
We are already born, we are going to die. So you have to do something interesting that you respect in between.
TONI MORRISON

With the advent of a new federal administration, with its hostilities toward immigrant/refugee, LGBTQ+, and BIPOC communities, massive economic upheavals and uncertainties, a diminishing safety net, and wars and the global rise of political extremism, helping professionals must navigate the damaging impacts on vulnerable clients’ lives and the increase in their own professional and personal stressors. These include worsening mental health conditions, an increase in addictions, as well as family and relationship breakdowns. Paraphrasing the writer Toni Morrison, how can we as helpers become “as fearless as one can, behave as beautifully as one can, under completely impossible circumstances”? How can we help clients move toward “survival, blossoming, and endurance” given this climate? There is a need for a coherent trauma-informed framework, team-building, and individual coping skills to fortify professionals’ grit, resistance, and perseverance, as they support communities that are hurting.
Drawing on clinical research as well as wisdom of ancestors from marginalized and indigenous communities, the workshop describes how culturally-sensitive, trauma-informed practices and leadership can be an important factor in buffering against psychological injury and enhancing long-term resilience. In addition to presenting content on trauma-informed, anti-racist, and anti-colonial practices and strategies of resistance, the impacts of trauma and racism on the body, the value of empathy and authenticity in navigating sensitive issues, and leadership strategies to buffer against toxic stressors, the workshop will model trauma-informed facilitation practices that participants can use in their work.
By the end of the workshop, participants will:
- Describe the continuum of toxic stress and the relationship between adversity and trauma;
- Update their understanding of trauma-informed practice and/or resistance to be effective in the current climate;
- Review the characteristics of collective trauma as it applies to immigrant/refugee, LGBTQ+, and BIPOC communities;
- Understand the different pathways of the autonomic nervous system and how they can be marshaled intentionally for emotional self-regulation, collective co-regulation, and resistance; and
- Draw on the wisdom of ancestors from marginalized and indigenous communities for inspiration.
Six hours of continuing education approved through the National Association of Social Workers.
BIPOC REPARATIONS DISCOUNT: If you identify as a member of BIPOC communities, you are entitled to a 25% discount.
MILITARY DISCOUNT: If you served in the military, either currently or in the past, or you are a military spouse, there is a 25% discount.
GRADUATE STUDENT DISCOUNT: If you are currently in graduate school in a clinical discipline and wish to register, there is a 25% discount.
Contact Wayne Scott for discount codes.
Trauma-informed Resistance in an Age of Overwhelm: Clinical Strategies
November 7, 2025
8:30 am – 4:00 pm
In person
Revolution Hall,
1300 SE Stark St,
Portland, Oregon
97214
