Confident Grief Coach Highlight Interview with Sarah Johnston
FULL TRANSCRIPT
Hello. Hello, Sarah. Thanks for being
here.
>> Hi. I'm excited to be here.
>> Yes, I'm excited to tell the world about
what you do. Sarah is one of our most
recent graduates with the confident
grief coach program and happy to have
her here. She's got an incredible story.
So, Sarah, I will let you tell your
story. could you um just introduce
yourself and just a little bit about who
you are, where you're located, and what
brought you to becoming a grief coach.
>> Sure. Um I'm Sarah Johnston with T
and I live in a I live on a farm in
South Central Texas. Uh 300 acres in
Dwick County, middle of nowhere.
And um this is a place that my husband
and I bought about 20 years ago for my
parents. And um we intended to retire
here someday. You know, we were really
old and everything was good. But nine
years ago he passed away unexpectedly.
Um my husband died by suicide. So I
ended up um down here on the farm full
time and trying to wrangle this by
myself.
But um anyway, yeah, so I lost my
husband to suicide um nine years, a
little over nine years ago now. And I,
uh just decided then like if I survive
this, like I've got to help other people
get through this too because this really
sucks. And suicide loss especially was
extremely lonely and very difficult to
find the help and resources. Um I even
struggled to find a grief group. So, I
just kind of vowed that like this was
not going to happen to anybody else and
um kind of kept me going, I guess, for a
while, but coaching was not really on my
radar. It was just, you know, somehow
I'm going to help other people. Um, and
then a few years ago, you know, you
start to hear about life coaching and
then eventually grief coaching. And
about a year ago, uh, I was just really
struggling. I was kind of going back
through my old journals and research and
things I had done and just trying to
find some strength and stuff, writing
more notes and I again came across grief
coaching and I was like okay you know
you you told yourself you were going to
help other people you've got all these
you know notes and resources like let's
figure out how to do that better and
coaching resonated with me because I've
been an athlete all my life and so
that's just something that like that's
normal to me more so than like say
therapy, going to a doctor. So, um I
really looked into it and found the
confident grief coach and was like,
"Okay, I'm just going to like try the
program out, see if this, you know, if I
can actually do this." And it really did
give me the confidence um that I can.
So, yeah, that's kind of who I am and
how I got to grief coaching, I guess. A
lot of loss.
>> Yeah. Yeah. And you know, you was
everybody else. Most people, I think,
who step into the space have that lived
experience of loss and just that that
embodied understanding of just how
painful it is. And that's really where
that fuel, that passion for like helping
other people and stepping into that role
of a support person. And that's what
makes a great coach, too, right? because
you've you've got all of that experience
from your own journey that you're able
to utilize now as that that force for
strength and support, you know, for
other people as well and supporting
yourself, you know, throughout the years
as well because we know that of course
the pain of loss doesn't just go away,
but it it
>> it uh carries with us over the years,
too. So, um, that's great that you've
been able to find those tools and
resources along your path. And I want to
hear more about that as well, um, about
what you incorporate into your coaching,
you know, alongside the Breathe model
with what you've learned in in a formal
coaching program as well. Um, but first,
I'm wondering if there was some moment
or an insight um, where you kind of
decided that you wanted to officially
pursue coaching. What called you toward
that grief support?
>> Actually, I was like I said earlier last
year like really going through it and I
was in going back through like my early
widowhood journals and you know looking
at that struggle I was like how you know
like how was I getting through this?
Like I was like in hindsight like I
don't know how I made it but like
looking at it you can kind of see the
path and I sat down and realized went
further back in other journals from in
my mom's early dementia because at the
time of my husband's death my mother was
still alive but had had dementia for
over 20 years at that point. So I had it
had that had been a long slow grief. And
so I sat down and realized what got me
through it was the things what got me
through my widowhood was the things I
had learned and gained during my mom's
dementia journey. And so I sat down and
wrote this um essay. was a thank you
note to dementia, which I usually write
hate mail to dementia, but this was a
thank you note because I realized that
dementia had gotten me through suicide
loss. Um, it had really what I had
learned and gained through that is what
kept me hanging on um after Jeff's loss
and even in the loneliness. So, I wrote
that letter and I actually read it to a
daughter of a lady that I was caregiving
for that has dementia because I was
about to submit it to for a writing
competition and I was like, "Can I just
read this? Like, can you just tell me if
this is crazy? Should I even do this?"
And I read it to her and she literally
like just was like, "Holy crap." Like,
I'm not even looking at my mom the same
way. Like, are you kidding me? and she's
like, "You have to share this with other
people. Like, that helped me so much."
And so, I recorded it and I shared it on
my YouTube channel. And I ended up
getting like some religious studies
majors, people going, "Wait a minute."
Like, we've never seen this before. Are
you kidding me? And people coming to me
and saying like that that had really
changed how they looked at dementia and
caregiving and dealing with their loved
one. Um, and that it could be a
beautiful journey. And so um it was at
that point where I was like that helped
so many people like how how can I do
that more? And that's I mean that was
when I like really like I contacted Pat
and I was like okay like show me how to
do this.
How do I put this together?
So I was like I've got to share this.
Like I've got to help people get through
this because this stuff sucks. And I
mean, I did it and came through it and
still laughing like you can, too.
>> Yeah. Oh, I love that. I'm I'm curious
about um where that overlap is from your
experiences with your mom's dementia and
caregiving for her over those years and
how that translated into navigating
suicide loss with Jeff's loss. what
where where did that overlap or that um
experience how did that benefit you from
your mom's journey and then translating
to your husband's journey?
So during my mom's journey um early on I
I was I was raised in a you know very
Lutheran you know Christian background
household so I had never like questioned
God or anything but early in my mom's
dementia journey I was like [ __ ] you
like if you can do that to that woman I
got no chance you know and um
I I dug into it I I was like going to
search the Bible and like you know
and instead um I ended up with a bunch
of miracles and more understanding than
I could ever imagine. It totally
solidified my faith.
>> So and my beliefs that if I just you
know like I could pray my way through
the universe was not gonna you like
there was something good that was going
to happen no matter how bad it was. And
so when and for me going back like
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