Grief Series and Workshops
Scrapbooking and Journaling
February 20, 2010
10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
Blue Ridge Hospice -in collaboration with Shenandoah County Parks and Recreation
232 South Main Street
Woodstock, VA 22664
New Participants are welcome! Please call Cathy at 540/536-5210 to register.
Safe Passage Support Series
1:00 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Bereavement Counseling Center
312 West Cork Street
Winchester, Virginia
*Register by February 1, as space is limited.
Safe Passage Support Series
February 23 – April 13, Every Tuesday for 8 weeks
2:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Center for Hope
13 West 2nd Street
Front Royal, Virginia
*Register by February 8, as space is limited.
Jammin’ Our Way Out of the Blues
Children’s Grief Support Series, Ages 6 to 16
March 23 – April 13, Every Tuesday for 5 Weeks
5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
Bereavement Counseling Center
312 West Cork Street
Winchester, Virginia
Safe Passage Support Series
April 23 – June 11, Every Friday for 8 weeks
2:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Center for Hope
232 South Main Street
Woodstock, Virginia
*Register by April 12, as space is limited.
Coming in the Spring
Men’s Grief Support Series
Pet Loss Support Series |
If you are interested in attending, or would like more information, please contact our Bereavement Department at (540) 536-5210. We look forward to hearing from you. Not sure if this group is right for you? Check with our Bereavement Department professionals for offerings that may better suit your needs.
Bereavement Department Events
No one is immune to loss, not even children. Children often feel alone during grief and adults facing the same losses often don't know where to turn for help. In the summer 0f 2008, Blue Ridge Hospice presented a one-day camp to help children face the grieving process.
Archived Articles:
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Camp Hope helps kids deal with loss
Monday, August 18, 2008
By Laura Oleniacz
The Winchester Star
Kernstown — At a table with three other children, a bucket of markers, and blue,
orange, and green quilt squares, 9-year-old Michael Wachter sat brainstorming.“We’re drawing pictures of our loved ones,” he said Saturday at the Youth Development
Center in Kernstown.
Michael had come from Martinsburg, W.Va., for the one-day session of Camp Hope, a
free camp for children ages 3 to 16 run by Blue Ridge Hospice, a nonprofit health-care
organization based in Winchester.
Camp Hope participants Leah Swartwout
(left) and Jeffrey Jones, both 10, design quilt squares Saturday with some help from Tracy Knight (second from left), a bereavement
counselor for Blue Ridge Hospice, and
Kristin Reilly, a music therapist for the
nonprofit organization.
(Photo by Ginger Perry)
The camp aims to give children an outlet for
the grief of losing a family member or friend.“People that grieve healthily as children grieve
healthily as adults,” said Leslie Stewart,
bereavement coordinator for Blue Ridge Hospice. The camp also gave children the opportunity to
meet peers with similar experiences of loss,
Stewart said, and to have fun.
Children created sand art, made memory
boxes, wrote a journal, learned new songs,
built bird houses, made masks, and jumped on
a Moon Bounce.
There was also a special performance by
Stephens City-based Master Lim’s U.S. Martial
Arts Academy.
Camp Hope is in its third year, Stewart said, but this was the first year it was held at the
Youth Development Center on Battaile Drive.
Sixty-six children attended this year, increasing by 32 campers from last year. They live
in Winchester, Frederick County, and surrounding areas including Shenandoah and
Loudoun counties, Stewart said.
At the camp, children learned ways to cope with anger, about the appropriateness of
tears, and that grief and loss are part of a natural process.“The big goal is to get comfortable in their loss, that grief is OK, and there are adults
that are here for them,” Stewart said.
Children can come to the camp for help with the loss of siblings, parents, and
grandparents, as well as divorce.
Some of the children who attended the camp had family members who were clients of
Blue Ridge Hospice care, Stewart said.
Blue Ridge Hospice focuses on palliative care, providing physical, emotional, social, and
spiritual support for terminally ill patients and their families in Winchester and Frederick,
Clarke, Warren, Shenandoah, Page, and western Loudoun counties.
In addition to the camp on Saturday, Blue Ridge Hospice also offered a parent session
from 9:15 to 11:15 a.m. There were about 25 adults signed up this year, Stewart said.
Although Camp Hope is only offered one day per year, there are year-round support
groups of various types available for children and adults, she said.
Waiting in line for registration Saturday morning with her family, Natalie Schlosser, 15,
said she and her sister Rachel, 12, and brother Daniel, 4, attended the camp to cope
with the loss of their father. “I want them to be able to share what they’ve gone through,” said their mother, Karen
Schlosser.
Natalie said she didn’t know what to expect from the camp, but she was optimistic. “I think it will be interesting to meet other children who have undergone similar
experiences,” she said.
Leah Swartwout, 10, was in her third year of attendance at the camp. Her grandmother
had been a residential patient at Blue Ridge Hospice for a year, said her mother,
Stephanie Swartwout.
At the previous camps, Leah said she enjoyed making a quilt square and watching a play where people juggled pins and balls. Before Saturday’s camp, she was hoping to meet new friends and have more fun, she
said.
Links to Resources
Additional resources can be found in our Lending library: LendingLibraryLog22008.xls (Excel/76k) located in the Blue Ridge Hospice Residential Center.
Suggested Videos for Those Who Have Suffered a Loss:
- "Men in Grief"
- "Surviving as a Widower"
- "No one Ever Told Us" , Linda Cunningham - Tag Video "The Gifts of Grief", Nancy Sobonya
Grief and Loss Web Resources
If you have any questions, you can e-mail our bereavement department at bereavement@blueridgehospice.org or phone (540) 536-5210.
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