Winter 2017 Mindful Resilience, Managing and Thriving with Everyday Stress, 6 week course

Wednesday, Jan 18, 2017 at 6:30 PM to Wednesday, Feb 22, 2017 at 8:30 PM PST

3903 Brooklyn Ave NE, Seattle, WA, 98105, United States

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We offer an income-based reduced rate and have a limited number of scholarships for mindfulness classes. Please email mindful@uw.edu for inquiries before registering.

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Registration with a Certification of Completion Partial Approval - $255.00

12 hours of continuing education credit hours are available for licensed psychologists, marriage and family therapists, mental health counselors, and social workers in Washington State.

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Wednesday, Jan 18, 2017 at 6:30 PM to Wednesday, Feb 22, 2017 at 8:30 PM PST

Center for Child and Family Well-Being, 3903 Brooklyn Ave NE, Seattle, WA, 98105, United States.

 

Mindful Resilience: Managing and Thriving with Everyday Stress 

taught by Diane Hetrick

Course Description

We all know, really, that stress isn't going away in our lives. In fact, with the fast pace of technology and change, it may increase. And, we may not really want it to go away. Stress can help us in many ways: it can grab our attention, remind us we need to make corrections away from our difficulties or lean into our resources to achieve new accomplishments. Even pleasant and positive events, such as vacations, celebrations, and life transitions, can be stressful.

This class, taught by Diane Hetrick, Certified Mindfulness facilitator (UCLA) and Compassion Cultivation Training (CCT) facilitator (Stanford), draws from work of both the MBSR and CCT classes, as well as some of the latest neuroscience and research of Kelly McGonigal in her book, The Upside of Stress, and Paul Gilbert, in his book, The Compassionate Mind.

You'll learn many of the same tools and practices as the traditional MBSR classes, as well as expanding out to tap into your own internal and external resources to develop more resilience and joy in the face of stress. This class incorporates a daily mindfulness meditation practice as well as real life practices to make it immediately useful to your life. 

Each class will include: 

  • An initial settling meditation practice 
  • Sharing of current research and perspectives, and group discussion of how to apply these to our lives
  • Individual or small group guided exercises (including written and verbal)
  • Embodying movement npractices 
  • Guided meditaiton practice 
  • Suggested home [ractice ideas

 

Course Outline 

Week One: Stress and the role of mindfulness and resilience

  • Understanding mindfulness and resilience, and how they might help us manage and even thrive with the day to day stressof life
  • The falacy of stress reduction and why we need stress resilience
  • A look at the latest research and perspectives regarding stress and how we might cultivate stress resilience in our lives

 

Week Two: Working with our mindset - the upside of stress

  • Looking at how how brains work and then learning how to work with our brains
  • Discussion of our negative biases; the Default Mode Network and our wondering mind

 

Week Three: Body and movement practices to support building resilience (bring a yoga mat to this class)

  • The role of movement, breath, and the vagus nerve to help us develop a physiology of resilience and courage

 

Week Four: Deepening into our mindfulness practices to manage and thrive with stress

  • Explore the work of Martin Seligman: the 3 P's that interfere with resilience - personalization, pervasiveness, and premanence and how mindfulness training can support us here

 

Week Five: Resilience: Growing our support systems, and communication skills

  • Exploring the concepts of our common humanity and the role of kindness, courage, altruism and gratitude hav on our resilience
  • Develop our capacity to listen, even in challenging situations. Litening for underlying needs 
  • The importance of remembering our intentions and values

 

Week Six: The role of forgiveness -- for ourselves and towards others

  • Working with Self-Compassion and then broadening this out towards others
  • Final tips for developing a resilient life

 

Pricing and Scholarships 

The course fee is $250.

If you are interested in financial assistance, CCFW offers two options:

  • Income-based reduced fee of $200, available to individuals with an annual household income from all sources of $60,000 or less. For more details, please email mindfulness@uw.edu 
  • A limited number of scholarships are available per course. To apply for a scholarship, please review criteria and complete the application form at https://catalyst.uw.edu/webq/survey/mindful/237140  Note: Scholarship applicants will be notified no later than 3 weeks prior to the first day of class (12/28/16). Applicants must wait to register for the course until a decision has been made in order to qualify.  

If you are a UW Affiliate and have department approval to pay using a UW budget transfer, you may register for a 25% discount ($187.50). Please add your department budget number at check out.

 

Continuing Education Credits

Pay $5 at registration to receive a Certificate of Completion for 12 credit hours for licensed psychologistsmarriage and family therapistsmental health counselors, and social workers  in Washington State.  Please note: the fee for requesting a Certificate of Completion for credit hours AFTER the course begins is $20. 

 

Cancellation Policy

If you cancel up to two weeks prior to the event (1/4/17), you will receive a full refund less a $5 processing fee. If you cancel within two weeks leading up to the event, you will receive a partial refund of 50% minus a $5 processing fee. Refunds cannot be granted on or after the day the class begins.

 

Pay it Forward - Support the Scholarship Fund

If you are able to pay more for the course, we encourage you to consider donating to the Mindfulness Outreach Fund which allows CCFW to offer 50% and 100% scholarships to community members to aid in the cost of registration fees for mindfulness courses. Scholarships are awarded to increase accessibility of mindfulness and compassion training for individuals who have limited resources to obtain such training and to those who work in communities experiencing adversity. To make a donation to the scholarship fund, please visit http://giving.uw.edu/mindfulness

 

 

Class Schedule

6-Class Sessions: Wednesdays from 6:30pm - 8:30pm between January 18 and February 22, 2017 at CCFW

Wednesday, January 18, 2017, 6:30pm - 8:30pm  

Wednesday, January 25, 2017, 6:30pm - 8:30pm

Wednesday, February 1, 2017, 6:30pm - 8:30pm  

Wednesday, February 8, 2017, 6:30pm - 8:30pm  

Wednesday, February 15, 2017, 6:30pm - 8:30pm  

Wednesday, February 22, 2017, 6:30pm - 8:30pm 

 

About the Instructor

Diane Hetrick has been studying and practicing in the areas of mind-body healing, mindfulness, meditation, and compassion cultivation most of her adult life. Her more than 30 years of experience as a Physical Therapist working with patients with chronic pain and/or illnesses lead her to explore various body and movement practices, including yoga, dance and qigong, and to explore the area of Mindfulness meditation, in order to help people with stress, pain or dysfunction find more ease, and well-being in their lives.

She completed the Certificate in Mindfulness Facilitation training through the Mindfulness Awareness Research Center (MARC) at UCLA. After completing the Compassion Cultivation Training (CCT) Teacher Certification Program, offered through the Center for Compassion, Altruism, Research and Education (CCARE) at Stanford, she became one of the first certified CCT teachers in the Seattle areaMore at: http://www.dianehetrick.com/

 

Privacy Policy

The personal information you submit to the Center for Child & Family Well-Being will not be shared, sold, or disclosed to third parties in any form, for any purpose, at any time without your authorization.

 

Contact Information
Page Pless
Associate Director of Programs
Center for Child & Family Well-Being
Office: 206.221.8508
Email: mindful@uw.edu

University of Washington Center for Child & Family Well-being

depts.washington.edu/ccfwb/

The Center for Child and Family Well-Being promotes positive development for children and families by translating research for practical application.We share knowledge through education, professional training and outreach to the community.

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