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Home » Using Mindfulness to Deal with Everyday Pressures: Regina Chow Trammel (Transcript)

Using Mindfulness to Deal with Everyday Pressures: Regina Chow Trammel (Transcript)

Regina Chow Trammel at TEDxAzusaPacificUniversity

Here is the full text of Dr. Regina Chow Trammel’s talk titled “Using Mindfulness to Deal with Everyday Pressures” at TEDxAzusaPacificUniversity conference. In this informative talk, Dr. Regina explores how the ancient practices of mindfulness can enable all of us to transcend the pressures of life.

TRANSCRIPT:

As a social-work educator and former practitioner, I’m interested in building and maintaining the emotional and mental capacity of those who do the hard work of helping others.

Take, for instance, a day in the life of a social worker. I’ll call her Kerry.

A typical day for Kerry may start like this. In the morning, she checks her emails, and she’s quickly interrupted because a client is in need of emergency shelter.

She handles the client situation and begins the application process for a grant that will fund more beds for her agency. More beds means more veterans off the streets, more single moms and their children in a safe place to stay for the night.

By mid-afternoon, she transitions and settles into group therapy, where she hears the emotional content and the stories of trauma and abuse of the women, who survived domestic violence.

She offers the skills and interventions of a social worker, and she provides comfort and empowerment to the women in order to get them back up on their feet again.

By the end of the day, she has seen many clients, she has heard many stories, and she’s spent. She’s emptied of herself. She’s given over her skills and interventions, time and resources, the best that she could give. It’s a busy day. It’s stressful.

And many days are like this for Kerry and for social workers in general. In fact, social workers suffer from burnout quite often. And though I realize that not all of you are social workers — and I can’t fathom why — but you often, probably, experience intense periods of stress in your own life as well.

So today, I want to talk to you about an ancient practice that you can use to further extend your capacity to deal with stress.