Finding Peaks

Finding Peaks


Grief and Loss Week at Peaks

May 05, 2022


Episode 51
Grief and Loss Week at Peaks

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https://youtu.be/0q2QhjXht4k

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Description

How do you grieve in a productive way? In this episode, we are joined by another engaging staff member, Lauren Atencio, MA, LAC, LPCC, one of our Primary Therapists. We discuss how Grief and Loss Week works at Peaks and the steps we go through to help clients work through their pain.


Talking Points
  1. Diving into the reasons why we help people through their grief and loss
  2. Reviewing how anger is typically an emotion that covers up pain and why you need to dig deeper to truly heal
  3. Establishing that providing safety, support, and space are essential components of the healing process
  4. Realizing that pain is inevitable in life and all we can do is work through it together


Quotes

“With our curriculum, we definitely don’t just throw them into grief week right away. It’s a process, within individual therapy, within group therapy, we allow them to get to know themselves more and love themselves more. This is one of the most special times of our client’s lives. They’re loved, they’re seen, and they’re actually given the opportunity to love themselves.”

– Lauren Atencio, MA, LAC, LPCC, Primary Therapist  

Episode Transcripts

Episode 51 Transcripts

empathy is knowing your own darkness


without that connection you don’t have


anything what’s the opposite of


addiction just freedom


hello everyone welcome to another


episode of finding peaks uh i’m jason


friesma chief clinical officer at peaks


recovery centers joining me uh founder


president and uh director of tick tock


chris burns let’s go and uh i’m really


privileged to invite another clinician


on this week lauren atencio


and really after our episode a couple


weeks ago


that we did with morgan mckinley


we really wanted to continue to bring in


the clinical experience that we provide


at peaks and


and really kind of how we are engaging


our clients and engaging kind of this


integrated care where we treat


both people that are primary mental


health issues and primary substance use


issues kind of all


with one curriculum and and really where


we left off talking with morgan was


about uh grief week


and


kind of the impact that that has uh in


in our milieu like grief week


with how we have our curriculum set up


people tend to do it toward the back


half of their treatment episode with us


and they have an opportunity to kind of


begin to walk through


uh and learn the process uh of grieving


things like we had talked about a couple


weeks ago but


um


lauren maybe starting with you could you


maybe let’s start with what we talk


about like from an educational


standpoint on on mondays and what we


kind of begin to go over with our


clients


yeah um you know i think


society kind of stigmatizes grief a lot


in this way of like there’s this certain


way you need to grieve the way that i


kind of explain it to clients sometimes


which is a little silly but


um like if you’re watching a dateline


episode and the commentator’s like well


he didn’t look like a grieving husband


right and that


directly tells people that there’s a


certain way to grieve


a grieving husband can show up in so


many different ways and i don’t think


it’s our role to tell people how to


grieve


and so that’s kind of what we go over in


that monday psycho-education piece is


what is grief what is loss um


really kind of diving into kubler-ross’s


stages of grief and what those look like


i think another common misconception


about grief is that you move through the


stages and you’re good um but the


reality of it is you are consistently


always moving through grief and you’re


bouncing back and forth from you know


anger to bargaining to depression


these different things and um so it’s


really about kind of identifying how


grief affects us but also how it affects


our mental health how it affects our use


of substances and


um


i got the opportunity to kind of work


you know with jason and a couple other


clinicians


in 2020 around grief and a big part of


grief is when we go into anger we want


solutions


and so we we do things that make


solutions right whether that be drug use


whether that be relationships


whether that be food these different


things that we try to do


to avoid the depression part of it


and so


on that first day we really kind of


talk about how important the depression


part is


to kind of explore the pain and identify


the pain


but at their own pace right i’m not


going to just throw them in to the


wolves and hopefully they get through it


it’s really about kind of meeting them


where they’re at but also helping them


get into that place to process


yeah i love how you put that and i have


talked to


uh when i’ve done some of those lectures


i’ve talked about how um


there are a lot of right ways to grieve


and kind of a very few wrong ways to


grieve and i think you are right like


where


we do find especially when people come


to a program like peaks like usually


they’re pretty jammed up in in


either anger or just trying to skip


straight to resolution and not having


kind of gone through the the depression


was kubler-ross put it


and so i do think like talking about how


people move through the


you know maybe denial or anger or


uh whatever but all in this


work to avoid kind of i think


kubler-ross’s fourth


stage in that which was uh that that


depression well uh before resolution


and


the other thing that i talk about too is


that when people kind of skip that


depression well and go straight to


