds
This workshop will be relevant to those who are working in the areas of substance misuse, diversity, homelessness, trauma ,violence , prison systems, refugees , therapy and counselling and in Community psychiatry and Social work .
Cost for the day:
Therapists: €75
Students: €50
(CPD points available)
Centre for Response-Based Practice and Unizon
Dignity 2018
Honouring dignity and resistance to violence
Date: 28th – 30th of September
Location: Elite Hotel Marina, Saltsjöqvarns kaj 25, Stockholm, Sweden
Keynote: Harm Reduction as Dignity-Driven Practice
I will reflect on my work shouldering up ‘peers’, People who use IV Drugs, incarcerated persons, Indigenous people, sex workers and ‘First’-First Responders struggling in the opioid epidemic/poisoning/ political deaths. The heart of Harm Reduction work is doing Dignity, and Harm Reduction invites us to creatively respond to life threatening events with respect and autonomy, not telling folks what to do, but creating new ways to resist oppression, suffering, and death. We’ll consider the peer led responses to the opioid epidemic/political deaths, and how we’ve been able to collectively shoulder each other up, resist what gets called ‘vicarious trauma’ and engage with justice-doing and believed-in-Hope as an ethical stance..
Penticton Supportive Housing training and knowledge share event
Workshop September 17 12-5
BC Housing Office
451 Winnipeg St
Penticton BC,
2018 HSABC Conference Plenury / Keynote
Responding to the opiate epidemic: Sustainability & shouldering each other up
September 19
1 p.m. to 5p.m.
Radisson Hotel Vancouver Airport
8181 Cambie Road
Richmond BC
In this experiential session, Vikki will explore organizational cultures of resiliency, “trauma” and related behaviours (intrusion/hyperarousal/avoidance) and useful ways of understanding burnout and vicarious trauma. We will look at our responses to death- differentiating tragic death from death as part of life.
Strategies for sustainability will include discussion on:
- Relations of respect and dignity between staff as a resource against burnout
- A frame for debriefing and commitments to collective care
- Resistance and resilience
- Connections on the “practice as research” we are creating
- Honouring clients’ lives and working in tension alongside the pain of loss
- Creative and collective responses that are generative and hope filled
Working Together….Changing Outcomes…..Changing Lives
DYNAMIC TWO-DAY WORKSHOP
To assist with Identifying, Assessing and Managing Homeless/Mental Health Cases
As part of the Crime Reduction and Community Safety project Community Services is developing, we invite you to join us for a two-day workshop facilitated by Vikki Reynolds on August 27 and 28, 2018.
Vikki Reynolds is a Consultant, Instructor and Supervisor specializing in Team Development, Resisting Burnout and Organizational Change. Her work addresses Addiction, Substance Misuse, Diversity, Homelessness, Trauma and Violence. (see http://www.vikkireynolds.ca)
The focus of this workshop will be to provide training to stakeholders and direct service staff to assist with identifying, assessing and managing homeless/mental health cases. A portion of the workshop will touch on vicarious trauma and staff burnout.
AUGUST 27 AND 28, 2018
Salt Spring Lions Hall (103 Bonnet Avenue)
9:00 am – 4:00 pm
LUNCH WILL BE PROVIDED
Workshop is free of charge
RSVP to Deanna Kameka – dkameka@ssics.ca – or call 250-537-9971 ext. 249
REGISTRATION DEADLINE: August 15, 2018
Resisting The Opioid Epidemic: Fighting Vicarious Trauma with Collective Care & Justice-Doing
Knowledge exchange for support service providers caring for people living with, affected by or at risk for HIV.
10 am – 4 pm
Tuesday, June 26th, 2018 at the 519 – 519 Church St.
