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Confident Grief Coach Highlight Interview with Sarah Johnston

30m 9s5,088 palabras702 segmentsEnglish

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0:03

Hello. Hello, Sarah. Thanks for being

0:05

here.

0:06

>> Hi. I'm excited to be here.

0:10

>> Yes, I'm excited to tell the world about

0:13

what you do. Sarah is one of our most

0:16

recent graduates with the confident

0:18

grief coach program and happy to have

0:21

her here. She's got an incredible story.

0:23

So, Sarah, I will let you tell your

0:25

story. could you um just introduce

0:28

yourself and just a little bit about who

0:30

you are, where you're located, and what

0:33

brought you to becoming a grief coach.

0:36

>> Sure. Um I'm Sarah Johnston with T

0:41

and I live in a I live on a farm in

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South Central Texas. Uh 300 acres in

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Dwick County, middle of nowhere.

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And um this is a place that my husband

0:54

and I bought about 20 years ago for my

0:56

parents. And um we intended to retire

1:00

here someday. You know, we were really

1:02

old and everything was good. But nine

1:05

years ago he passed away unexpectedly.

1:08

Um my husband died by suicide. So I

1:11

ended up um down here on the farm full

1:15

time and trying to wrangle this by

1:18

myself.

1:21

But um anyway, yeah, so I lost my

1:24

husband to suicide um nine years, a

1:27

little over nine years ago now. And I,

1:30

uh just decided then like if I survive

1:34

this, like I've got to help other people

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get through this too because this really

1:38

sucks. And suicide loss especially was

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extremely lonely and very difficult to

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find the help and resources. Um I even

1:47

struggled to find a grief group. So, I

1:50

just kind of vowed that like this was

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not going to happen to anybody else and

1:55

um kind of kept me going, I guess, for a

1:58

while, but coaching was not really on my

2:02

radar. It was just, you know, somehow

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I'm going to help other people. Um, and

2:07

then a few years ago, you know, you

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start to hear about life coaching and

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then eventually grief coaching. And

2:14

about a year ago, uh, I was just really

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struggling. I was kind of going back

2:18

through my old journals and research and

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things I had done and just trying to

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find some strength and stuff, writing

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more notes and I again came across grief

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coaching and I was like okay you know

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you you told yourself you were going to

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help other people you've got all these

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you know notes and resources like let's

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figure out how to do that better and

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coaching resonated with me because I've

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been an athlete all my life and so

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that's just something that like that's

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normal to me more so than like say

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therapy, going to a doctor. So, um I

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really looked into it and found the

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confident grief coach and was like,

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"Okay, I'm just going to like try the

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program out, see if this, you know, if I

3:00

can actually do this." And it really did

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give me the confidence um that I can.

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So, yeah, that's kind of who I am and

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how I got to grief coaching, I guess. A

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lot of loss.

3:12

>> Yeah. Yeah. And you know, you was

3:14

everybody else. Most people, I think,

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who step into the space have that lived

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experience of loss and just that that

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embodied understanding of just how

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painful it is. And that's really where

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that fuel, that passion for like helping

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other people and stepping into that role

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of a support person. And that's what

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makes a great coach, too, right? because

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you've you've got all of that experience

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from your own journey that you're able

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to utilize now as that that force for

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strength and support, you know, for

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other people as well and supporting

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yourself, you know, throughout the years

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as well because we know that of course

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the pain of loss doesn't just go away,

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but it it

3:57

>> it uh carries with us over the years,

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too. So, um, that's great that you've

4:01

been able to find those tools and

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resources along your path. And I want to

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hear more about that as well, um, about

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what you incorporate into your coaching,

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you know, alongside the Breathe model

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with what you've learned in in a formal

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coaching program as well. Um, but first,

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I'm wondering if there was some moment

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or an insight um, where you kind of

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decided that you wanted to officially

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pursue coaching. What called you toward

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that grief support?

4:30

>> Actually, I was like I said earlier last

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year like really going through it and I

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was in going back through like my early

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widowhood journals and you know looking

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at that struggle I was like how you know

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like how was I getting through this?

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Like I was like in hindsight like I

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don't know how I made it but like

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looking at it you can kind of see the

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path and I sat down and realized went

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further back in other journals from in

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my mom's early dementia because at the

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time of my husband's death my mother was

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still alive but had had dementia for

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over 20 years at that point. So I had it

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had that had been a long slow grief. And

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so I sat down and realized what got me

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through it was the things what got me

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through my widowhood was the things I

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had learned and gained during my mom's

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dementia journey. And so I sat down and

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wrote this um essay. was a thank you

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note to dementia, which I usually write

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hate mail to dementia, but this was a

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thank you note because I realized that

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dementia had gotten me through suicide

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loss. Um, it had really what I had

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learned and gained through that is what

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kept me hanging on um after Jeff's loss

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and even in the loneliness. So, I wrote

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that letter and I actually read it to a

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daughter of a lady that I was caregiving

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for that has dementia because I was

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about to submit it to for a writing

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competition and I was like, "Can I just

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read this? Like, can you just tell me if

6:00

this is crazy? Should I even do this?"

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And I read it to her and she literally

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like just was like, "Holy crap." Like,

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I'm not even looking at my mom the same

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way. Like, are you kidding me? and she's

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like, "You have to share this with other

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people. Like, that helped me so much."

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And so, I recorded it and I shared it on

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my YouTube channel. And I ended up

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getting like some religious studies

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majors, people going, "Wait a minute."

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Like, we've never seen this before. Are

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you kidding me? And people coming to me

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and saying like that that had really

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changed how they looked at dementia and

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caregiving and dealing with their loved

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one. Um, and that it could be a

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beautiful journey. And so um it was at

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that point where I was like that helped

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so many people like how how can I do

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that more? And that's I mean that was

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when I like really like I contacted Pat

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and I was like okay like show me how to

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do this.

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How do I put this together?

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So I was like I've got to share this.

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Like I've got to help people get through

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this because this stuff sucks. And I

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mean, I did it and came through it and

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still laughing like you can, too.

7:14

>> Yeah. Oh, I love that. I'm I'm curious

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about um where that overlap is from your

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experiences with your mom's dementia and

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caregiving for her over those years and

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how that translated into navigating

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suicide loss with Jeff's loss. what

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where where did that overlap or that um

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experience how did that benefit you from

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your mom's journey and then translating

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to your husband's journey?

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So during my mom's journey um early on I

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I was I was raised in a you know very

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Lutheran you know Christian background

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household so I had never like questioned

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God or anything but early in my mom's

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dementia journey I was like [ __ ] you

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like if you can do that to that woman I

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got no chance you know and um

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I I dug into it I I was like going to

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search the Bible and like you know

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and instead um I ended up with a bunch

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of miracles and more understanding than

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I could ever imagine. It totally

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solidified my faith.

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>> So and my beliefs that if I just you

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know like I could pray my way through

8:34

the universe was not gonna you like

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there was something good that was going

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to happen no matter how bad it was. And

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so when and for me going back like

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    Confident Grief… - Transcripción Completa | YouTubeTranscript.dev