resolution it leaves like an infection


it’s like it’s like a band-aid and it


looks like it heals up over the top of


it but um but really there’s these


things usually that still need to be


kind of excavated and kind of worked


through yeah what do you what are you


hearing chris yeah do you find and i


asked morgan a similar question last


week but i’m just interested from your


take is do you find with specific to


mature adults and young adults as they


go through that process is there any


specific stages that you see


mature adults maybe get more entrenched


in than young adults and vice versa yeah


absolutely


you know i think you know morgan touched


on it last week a little bit but i do


think there is


a big gap with how


older adults are allowed to feel and in


younger adults they really do have


permission to feel right and older


adults never got the opportunity to feel


and i think


what i notice is that


and i don’t even know if it’s younger


versus older um i would even go to kind


of female versus male a little bit


in this way of like


men


anger is very acceptable um anger is the


emotion that men can show and they’re


not going to be judged for it


and i think it becomes really


comfortable for our clients to go there


right so i see a lot of our clients both


younger and older stay with the anger


because they don’t understand what’s


underneath it


and i think that’s what grief freak


really does is it starts to explore


what’s underneath that anger for them


and


um it is harder sometimes with the older


adults who are so like set in their ways


of i am not feeling emotions you know


whereas the younger


adults are a little bit more open with


emotion so i think that’s the biggest


barrier but i do think it boils down to


anger like they are allowed to be angry


nobody’s going to judge them for being


angry


um but the real hard part of it is


dipping into the depression well you


know and being able to identify actually


this anger is just a lot of pain


um


so i do see kind of that difference with


them but again with with females and


males too of males aren’t really allowed


to feel emotions


so yeah and i find i was actually


talking to jason about it this morning


and thank you for that um just had an


experience at home the other night where


i was sitting in some sadness as a


father


and i my brain kept trying to pull me


right out of it and get me into anger


and be like no it’s her fault this goes


over here you know but and i had to talk


to cass about it and i said hey there’s


some sadness is coming up for me and i


want to go to anger but i really just


need to sit in this yeah so i really


like that part and i can’t tell you how


many crime shows i’ve been sitting


around he’s guilty


crying yeah


but i think that’s that’s so real is


like


anger’s so acceptable i mean for anybody


and so it’s easier to stay there and


when i always explain it to clients as


like


you’ve had 20 years to practice anger


and we’re asking you within this hour to


practice depression and pain so it’s


hard right


and


it takes so much practice to be able to


stop myself and say yeah i’m angry and


what else is going on down there


and it is it’s a lot of practice


redirection um


it’s a lot of mindfulness really so it’s


interesting too for mature adults i bet


you know


vulnerability and authenticity and


that’s kind of the inflection point with


what we do it’s like we gotta find


vulnerability and we gotta find that


authenticity yeah so and i’d love to and


i think we talked about a little bit


last week how the young you know the


young guys can actually be


a major influence to the mature adults


and vice versa in different different


weeks different modalities and things


like that so


and i think one of the most beautiful


things about our program is that you


know a 75 year old man walks in and a 20


year old man walks in and they get


together and they realize hey we’re


actually really similar


um and they connect and and that was my


fear moving out of the young adult realm


right is that how are they going to


connect with these


younger


individuals but it is just the most


beautiful thing to see this you know


very well established man who has done


so many things with his life


be able to connect with this younger


adult who’s just starting his life


yeah that can be so powerful i do


remember having that discussion like how


we


we just thought the campus would split


or whatever and really


it’s brought it


uh incredibly close uh when people are


able to relate to one another like that


and and i think it can be really healing


like


like for


young adults to to kind of grieve with


older adults and vice versa like it can


just be really


uh powerful when people are relating


like that


so i do think lauren um


well how our how our curriculum is set


up is uh


i mentioned monday we kind of do psycho


education and we introduce a topic and


we have these six weeks of uh uh


intensives that we offer


and so monday we kind of talked about


what we do on monday for grief week but


on tuesdays uh i’ve been really excited


to talk to you about this um


what do you do for tuesday for grief


week like


yeah


i’m smiling because i


i mean this


grief week and being able to be there is


is one of my favorite parts of my job um


and


so um what we kind of do is


on monday we set each client up with a


task to write a letter


a grief letter to something they’re


grieving and i think


again going back to the stigma of grief


is


um and i think morgan touched on this


last time too is like our younger adults


being like well i have never lost anyone


right i’ve never


i’ve never grieved like i’ve never had