Please register at registration@caseyhouse.ca
Workers responding to the opioid epidemic, working with people struggling with substance use, poverty, violence and oppression are often told that they will ‘burn out’, and that it is the connection to the client’s pain that ‘traumatizes’ them, that is one perspective. Vikki offers another, she believes that “clients don’t harm us, nor does their suffering, it is the spiritual ethical pain that follows when we are unable to work in ways that are ethical, dignified and structurally supported. When we stay with connection, resist disconnection and enmeshment we are able to do ‘collective care’ as opposed to self-care. We shoulder each other up by working in line with our collective ethics and enacting what is at the heart of our work. Bringing hope is an ethical response to despair, and we’ll consider how to keep a finger-hold on a believed-in-hope amidst the darkness of tragic death and mean spirited politics. And that leads us to the ‘Zone of Fabulousness’, where the people we are here to serve are at the centre, and we are ‘walking our talk’ collectively.”
Fighting Vicarious Trauma with Collective Care
10AM-4PM Tuesday, June 19th
Chinese Alliance Church,
22 Eccles, Ottawa
RSVP: Coming Soon
In this experiential workshop we’ll address:
- Organizational cultures of resiliency
- Understandings & critiques of “Trauma” and behaviours: Intrusion/hyperarousal/avoidance
- Normalizing our responses to oppressive experiences
- Self regulation and co-regulation
- Resident-centered ways of understanding burnout and vicarious trauma
- Relations of respect and dignity between staff as a resource against burnout
- Responding to death: differentiating tragic death from death as part of life
- A frame for Debriefing and commitments to collective care
- Strategies for sustainability: Resistance, resilience and “Traumatic Growth”
- Connections on the “practice as research” we are creating
Justice-Doing in Community Work and Therapy: Solidarity Groups & Collective Care
This workshop will be informed by a spirit of solidarity and social justice activism. Vikki will illuminate her stance for an ethic of Justice-Doing as a frame for community work and therapy. With this, she will invite and challenge us to consider the intersections, tensions and affinities between community work practice and social justice activism that encompasses: centering ethics, doing solidarity, addressing power, fostering collective sustainability, critically engaging with language and structuring safety.
June 22, 2018 (9:30am to 4:30pm)
Family Service Toronto Building
355 Church St. Toronto
Registration
Keynote Address: 2018 Child and Youth Care Conference
May 2-4, 2018
Conference on the ancestral and unceded territories of the Coast Salish Peoples, specifically the Musqueam peoples, commonly known as Richmond, BC.
Resisting Vicarious Trauma With Collective Care & Justice-Doing
9AM — 4PM on May 4, 2018
La Perla Ballroom, New Westminster, BC
810 Quayside Dr #204, New Westminster, BC
In this experiential workshop, Vikki offers an alternative approach to the notion of vicarious trauma and worker burnout.
Folks working with people struggling with addiction, poverty, violence and oppression are often told that they will “burn out”, and that is the connection to the client’s pain that ‘traumatizes’ them. Contrary to this, is a story of sustainability— how our collective work sustains us, nourishes our hope, invites us to honour the resistance and strength that we witness in the people who we work alongside, and allows us to work congruently with our ethics.
This experiential workshop will address our collective ethics and what is at the heart of our work, and practices of collective care as opposed to self-care. Workers will be invited to begin to build their own “Solidarity Team”; examining who stands alongside them, what ideas and practices sustain them, and how they might act to help each other when burnout attacks.
Register online
Northeast Regional Victim Services
Turning burnout into collective care
This invigorating and powerful one-day workshop offers an alternative approach to the notion of worker burnout. Those working with people struggling are often told that they will “burn out”. Contrary to this is a story of sustainability; how our collective work sustains us, nourishes our hope, invites us to honor the resistance and strength we witness. This experiential workshop will address our collective ethics and practices of collective care as opposed to self care.
