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By Paula Fontenelle
4.7
5454 ratings
The podcast currently has 135 episodes available.
My guests today are Nicole Siegfried and Caroline Nichols. In this interview, they help us figure out how parents and families can help kids who struggle with suicidal thoughts, ideation, and previous attempts.
This interview is the fourth of a week-long series, during which I will be publishing at least one episode every day directly from the 57th conference of the American Association of Suicidology, AAS, in Las Vegas.
Join me daily for interviews with key speakers, researchers, and loss survivors.
Are you looking for a suicide loss support group? Join mine, it's online.
See details here: https://t.ly/YsdKG
Find Nicole and Caroline:https://lightfully.com/
Visit my page www.understandsuicide.com
Enroll in my course "How to help suicidal people"
https://bit.ly/3klNZ7n
Find my book: Understanding suicide: living with Loss, paths to Prevention
https://t.ly/mTxpo
If you need to talk, contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline:
https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org
Phone: 800-273-8255
My guest today is Joan Hoff. She has been facilitating loss groups for over thirty years, including support groups for children, families, and suicide loss survivors. Joan lost her husband to suicide and in this interview, she shares with us her experience with her own grief and why she believes in the healing power of groups.
This interview is the third of a week-long series, during which I will be publishing at least one episode every day directly from the 57th conference of the American Association of Suicidology, AAS, in Las Vegas.
Join me daily for interviews with key speakers, researchers, and loss survivors.
Are you looking for a suicide loss support group? Join mine, it's online: https://t.ly/YsdKG
Visit my page www.understandsuicide.com
Enroll in my course "How to help suicidal people"
https://bit.ly/3klNZ7n
Find my book: Understanding suicide: living with Loss, paths to Prevention
https://t.ly/mTxpo
If you need to talk, contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline:
https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org
Phone: 800-273-8255
My guest today is the therapist Khara Croswaite and the topic is "When therapists lose a client to suicide." What does the grief look like? Who do we go to? What helps? What about the shame of sharing with colleagues that you have lost a client in this manner?
Khara knows some of those answers because she recently lost a client to suicide and she has been vulnerable and brave enough to share her story and publish a book about her experience. The book is entitled “Moving from Alert to Acceptance.” (link below).
This interview is the second of a week-long series, during which I will be publishing at least one episode every day directly from the 57th conference of the American Association of Suicidology, AAS, in Las Vegas.
Join me daily for interviews with key speakers, researchers, and loss survivors.
Find her book: https://amzn.to/4byBeiR
Are you looking for a suicide loss support group? Join mine, it's online: https://t.ly/YsdKG
Visit my page www.understandsuicide.com
Enroll in my course "How to help suicidal people"
https://bit.ly/3klNZ7n
Find my book: Understanding suicide: living with loss, paths to prevention
https://t.ly/mTxpo
If you need to talk, contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline:
https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org
Phone: 800-273-8255
My guest today is Joanne Harpel, president of Coping after suicide and executive producer of the film “Talking Out Loud: Teen suicide loss, a Conversation.” She lost her brother Stephen to suicide in 1993. Since then, Joanne has been working on prevention and postvention, particularly with support groups.
Our focus today is teen bereavement, a topic very rarely explored even here on my podcast. I watched her film at the convention and learned so much from it that I decided to share it with you, so let’s listen to her journey and how she has transformed lives since her loss.
This interview is the first of a week-long series, during which I will be publishing at least one episode every day directly from the 57th conference of the American Association of Suicidology, AAS.
Join me daily for interviews with key speakers, researchers, and loss survivors.
Watch the film: https://t.ly/uCs1h
Are you looking for a suicide loss support group? Join mine, it's online.
See details here: https://t.ly/YsdKG
Visit my page www.understandsuicide.com
Enroll in my course "How to help suicidal people"
https://bit.ly/3klNZ7n
Find my book: Understanding suicide: living with Loss, paths to Prevention
https://t.ly/mTxpo
If you need to talk, contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline:
https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org
Phone: 800-273-8255
This week, beginning tomorrow (Tuesday), I will be publishing at least one episode every day directly from the 57th conference of the American Association of Suicidology. Join me daily for interviews with key speakers, researchers, and loss survivors.