to grieve and


i think


what’s


the most beautiful part about the grief


process is that


loss is so universal that like yeah you


have lost things so let’s figure out


what that is


um so we tasked them on monday to write


a letter to the person the thing the


object the feeling whatever it is to


um what a letter to them right in the


sense of this is


how you’ve kind of impacted me and this


is what i need to start to let go


and then moving into tuesday


we start to move into more of an


experiential


process


there is


a treatment modality kind of related to


fritz pearls it’s gestalt


which he integrated this concept of


empty chair um


and


exactly what it sounds like right


we usually have the client and it’s


interesting because like we’ll have all


of the other clients sitting around


right and then we put


the client right in the middle of the


circle with their peers and we put a


chair in front of them and


we sit with them


and


kind of start to process the letter and


what that looks like is


you know i was just telling chris


i


have found that


there’s a special way to allow for the


client to kind of get into themselves


and their emotions especially for those


who aren’t connected to their emotions


right


and so being able to have them i’ll


usually kind of sit at the very edge of


my chair and very get very very close to


them and i make sure that my tone of


voice is very low


kind of like a meditative state


allowing them


how i start is kind of tell me about


what you’re grieving tell me about you


know let’s say mom your grieving mom


tell me about your mom tell me about


what she looks like tell me about what


she does tell me about your relationship


with her


and so then they’re kind of thinking


about it the wheels are turning and then


i kind of stop that and allow for them


to


feel their body i’ll ask them kind of


what are you noticing in your body


is it anxiety is it fear is it anger


and really focusing on okay well the


anger is in my chest okay bring bring


focus to that right


help yourself identify with the anger


understand the anger be with it


um and then after that i will kind of


move into this place of all right so now


let’s put your mom in the chair in front


of you


um continuing to have that low voice in


that meditative state and um


like i’ll be like


you know what is she doing in the chair


is she nervous to talk to you is she


angry


is she looking at you you know all of


these different things in order to make


the space


a place where they can just be


vulnerable and safe with the thing


they’re grieving the most


and then we move through that and


my favorite part about grief week is


that


usually the letter that they’re writing


is not to what they’re grieving right


and so we’ll move through the process


they’ll read the letter and i kind of


pick things out of the letter i’m like


okay so tell me tell your mom more about


this


and then it might get to a place of like


no actually i’m really grieving my


childhood


you know like i’m actually grieving what


i didn’t get


and i’m grieving the child in front of


me that inner child in front of me i’m


i’m sad for him you know and i’m i’m sad


that he didn’t get these things and


being able to just show compassion in


that way is just so powerful for clients


and


it again like i said it’s my favorite


intervention because


it allows for the clients to really just


let go of what they’re holding on to so


i mean tightly you know


and it allows for them to just release


and another thing that i was saying


right is that


sometimes the clients aren’t ready to go


certain places and that’s okay i think


what this gives us is an opportunity to


hold space i’ve had a client in the past


who sat in the chair for 10 minutes


wasn’t willing to read his letter


all he was willing to do was sit there


and cry


and i just sat there and i held that


space for him because it was too much


for him to hold on his own and he just


needed a little bit of support with that


um


so yeah it’s really cool


i love that it reminds me of my last


trauma intensive


it’s just really unique what we do here


because you hold space


you set the stage you create safety


we’re going into the limbic brain we’re


getting a lot of work done in that what


feels like hours but maybe just 15


minutes


and i remember when i went


to one of my other favorite treatment


programs the meadows and we sat up there


in a lecture on a monday and they were


like you’re going to get two years of


talk therapy in this week


and so that’s what the viewers can


really expect is when you come into


peak’s recovery and go through our


six-week curriculum i mean each week has


that same intensity


that same safety and that same


intentionality that really moves people


through their grief their loss their


pain and their shame in a really


exceptional way and so i always find


myself telling families i was just


talking to one before i got here and i


get a lot of hopelessness on that side


and i’m like just be patient we’re going


to take it 24 hours at a time and let’s


see where this goes


because you watch people day in and day


out i come back a week later and it’s


like who are you it’s a new person and i


just love the way that you guys set up


the safety for our clients because


that’s one thing i was just in group


this morning running circle and


everybody in that group is safe they’re


not hyper vigilant they’re not worried


about where they’re going to eat where


they’re going to sleep what’s going to


happen is a lot of them have been for a


number of years they’re


they’re set in the chair and they’re


like feed me yeah you know that’s


