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Compassion and Presence, Garrison, NY

Skills training in contemplative care for healthcare professionals.

Course participants group photo

Originals even details

March 11-14, 2011 | Registration Friday, March 11, 3pm-6pm followed by a dinner. Orientation and retreat begins at 7:15pm. The retreat closes following lunch on Monday, March 14.

The Garrison Institute, Garrison, NY | Google map

With Christine Longaker , author of Facing Death and Finding Hope, Kirsten Deleo and Pam Russell .

$295 | Lodging and Meals: Separate Fee through Garrison Institute

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CEUs are available for nurses, social workers, chaplains and NY Office of Alcohol and Substance Abuse (OASAS clock hours).

For more information on the training, CEUs and registration contact us

Responding effectively to the needs of patients remains an on-going professional and deeply personal challenge. Compassion and Presence offers the opportunity to learn contemplative resources that support you in your life and work, and enhance the way you offer care - with a renewed sense of joy, confidence, and fulfillment. Drawing from meditations taught in the wisdom tradition of Tibet, this training focuses on cultivating presence and mindfulness, and deepening the capacity for compassion, so that you can remain present, spacious and loving in the face of suffering.

The training introduces insights and contemplations from Sogyal Rinpoche's groundbreaking book, The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying, and demonstrates in practical ways how to appropriately integrate these practices of meditation, contemplative listening, and compassion in any medical setting.

Compassion and Presence is for anyone who cares for others in hospice, palliative care, critical care, gerontology, oncology, general medicine, nursing, emergency medicine, pastoral care, psychology, social work, health care education, and other allied health professions. It will resonate with professionals and volunteers from diverse cultural and religious backgrounds.

The training focuses on four core competencies:

  • Holding authentic presence and communication.
  • Deepening one's ability to extend compassion toward oneself and others.
  • Developing a personal understanding of suffering, and how to be present with suffering.
  • Applying contemplative practices for self-care.

Methods of training

Lectures, discussion, writing, reflection, contemplative practice, and interactive methods for integrating learning.

Training Topics

  • Spirituality and healthcare - an introduction to the spiritual care model of compassionate care
  • Cultivating presence through meditation and mindfulness practice
  • Methods for deepening compassion
  • Responding to suffering
  • Training in contemplative listening
  • Creating a sacred environment
  • Compassionate self-care for alleviating stress, healing burnout, and transforming challenging situations
  • Caregiving as spiritual practice
  • Scientific research on the benefits of training in meditation and compassion in medical care work.

Faculty

Christine Longaker, Education Director, Rigpa's Spiritual Care Education Program.
Former director and staff trainer of the Hospice of Santa Cruz County in California, Christine has provided hospice trainings internationally since 1978. She has been instrumental in developing Rigpa's Spiritual Care Education Program, and serves as its International Education Director. She co-designed and serves as faculty for Naropa University's accredited training in 'Contemplative End-of-Life Care', and is author of Facing Death and Finding Hope: A Guide to the Emotional and Spiritual Care of the Dying, which is translated into nine languages.

Kirsten DeLeo, MA, International Training Manager and Senior Educator, Spiritual Care Education Program.
Drawing from more than fifteen years' experience accompanying people in the last phase of life, Kirsten leads trainings for professionals and the public, and is faculty for Naropa University's 'Contemplative End of Life Care' training. She is a counselor specializing in spiritual care, and in supporting people living with illness. Kirsten completed a three-year meditation retreat under the guidance of Sogyal Rinpoche and is a Senior Meditation Instructor in Rigpa.

Pam Russell, LMSW, Senior Educator, Spiritual Care Education Program.
Pamela is an end-of-life care social worker and bereavement counselor with over twenty years' experience in elder care in long-term care facilities. She is faculty for Naropa University's 'Contemplative End of Life Care' training, and a Rigpa meditation instructor.

 
Spiritual Care Programme
Non-denominational education and care for living and dying inspired by the wisdom and compassion of Tibetan Buddhist teachings

© 2010 Spiritual Care Programme | All rights reserved | Photos by Chinch Gryniewicz and Spiritual Care team