Through our shared narratives we stitch together
niches of resilience into tapestries for change!
-Wes Ryan
DATE: Thursday Sept 21, 2017
LOCATION: Trinity St Pauls, 427 Bloor St W
TIME: 1:00 - 4:30 pm
COST: $85 + HST
Transforming Trauma is a workshop designed to assist helping professionals looking for tools to address personal stress stemming from work related circumstances. We'll craft metaphor to approach vicarious traumas, put transference in parentheses, and find poetic potential in the mundane. Each list tells a story.
Narrative approach benefits the individual, the counsellor, and the agency (Hartman, et al, 2008). Using both receptive and expressive approaches, participants in this workshop will explore the benefits of utilizing existing poetry and creating their own writing.
Learn to be self -reflective and encourage empathy for others and self, to encounter the nuances of individual situations, and to be heard within a supportive environment.
Spoken word requires listeners as well as presenters, and this workshop will encourage both in a supportive and creative atmosphere wherein participants will fulfill both roles. This is a reciprocal exercise wherein participants will build community and foster individual growth.
"Not only did I learn about spoken word to use with clients,
I got lots out of it for myself!"
Colleen Carruthers - B.Ed. (Adult Ed.), CTDP, PCC, CCMC, CHRM,
Workshop Breakdown:
Hour 1: Build rapport and create a safe environment for participants
Hour 2: Digging Deeper with Abstract Nouns
Hour 3: It takes a community to raise a poet
Conclusion - Room discussion to identify value in the work
" It was a lovely, instructive and inspiring afternoon
which I'd sign up for again in a heartbeat!"
Alanna Morgan
Wes Ryan is an award winning spoken word artist, community organizer, and workshop facilitator. He has worked with various communities including at-risk youth, sexual assault survivors, street-identified individuals, and industry professionals. His own experience as a survivor and a person with a disability is that poetry and other expressive arts provide a myriad of benefits to the individual including self-care techniques as well as social work interventions.
"It is Wes' magic to raise words to the plane of experience: we are not listening to Wes, we are listening with him. As we do, we experience ourselves not on the level thought, but in the domain authentic emotion at our core."
. Dr Gabor Maté
becca@cast-canada.ca www.cast-canada.ca regehr@cast-canada.ca