160 likes | 311 Views
Be the ROCK for someone in need…. R esource O ffering C ompassion & K nowledge Rock …a firm foundation or support; (figurative) someone who is strong and stable and dependable. Principles for Caring Actions. Be a ROCK
E N D
Be the ROCK for someone in need… Resource Offering Compassion & Knowledge Rock…a firm foundation or support; (figurative) someone who is strong and stable and dependable
Principles for Caring Actions • Be a ROCK • ROCKS need to listen twice as much as they talk • Guide the decision-making process • Be an advocate for the young person • Express and receive honest emotion • Extend realistic hope in the midst of crisis
Responses • PREVENTION - ongoing support and ministry to all youth and young adults • INTERVENTION - immediate response to actual crisis • REFERRAL – building a caring community • MINISTRY - faith response
Prevention • Establish a personal relationship • Develop good communication skills • Active listening • Clarifying skills • Supportive/directive skills • Remain clear, calm, balanced … personally secure … think clearly
Prevention, continued • Be aware of your own feelings, needs, and supports … who is your anchor? • Involve others in a supportive role • Don’t try to “save”
Intervention • Do something … and do it NOW • Don’t keep secrets • Know where to go for extended professional support • Don’t moralize • Don’t rationalize • Give hope
Confidentiality • Privacy: Assure the youth or young adult that you will respect his/her privacy, and will not divulge the conversation to another without telling them you are doing so. • Limits: when there is danger of the person hurting oneself, hurting another, or of being hurt by someone else.
Guidelines for Referral • Assess Your Limitations • Time • Skill • Emotional Security
Guidelines for Referral • Assess Your Limitations • Follow These Steps • Know your resources • Timing • Healing and Concern • Involve the young person • Maintain some contact afterwards
Guidelines for Referral • Assess Your Limitations • Follow These Steps • Anticipate Barriers • No resources (available or affordable) • You don’t want to! • The young person doesn’t want to talk to someone else
Ministry • Build a community and a sense of belonging • Ministry of wasting time • Skill of creative loafing • Peer ministry • Educate youth and young adults • Parent education (with youth) • Have good referral patterns
Upcoming NCPD Webinars Threats to the Life of People with Disabilities, Part I: Poor Prenatal Diagnosis of Lethal or Nonlethal Conditions & Disability October 5, 2010 Advanced Considerations on Catechesis and Children and Youth with Disabilities1st Quarter, 2011 Parish Outreach to Wounded Warriors 2nd Quarter 2011
Thank You! Thank YOU for joining us. May God bless your efforts to support the life and faith of youth and young adults. Thank you to our partners in this webinar, the: National Federation for Catholic Youth Ministry and the National Conference for Catechetical Leadership Thank you to our collaborator, the: National Catholic Young Adult Ministry Association and thanks to all of you who spread the word about this webinar series!
Special thanks, as well, to our major funders… • Province of St. Joseph of the Capuchin Order • Our Sunday Visitor Institute • Warren P. Powers Charitable Foundation …without whom this webinar would not have been possible.
Visit the NCPD Website at www.ncpd.org • For a schedule of upcoming webinars. • For a replay of this and archived webinars • Select a webinar under the “Webinars” navigation button and scroll to the bottom of the page to access the Resources
Support NCPD • Did You Know?—that NCPD serves some 14 million Catholics with a disability, by supporting the work at the (arch) diocesan and parish levels? • And that NCPD does this on a budget funded only from donations from affiliate member (arch) dioceses, grants and individual sponsors? • Help grow our ministry, and bless our work. Donate to NCPD by clicking on the icon on the front page of our website, www.ncpd.org.