Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Transformation by Transportation 🚙 Foundry Silent Auction

Transformation by Transportation

allows generous donors to purchase a car and have one of three options. You can purchase a vehicle and keep it for yourself, donate it to the ministry of your choosing or donate it to a recent Foundry graduate. The Foundry will deliver it and make the connection for you. If you choose to support a Foundry graduate, we will provide you their story and provide a picture

Your selection to support an additional ministry or gifting a vehicle to a Foundry graduate are both considered tax-deductible donations.
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2002 Toyota Highlander

Year 2002 | Make Toyota | Model Highlander | Mileage 196,984
Transmission Automatic | Engine 3.0L V6 | Exterior Color Gold

2006 Land Rover LR3

Year 2006 | Make Land Rover | Model LR3 | Mileage 191,204
Transmission Automatic | Engine 4.4L V8 | Exterior Color White
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Free 2020 Advocacy Webinar Series Starts Friday!

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NAADAC
April 27, 2020
The Free 2020 Advocacy Webinar Series Starts Friday!
In order to provide you with the tools and information you need to be a powerful and effective advocate for the addiction profession, NAADAC has developed the 2020 Advocacy Webinar Series! This exciting five-part webinar series kicks off on Friday, May 1, 2020 at 12:00pm ET.

Now more than ever, your voice is needed to advocate for yourself, fellow addiction professionals, and those you serve. Learn about public policy, the latest updates in federal funding, grassroots advocacy efforts, and the many resources NAADAC can provide you to help you stay updated on current state and national public policy issues that impact addiction professionals. Earn 7.5 CEs! 

Each free 1.5 hour webinar is presented by a subject matter expert in the addiction profession and worth CEs. While viewing the education is free, non-members must pay to receive CEs ($20 for 1.5 CEs). NAADAC members can earn those CEs for free! (Join NAADAC now and save!)
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2020 Advocacy Webinar Series Schedule
Session I: Shaping Policy and Practice Through Advocacypresented by NAADAC Executive Director Cynthia Moreno Tuohy, BSW, NCAC II, CDC III, SAP, and Polsinelli Policy Advisor Tim Casey
  • Friday, May 1, 2020 @ 12:00-1:30pm ET (11 CT/10 MT/9 PT)
  • Earn 1.5 CEs
  • More Information
  • Register Now
Session II: Updates on Federal SUD Fundingpresented by the National Association of State Alcohol and Drug Abuse Directors (NASADAD) Executive Director & Director of Legislative Affairs Robert I.L. Morrison
  • Friday, July 10, 2020 @ 12:00-1:30pm ET (11 CT/10 MT/9 PT)
  • Earn 1.5 CEs
  • More Information
  • Register Now
Session III: Bolstering the Addiction Workforce – A Call to Actionpresented by Health Resources and Services Administration’s Division of the National Health Service Corps Director Israil Ali, NAADAC Executive Director Cynthia Moreno Tuohy, BSW, NCAC II, CDC III, SAP, and Polsinelli Policy Advisor Tim Casey
  • Friday, August 7, 2020 @ 12:00-1:30pm ET (11 CT/10 MT/9 PT)
  • Earn 1.5 CEs
  • More Information
  • Register Now
Session IV: Confidentiality Rule Changes and 42 CFRpresented by Santa Clara University Executive Professor of Public Health H. Westley Clark, MD, JD, MPH, CAS, FASAM
  • Wednesday, September 2, 2020 @ 3:00-4:30pm ET (2 CT/1 MT/12 PT)
  • Earn 1.5 CEs
  • More Information
  • Register Now
Session V: Bringing it Home – Grassroots Advocacypresented by NAADAC Public Policy Committee co-chairs Sherri Layton, LCDC, CCS, and Michael Kemp, NCAC I, ICS, CSAC, CSW
  • Friday, October 30, 2020 @ 12:00-1:30pm ET (11 CT/10 MT/9 PT)
  • Earn 1.5 CEs
  • More Information
  • Register Now
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Closed Captioning Available for NAADAC Webinars

NAADAC is proud to inform you that closed captioning is available on live NAADAC webinars!
 In addition, transcripts will be made available for on-demand webinars recorded on and after March 27, 2019.

The captioning capabilities are in compliance with the practices defined in Worldwide Web Consortium’s (W3C) Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) and Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act.
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NAADAC Webinar Sponsorship Opportunities Available

Reach thousands of addiction professionals by sponsoring a NAADAC Webinar! Put your product, organization, or company name in front of the decision-makers in the addiction community. Webinar sponsors receive significant recognition before, during, and after the webinar, increasing brand recognition, and making a lasting impression.

Please contact Irina Vayner, MS, Marketing Manager at ivayner@naadac.org or 703.741.7686 x140 for more information.
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Questions or Comments About NAADAC Education?

Take a look at our Webinar FAQs or email NAADAC.
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NAADAC, The Association for Addiction Professionals
44 Canal Center Plaza, Suite 301, Alexandria, VA 22314
Phone: 703.741.7686 / 800.548.0497

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Higher Logic

Sheltering at Home with a Substance Misusing Loved One?