Are you looking for an online suicide loss support group? Join mine: https://t.ly/gYW-G
Find my book "Understanding Suicide: Living with loss, paths to prevention:”
https://amzn.to/3QYe0II
Enroll in my course "How to help suicidal people."
https://bit.ly/3klNZ7n
Subscribe to my YouTube channel:
https://rb.gy/0emdk
Visit my page www.understandsuicide.com
If you need to talk, contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline:
https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org
Phone: 988
After a series of losses, including the death of her mother and her husband’s suicide, Michelle Collins combined the tools she had collected as a yoga therapist and wellness coach and studies in positive psychology and neuroscience to turn post-traumatic stress disorder into post-traumatic growth and resilience.
She is the author of two books: “Surviving Spousal or partner suicide loss: A Mindful Guide for Your Journey Through Grief” and “Supporting a Survivor of spouse of partner suicide loss: A Mindful Guide for Co-journeying Through Grief.”
In this interview, we focus on how a partner or spouse can help their loved one through suicide loss.
Find Michelle: https://inhabitjoy.com/
Are you looking for an online suicide loss support group? Join mine: https://t.ly/gYW-G
If you need to talk, contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline:
Richard Brockman is Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, and Attending Clinical Psychiatrist at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center. When he was seven years old he found his mother’s body after she died of suicide. This traumatizing experience re-shaped the narrative of his life.
In his book, "Life After Death: Surviving Suicide,” Dr. Brockman he shares the memories of his childhood, the many gaps he has in those memories, and how the man survived while the boy tried to make sense of it all.
Find Dr. Brockman: https://www.cugmhp.org/faculty/richard-brockman-md/
Buy his book: https://amzn.to/3SbxJqk
Are you looking for a suicide loss support group? Join mine, it's online. See details here: https://t.ly/qcCC9
Find my book "Understanding Suicide: Living with loss, paths to prevention:”
https://amzn.to/3QYe0II
Enroll in my course "How to help suicidal people."
https://bit.ly/3klNZ7n
Subscribe to my YouTube channel:
https://rb.gy/0emdk
Visit my page www.understandsuicide.com
If you need to talk, contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline:
https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org
Phone: 988
Kristyna and Veronika Delmar are from the Czech Republic and they lost their mother to suicide a little over a year ago. In this interview, they share with us the different paths they took to live through their grief.
Kristyna tried to “learn" everything she could about the topic by reading books and trying to get in touch with people who were going through the same kind of loss. Veronika was the one who found their mother, so this shock permeated her pain and it still does. She still tries to suppress her emotions and acknowledges that anger is still taking center stage.
This moving interview touches on a universal theme when it comes to suicide: how do families deal with each other’s grief journeys? Is it possible to respect and support each other through suicide loss? Their candid story shows us that nothing is more healing than love, compassion, and the understanding that when suicide happens, we are inherently bound by a shared loss.
Are you looking for an online suicide loss support group? Join mine. See details here: https://t.ly/qcCC9
Find my book "Understanding Suicide: Living with loss, paths to prevention:”
https://amzn.to/3QYe0II
Enroll in my course "How to help suicidal people."
https://bit.ly/3klNZ7n
Subscribe to my YouTube channel:
https://rb.gy/0emdk
Visit my page www.understandsuicide.com
If you need to talk, contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline:
https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org
Phone: 988
From time to time, some of my listeners contacted me for therapy but in the past, I have not been able to accept new clients due to a lengthy waiting list. That has recently changed because I just opened my own practice, so I am taking new patients and have a few available spots.
If you are searching for a therapist and you live in Oregon, in the US, contact me. I give a free 15-minute consultation so that we can see if we are a good fit.
I'm not taking insurance at the moment.
My phone number: 971 2361388
Email: [email protected]
Have a great day.
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