special and i think that’s another thing


that’s so special about our grief week


is that we do it in a group setting


so they’re not alone through this you


know like sure i’m there but


all of their peers who see them who’ve


seen them at their lowest who’ve seen


their most vulnerable parts are sitting


there just holding this for them


and i think when you’re seen it’s so


much easier to let things go


yeah


for sure it’s that empathy thing it


totally is


when i think you know if you


we can always tell when it’s grief week


on our campus because like it’s a little


quieter yeah it’s a little well and a


little routier a little yeah a little


bit rowdier in spots for sure but uh


there’s


something settles on and i do think like


our chef tries to cook some comfort food


sometimes during grief week which is


really kind of her and i think


um


but there is this this tone and this


camaraderie and


and it is usually when i when i’ve done


grief week just recently actually i i


had the privilege of doing a friday


session and like


that’s where the guys were like this is


the best experience of my life this is


the best


treatment of my life this is the best


experience of my life and the most


life-changing experience of my life and


and that is so powerful and and to your


point chris it doesn’t take months and


years to kind of dig in there it takes


some intentionality


and we kind of do it in a week and


really


you know


to kind of round out the week like when


we go to thursday that’s where we do


like crossfit and you me with the guys


and we do um some yoga and then the


auricular therapy or the the accu detox


and um


just to really help people’s nervous


systems settle because


it’s pretty activating um when people


learn how to kind of dig into the depth


of their depression and all that like


that can be pretty activating and


stimulating


and then friday


that’s where we do work to kind of


continue to relax


the system a little bit but also talk


about the integration of it


and i know when i talk about that uh


during grief week i talk about how like


we have we grieve all the time and like


this is a process you’re learning and it


doesn’t actually


take therapists and all of that to to


learn how to do a process


um


my hope being as as people lead peaks


that they know how to like okay i can


i can feel my daughter for instance


leaving for college i don’t know


anything about that but uh i can feel my


daughter leading leaving for college and


i can feel the sadness coming up and i


can feel almost bargaining and i can


feel myself working through these stages


and then


you know sinking into the sadness of it


with the recognition that like i know i


can move through this and i know there’s


another side of resolution and


and you know even you know just to


continue this uh completely hypothetical


situation i know


you know like


if she were to like come home on a


holiday or whatever like i get to go


through little mini grief cycles as well


every time


and so just learning how to like


trust that process too and not block it


to let it kind of flow because i do


think that’s what our grief week does


like people end up really log jammed and


like


you know i didn’t grieve my grandma


passing and then my dad and then my


marriage and then my kids don’t talk i


have this stack


of things and frequently people write a


letter and they’re like i want to write


another one can i do it again


i need to do it again i’ve got more i’ve


got to work on


and um


i don’t know do you have anything to add


to kind of the end of the week i not


necessarily the end of the week but i


just have something to add to that um


maybe the end of the week right is


something that i really try to like let


our clients know is like hurt is


inevitable right and we we spend so much


time trying to get away from it whether


that’s self-sabotage whether that’s


substance use whether that’s you know


high anxiety we spend so much time


trying to figure out how do i not get


hurt in this situation


but the problem with that is her is


inevitable and we’re all going to get


hurt at some point or the other


and so what this really does is it


teaches clients how to deal with the


hurt how to not let the hurt consume


them and control them but instead they


get to kind of control it and i think


that’s probably one of the most powerful


things and like you said integration


that last day is being able to say like


you did it


you this one thing that you never


thought you could do you did it like


it’s such a cool thing to be able to


give them hope that they can move


through it again at some point or


another


yeah i really love what the what the


curriculum speaks to because it is like


really tangible next steps when you get


out in the community


i’m going to have to reap certain things


i’m going to have to find my identity


i’m going to have to you know action


orient my purpose and have to understand


my mental health i’m going to have to


understand my substance use history you


know i’m going to have to walk through


relationships how to keep those how to


grieve those and i think you’re so right


too it’s because when you finally hit


that grief button it’s like


here it comes you know i found myself


experiencing some sadness around an old


friend that i hadn’t talked to about


five years ago and


i’m just starting to experience that in


the last year or so and so when you open


up that channel this authenticity and


this vulnerability you can just be sad


and not have to move away from it and


something that i’m really anchoring into


and really loving to be a part of in my


recovery


so


yeah i think that’s incredible and i


