You Can Only Give What You Have: Building Anchors to Weather the Storm of Stress
Original Recording Date :
Length: 2.75 hours
Recorded webinar.
Professional and personal capacity, or bandwidth, are intimately linked. Clients are best served by nourished clinicians. However, while navigating the unknowns of the Covid pandemic, stress levels have risen and depletion has become common place. This workshop explores the relationship between stress, breathing, relaxation, and personal and professional bandwidth. Participants will gain access to their own internal anchors while learning how to harness this experience for better client treatment. There will be a balance of practicing techniques and discussing the science behind why and how these techniques work.
Learning objectives:
Research: Research information about this presentation can be found on the following websites:
Content level: beginning, intermediate, and advanced
Target Audience: social workers, mental health practitioners, creative arts therapists, marriage and family therapists, psychologists, and other interested individuals
Customer ServiceWe are happy to respond to any concerns or questions you may have. Please contact us at by email at sw-ce@buffalo.edu or by phone at 716-829-5841.
ADA Accommodations: If you require any support for your ADA needs in the United States, please contact us by email at least 3 weeks prior to the event by email at sw-ce@buffalo.edu or by phone at 716-829-5841.
Lidia Snyder, LMSW, RYT-500, TCTSY-F is a Registered Yoga Teacher as well as a Certified TCTSY Facilitator and accredited TCTSY trainer of the Center for Trauma and Embodiment. She teaches traditional Hatha Yoga and Trauma Sensitive Yoga across Western New York, including organizational and individual clients. She has worked in child welfare and juvenile justice over the past 20 years and has taught graduate level courses in child welfare and organizational behavior. Lidia is a contributing author on Yoga and Resilience: Empowering Practices for Survivors of Sexual Trauma.