1 / 29

Care

Care. WHANAUNGATANGA. Whanaungatanga conforms to an ancient form: IT HEARS the heart-beat of many generations past carried forth in me, the person before them IT SEES who I am, without judgment or derision or despise

joy
Download Presentation

Care

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Care

  2. WHANAUNGATANGA Whanaungatanga conforms to an ancient form: • IT HEARS the heart-beat of many generations past carried forth in me, the person before them • IT SEES who I am, without judgment or derision or despise • IT RESPONDS to me, the person, and creates an opportunity for me to respond in kind • IT SHARES what it has with me and asks nothing in return • IT SUPPORTS me to find myself if I am lost and serves as an anchor by which I might lean upon when I am tired and in need of succor • IT CLOAKS me in its wairua Midlands Common capabilities

  3. How do you specifically use whanaungatanga in your engagement with whanau? • Share with the person sitting next to you.

  4. Ahuatanga Maori “Triangulation” The use of three points to discover one’s location is both an art and a science. Triangulating our way to meaning is an example of fact, logic and metaphor Paraire Huata

  5. Ahuatanga Maori Body – Mind – Spirit Facts – Logic – Metaphor Exterior – Interior – Transpatial Empericism – Rationalism – Transcendentalism Kete Aronui – Kete Tuauri – Kete Tuatea Paraire Huata

  6. Ahuatanga Maori “Ma te whakaatu, ka mohio….” Maramatanga Matauranga Mohiotanga Paraire Huata

  7. Ahuatanga Maori “Abstract rational thought and empirical methods cannot grasp the concrete act of existing Which is fragmentary, paradoxical and incomplete. The only way lies through a passionate, inward subjective approach.” Rev. Maori Marsden Paraire Huata

  8. Ahuatanga Maori Plato speaks of the three elements of inner man; Appetite – To fulfill basic physical desire Reason – To understand and master lifes complexities Spiritedness – Free to exercise moral choice Paraire Huata

  9. Ahuatanga Maori Food is needed for; My mind My body My spirit Learning is the vehicle that gives meaning to my life Paraire Huata

  10. What do you do in your practice to elicit learning goals/outcomes from the whanau you engage with, and how do you record them? • Share with the person next to you

  11. The phenomena of care • Strengthens togetherness • Affirms purpose • Encourages belief in an optimistic future

  12. He tauira • Moral autonomy • Personal mastery • Spiritedness • Transmitter of wellness

  13. Te ao hurihuri “For many people, friends become whanau. Whanau are the people for whom it matters if you have a cold, who will visit you in hospital, who will talk with you when you’re in the pits of despair, who like to hear stories of when you were young. Whether or not they are biologically related to each other the people who do these things are whanau.”

  14. The phenomena of care • People who attend to each other’s needs for safety, shelter, food, friendship and purposefulness care about each other • People are affirming their social nature by doing this • People are then able to transmit their culture adequately generation to generation

  15. The phenomena of care • When peoples abilities to sustain wellness and wellbeing are disrupted, their ability to care for self and others becomes threatened and the transmission of culture flounders.

  16. Pathology of care • The increasing proliferation of helping services increases the likelihood of severe “learned helplessness” • Those served do less and less for themselves. • Paid practitioners cannot always provide the quality of care that “nurtures the soul”

  17. Whanau-Hapu-Iwi • “You can’t have community without unity” Dad back in the days Strong families, make strong sub tribes, make strong tribes. The pervasive nature of delivering services and the increasing range of services has eroded the culture of care, the hallmark of healthy families, healthy communities.

  18. What to do? • Overarching principle “The family comes first” “I whanau mai koe”

  19. Some advice • Build whanau identity and self determination • Connect people with relatives and their family and community history • Help whanau build support systems with each other

  20. More advice • Promote togetherness, resiliency and courage in all circumstances • Being respectful at all times enhances mana “My attitude determines your altitude”

  21. The advice keeps coming • Facilitate posing of perceived problems • Teach differences between feeling and thinking, truth and fantasy • Teach effective decision making • Model and teach empathy

  22. Just about run out of advice • Model and teach healthy lifestyles • Help find balance between individuation and togetherness • Encourage goal setting

  23. More questions • Who looks after the well being of your whanau? • What is the obedience expectation in your whanau? • How does your whanaucontribute to the well being of the hapu/iwi?

  24. Last piece of advice • Keep breathing and keep up the good work.

  25. Enabling Institutions • We can also consider the culture of institutions by the same criteria as for working with whanau • Wellness orientation = positive experiences, meaning, engagement • Character Strengths • Ability to engender optimism and hope • Core Values • Interests, abilities & accomplishments = specific attitude to its role, skill base • Positive interpersonal relationships

  26. We build a house and we live in it. It contains us all, not just consumers, also staff, providers, governance, the whānau whānui, all benefit in various ways. The whare is the tinana, the kiko, the flesh.

  27. We build a house, where we are embraced by the ancestors and all that we have comes from them. The whare is the whanau, the evolution of life.

  28. We build a house, and carry inside it all that we think, feel and behave. It holds our dreams, our hopes, our wants, our desires. The whare is the hinengaro, the understanding

  29. The whare is the house of the spirit Inner Awareness

More Related