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Sheltering at Home with a Substance Misusing Loved One?

By Carli Noffsinger, LMSW, CAADC, Monday, April 27, 2020 8:32 AM
  So, all these weeks of staying at home have answered those nagging questions in the back of your mind about a loved one’s behavior changes. Your spouse, significant other, child, friend has been misusing a substance of some sort and likely has a substance use disorder (SUD).   Substance Misusing Loved One … Everyone […]
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Sanford House Addiction Treatment Centers 74 Lafayette Ave NE Grand Rapids Michigan 49503 United States

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WFS Monday Thoughts April 27, 2020

"She believed she could, so she did.”  ~~Unknown
“Just one small positive thought in the morning can change your whole day.”  ~~Dalai Lama
“Time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time.”  ~~Marthe Troly-Curtin
_______________________________________________________________
#5 I am what I think.
I am a capable, competent, caring, compassionate woman.
_______________________________________________________________
Statement #5, the core of the WFS New Life Program, lays the foundation for who we are and where we are going. For many women, this can be a new way of thinking and an enormously powerful assertion. In the past, it may have been more comfortable to have someone else dictate who we were or how to live our life.
In our WFS Program booklet, it states “It is important for all women to know and use, the power of their mind and thoughts. However, it is most important for women with drug and alcohol problems to use our minds to enhance our well-being. We can consciously build positive images of ourselves. We create a new self in our mind first.”
It is critical to oversee our minds, especially now with uncertainty in the news and on social media. Being able to create a pause, or distance between unhealthy or repetitive thoughts takes daily practice. One of the most helpful tools I learned to let go unproductive thoughts came from a guided meditation. While I cannot recall the author, the speaker described a small, cool stream outlined with trees. Imagine yourself sitting comfortably along the edge of the water. A large, bright yellow leaf gently falls from a tree and lands on top of the water near you. If there is a thought that you would like to let go of, picture that thought as that yellow leaf. Your eyes are staring at this leaf. It glides down the stream, slowly at first, twirling round and round. You do not chase after it but continue watching it. You can see distance now between you and leaf and soon, it is only a tiny speck of color, then it is gone. It held your gaze but you did not run after it, you did not try to catch it, you simply let it go. This one tool consistently aides in releasing what is no longer needed.
How do you manage your thoughts today?
Hugzzz
Karen
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hi 4C Women,
With so much time for reflection, I have been finding many of my writings from over the years and I am grateful to have them.  During this current time, I find myself starting to question who I think I am.  Before sobriety, I constantly questioned my positive characteristics and honestly, when asked to list as many positive qualities as possible, I was fortunate if I got past 3 and that was a struggle.  The lists I have made over the years are like a history lesson of my own personal emotional growth, my nurturing and beginning of the planting of positive seeds to answer the question, “Who do I think I am?”  I feel that with the social isolation, I have lost some of my identity and my purpose not to mention my energy level is so up and down.  Thank goodness for WFS and Karen’s message to remind all of us that while circumstances have changed, our core foundation of who we are remains strong and if it’s not where you wish it to be, we have the time, support and encouragement to begin or continue building it.  And the best part, for me, is that I no longer see my inability to do certain tasks (computer technology, fixing broken items, learning a new skill, etc.) as weaknesses.  I see them for what they are – just things I’m not gifted with as I have other gifts, talents, skills as we all do.  I have learned to seek help with what I cannot do and share with others what I can. 
One of my favorite exercises for this statement is to list as many positive qualities, talents, characteristics as possible on a 3x5 index card and on the front in bold letters, write STOP.  Keep it in your purse and whenever you start any negative self-talk, the negative adjectives that you feel define yourself, take out the STOP card, turn it over and read the truthful definition of who you are in your own words.  You could even ask others what positive word they would use to describe you and include that. 
2nd exercise:  Practice this exercise and use it whenever you need a quick reminder of how to feel good about yourself.  Exercise from“The Self-Esteem Companion.”     
   1.  Recall a time when you felt really cared for and loved.
        It can be a big event or a small moment.

   2.  Think back to a time when you felt really successful. 
        Anytime will do as long as it provides a strong memory
        of your feelings of success.
   3.  Remember a time that you did something important for
        someone else.  It can by any moment of selflessness
        that’s important to you.
     4. Look for a memory of loving someone else.  Think back to
         a moment when you felt love for another very strongly,
         when that feeling filled your heart.
I've done this exercise a few times and it's amazing how different the answers were depending on what I was feeling or experiencing that day.  What I love about this exercise is that the answers don't require a huge event, although that is certainly just fine if it is a big event in your life.  Big or small, it's about those moments of awareness that remind you how much you matter, how much positive feelings/moments you have experienced when you give quiet time to reflect.  What this exercise has helped me do in moments of doubt, of feeling sad or missing out, is that no matter how big or small, I have been fortunate enough to have experienced these moments of being cared for, love/loved, successful and gave selflessly as so many are doing right now.
Bonded in being part of a phenomenal group of 4C woman, Dee

WFS Virtual Weekend Conference
June 12-14, 2020
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