Friday, April 20th in Melfort, Saskatchewan
Kerry Vickar Center
Workshop 9am-4pm
Registration Fee: $50
Registration Deadline: March 15, 2018
Includes snacks and Lunch
For more information on this event or to register please contact Victim Services at 306-878-3819 or email Tanya.brakstad@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
Saturday, April 21 in Tisdale, Saskatchewan
Tisdale Civic Center
Workshop 9am-4pm-lunch included
Volunteer Appreciation Event 5pm-8pm
Supper at 5:30pm
Registration Deadline: March 15, 2018
Please email Tanya.brakstad@rcmp-grc.gc.ca to sign up for this event
Canadian Association of Nurses in AIDS Care (CANAC)
29th Annual Conference: Acting Up, Reducing Harm: Clinical Practice and Advocacy in the Context of Crisis
April 5-7 2018, Vancouver, British Columbia
Keynote Address April 6
Be the Change Conference
March 16 and 17 2018
New Westminster, BC
Keynote Address: Resisting Vicarious Trauma with Collective Care and Justice Doing
Responding to Trauma in Brief Settings: Witnessing Resistance
Part of the Windz Brief and Narrative Therapy Workshop Series
February 1 & 2, 2018
Oakville, Ontario
Many counsellors and therapists are working within therapeutic contexts such as walk-in counselling clinics and short-term services where brief encounters with people occur. People who come to consult with us in these brief settings might come and talk about histories of trauma, oppression, suffering, violence, bullying and other experiences of social injustice. In these situations counsellors must think clearly and differently about how to respond in ways that are non-pathologizing and instead honour acts of resistance.
In all of our work and especially in brief contacts, we can be mindful of the social and political context of injustice and resist the social construction of pathologizing and marginalizing identities. Honouring and witnessing the wisdom of people in their responses to trauma, brings forward their agency, and can create identities of knowledge, autonomy and strength, as opposed to victim/survivor identities, or other “spoiled identities”. We have an opportunity within a single session to shift meaning and identity stories in ways that can be very impactful of people’s lives going forward.
In this workshop you will learn about:
- Alternative understandings of trauma & oppression that include acts of resistance
- Structuring safety immediately in brief therapy encounters
- Witnessing practices that offer new meanings of past traumatic events
- Questions that come from an ethical stance of justice-doing in our conversations
- Connecting private pain to public social and political contexts in ways that reduce isolation and ‘othering’ stories
Registration
AIDS Bereavement and Resiliency Program of Ontario (ABRPO) and the Front Line Worker Support Group
Learning from One Another
Wednesday January 31st, 2018 Central Toronto
Health Centre 955 Queen St. East 4th fl
Responding to the opiate epidemic: Sustainability & Shouldering each other up
Workshop for Managers and Supervisors morning 9-12
In this experiential session, Vikki will explore organizational cultures of resiliency, “trauma” and related behaviours (intrusion / hyperarousal/ avoidance) and useful ways of understanding burnout and vicarious trauma. We will look at our responses to death- differentiating tragic death from death as part of life.
Strategies for sustainability will include discussion on:
- Relations of respect and dignity between staff as a resource against burnout
- A frame for debriefing and commitments to collective care
- Resistance, resilience and “Traumatic Growth”
- Connections on the “practice as research” we are creating
Responding to the Darkness in Our Work
Workshop for Front Line Workers afternoon 1-4
Vikki will lay a foundation for understanding responses to loss and hardship in our work from a place that holds the dignity and respect for workers and our community members. This will look at the social structures of oppression and structural violence that make up the landscape of our work, and look at the psychological ideas that aren’t so useful, like vicarious trauma, as they blame us for not being “resilient” enough.
- Instead we’ll consider responses to loss that can give a foot up on being harmed and disconnected in the work and honour our humanity and our pretty fabulous ways of “Showing up & Doing the hard things”.
- We’ll also consider Holding on and Letting Go, strategies for honouring clients’ lives and our own best work held in a tension alongside the pain of loss.
- Finally, we’ll strategize ways to creatively and collectively respond to our heart break and suffering that are generative and hope filled.
Workshops are free of charge. No registration necessary
For more information, please contact:
Yvette Perreault
Director ABRPO
647-290-8664
yperreault@abrpo.org