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Brave Space Supervision: Creating Emotionally Safe and Reflective Learning Environments

Facilitators: Rachael DuBose

Location: Virtual

3 Hr CEs (NBCC)

Cost: $150

Grief and bereavement are multifaceted processes that extend beyond sadness, encompassing psychological, emotional, physical, spiritual, and cultural dimensions. While grief is a universal human experience, each client’s journey is unique and influenced by personal history, family systems, culture, and the nature of the loss.

This training equips mental health counselors with knowledge and skills to navigate the complexities of grief support. Participants will gain clarity on the distinctions between grief, mourning, and bereavement, while also exploring how to differentiate typical grief responses from complicated or prolonged grief. Emphasis will be placed on culturally responsive care, lifespan considerations, and evidence-based interventions.

Counselors will also reflect on their own experiences of grief, learning strategies to build resilience and prevent burnout when working with grieving clients.

Objectives:

1. Define emotional safety in the context of clinical supervision and identify its key components.

2. Explore how cultural identity, power dynamics, and trauma histories shape supervision experience.

3. Apply trauma-informed, relational, and culturally responsive strategies to enhance emotional safety for supervisees.

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November 5

Whole Families, Whole Healing: Healing Justice-Involved Families Through Trauma-Informed Support

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November 21

Messy, Painful, Necessary: Collective Healing Beyond the Therapy Room