as we’re sitting here talking through


all this too i’m thinking


you know like if if somebody’s watching


this that is contemplating coming to


peaks like this might sound kind of


scary


like i don’t know if i want to go to a


place where like


i got to do this hard work so


lauren how do you how do you think we


prepare clients for this


um


yeah you know i think


um with our curriculum we definitely


don’t just throw them into grief week


right away


it’s definitely a process right we


within individual therapy within group


therapy we allow them to kind of


know themselves more and just be able to


get to know themselves more get to love


themselves more you know i think


something that’s always stuck out to me


chris that you said i don’t even know


when you said it but


um this is the most one of the most


special times of any of our clients


lives right they’re loved they’re seen


and they’re actually getting the


opportunity to love themselves and so as


as scary as this all is it is the most


relieving feeling to be able to let some


of this go


and be able to look at myself and say


like


i did this you know like i moved through


this and


and i think


there is a lot of fear with treatment


and therapy in general


um and and i’m guilty of it too like


first time i went to therapy i was not a


fan you know like it was


you’re gonna ask me to stay here and


talk about all my stuff like no thank


you


um but the hardest moments are the


moments where you’re healing the most


and i just try to like lean into


our clients with that and i and i i said


this yesterday to kind of one of our new


clinicians is that’s the beauty of


treatment is that


we create safety right we create an


environment where you can feel that and


you don’t feel like you’re just going to


crumble


but instead you feel like no i know that


she’s over here he’s over here


to be able to support me through this


but i do think the curriculum is a big


part of it is we prepare them yeah to be


able to process some of these emotions


and i think too that is beautiful and i


think too also with you know people that


are potentially coming in or thinking of


calling peaks they might think we’re


coming in and i’m doing this alone right


yeah but it’s completely the opposite


and you’re like i’m gonna walk into


strangers and within 72 hours you know


we’re calling these people our best


friends because we’re sharing in the


opportunity that is vulnerability and


authenticity for the first time and so


you watch people come in like this then


when in 24 hours it’s just like that


yeah yeah totally and that’s the peaks


environment and that’s the peaks culture


and that’s the ability that we have and


especially people coming into the


program to counter balance what is some


significant adversity yeah in early


recovery so


thank you for that yeah yeah i think


that was really insightful and i and i


do think


the link


another link between kind of primary


mental health and primary substance use


is people are really lonely they’re


detached from their relationships


and they can be surrounded with a lot of


people but um


but they’re doing all this alone


truthfully yeah whether they can’t get


out of bed because of depression


um or they’re just alone in their


thoughts uh


uh you know ruminating or obviously


alone and using and so coming into an


environment like peaks like


it’s what we immediately do and chris


you have set the tone uh since 2014 that


this is about building community and we


have changed a lot of aspects of


everything else about this program but


like that piece alone uh is the threat i


think that has pulled all the way


through and i think it’s it is what


makes grief week not this uh


week of like i gotta figure all this out


on my own it’s a it’s a we thing and you


did a great job describing the circle


around the


the clients as they go through this


process so um and something i value


about our program sorry is that


i tell the guy the clients this all the


time is our program is probably 60


percent your peers yeah like you your


connection your community


is going to get you through this when


we’re not there you know and i think


that is


one of the most beautiful things i see


in our program yeah


i mean i feel like that’s a whole other


discussion too about how


uh


we are just the conduits of all that


right like this isn’t about anybody’s


ego and like


you know this i you know the therapists


have to be the most amazing people in


the world even though i think we are


i think but like we don’t have like we


try to set a tone the entire company


every department tries to set the tone


that like we’re just building the


structure for the healing to occur


within i think um and in providing


little things and prompts and


uh pushes here and there but i i think


you’re right a lot of it is the


community yeah i’d say the recovery


ecosystem at peaks is some of the best


in this country as far as i can see yeah


yeah i think so too


all right well lauren i really


appreciate you coming on and doing this


deep dive and chris i always love uh


your perspective and your questions and


and you sharing your own journeys you


kind of have


uh walked your own path especially over


the last few years and gotten to this


place where you can hold this


conversation with us i really appreciate


it that would have been uncomfortable a


couple years ago


no grief yeah


so anyway uh that’s it for this episode


of finding peaks find us on mainly tick


tock uh that’s the best place


and then also find us on uh facebook


spotify


instagram


and the other ones probably appearing on


your screen now


until next time