Past Events

CalendarUpcoming Events Past Events
Event Status
Scheduled
Date and time: Oct. 2, 2024, 10 to 11:30 a.m.
Strengthening Relationships presentation series “Depolarizing Conversations” presented by Donna Buehler, the University Ombuds for Stony Brook University on Wednesday, October 2nd from 10am-11:30am (90 minutes). This workshop provides attendees with an overview of the various approaches to depolarizing conversations. It includes the recent works of three authors along with the presenter's information. The content allows us to rethink how we approach difficult conversations. And it causes us to reflect on how we handle emotions, conflict and change. The presenter hopes that attendees will leave the workshop with new tools and strategies to embrace the current challenges in the world today. Sign-up via UT Learn: https://utexas.csod.com/ui/lms-learning-details/app/event/22383f7d-f9d5…
Event Status
Scheduled
Date and time: Oct. 1, 2024, noon to 1:30 p.m.
Recurs: Weekly on Tuesday, 12 - 1:30pm until Tue, Nov 12 2024
Join our seven-week virtual therapeutic support group offered by the Employee Assistance Program. This group is designed for young or new professionals with five years or less experience in higher education. It aims to foster personal and professional growth through shared experiences and learning. As a participant, you'll have the opportunity to: • Understand Mental Health Needs: Learn strategies to reduce stress and enhance well-being within a supportive environment. • Build Meaningful Connections: Engage in activities to form peer support networks, fostering mutual understanding and empathy. • Develop Coping Skills: Learn practical strategies and resilience-building techniques to effectively manage stress, setbacks, and work-life balance challenges. • Cultivate Personal Growth: Foster a growth mindset and self-awareness, recognizing strengths and overcoming obstacles while seizing development opportunities. • Advocate for a Supportive Workplace Culture: Promote an organizational culture prioritizing mental health, open communication, and the well-being of young professionals in higher education. This group, facilitated by an EAP counselor, is limited to 12 participants. Those interested in joining will participate in a pre-group interview with the facilitator before joining. To sign up for a pre-group interview, please email eap@austin.utexas.edu.
Event Status
Scheduled
Date and time: Oct. 1, 2024, 10 to 11 a.m.
The skills of slowing down and clearing our minds are time-tested methods for lowering stress and anxiety. This training is designed to develop awareness of how we respond to stress and the principles behind the relaxation response. Join us for a virtual training on October 1st from 10am-11am to develop practical skills for managing stress including relaxation breathing, meditation, mindfulness, and lifestyle management. Sign-up via UT Learn: https://utexas.csod.com/ui/lms-learning-details/app/event/553d91d9-323e…
Event Status
Scheduled
Date and time: Sept. 25, 2024, 3:30 to 4:30 p.m.
In times of adversity, the idea of having hope can sound far away and out of touch. According to an area of positive psychology called “hope theory”, hope is more than a fleeting or passive wish; hope is a way of thinking that can be taught and is associated with well-being and productivity. In this virtual presentation on September 25 from 3:30-4:30pm, EAP Counselor Jamie Justus LCSW-S will share about the underpinnings of hope, the three areas of thinking that promote hope, and practical ways for participants to tap into hope in their own lives. Sign-up via UT Learn https://utexas.csod.com/ui/lms-learning-details/app/event/c9e6e840-971d…
Event Status
Scheduled
Date and time: Sept. 25, 2024, 11 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.
Recurs: Weekly on Wednesday, 11am - 12:15pm until Wed, Nov 13 2024
An in person 8-week therapeutic yoga group offered by the Employee Assistance Program Changes, big or small, can be stressful to live through and can bring up feelings of overwhelm, anxiety, and grief, to name a few. The body can sometimes experience the stress of change through panic, digestive issues, sleep disturbance, or other somatic symptoms. This therapeutic yoga group offers a space to turn towards the body to gently acknowledge and express the vulnerable and uncomfortable emotions spurred by various life changes. Group sessions will entail deepening and strengthening mindfulness based practices for resiliency including a gentle hatha yoga practice appropriate for all levels and ability, meditation, breathwork, and exploration of emotions. Group members will learn to embody a compassionate approach to mental and physical well being, while finding support through connecting with others. The group will be facilitated by Geeti Shirazi Mahajan, LCSW-S (she/her), one of the counselors at the Employee Assistance Program. Geeti is also certified as a Yoga Therapist (C-IAYT). The drop-in group meets in person on Wednesdays from 11am-12:15pm from September 25th – Nov 13th and is limited to 10-15 participants. You can sign up for which weeks you would like to attend in UT Learn.
Event Status
Scheduled
Date and time: Sept. 24, 2024, noon to 1:30 p.m.
Recurs: Weekly on Tuesday, 12 - 1:30pm until Tue, Nov 12 2024
Join our seven-week virtual therapeutic support group offered by the Employee Assistance Program. This group is designed for young or new professionals with five years or less experience in higher education. It aims to foster personal and professional growth through shared experiences and learning. As a participant, you'll have the opportunity to: • Understand Mental Health Needs: Learn strategies to reduce stress and enhance well-being within a supportive environment. • Build Meaningful Connections: Engage in activities to form peer support networks, fostering mutual understanding and empathy. • Develop Coping Skills: Learn practical strategies and resilience-building techniques to effectively manage stress, setbacks, and work-life balance challenges. • Cultivate Personal Growth: Foster a growth mindset and self-awareness, recognizing strengths and overcoming obstacles while seizing development opportunities. • Advocate for a Supportive Workplace Culture: Promote an organizational culture prioritizing mental health, open communication, and the well-being of young professionals in higher education. This group, facilitated by an EAP counselor, is limited to 12 participants. Those interested in joining will participate in a pre-group interview with the facilitator before joining. To sign up for a pre-group interview, please email eap@austin.utexas.edu.
Event Status
Scheduled
Date and time: Sept. 24, 2024, 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Strengthening Relationships presentation series “The Musts of Trust: How to Build, Maintain, and Repair Your Relationships at Work” presented by Sarah Porter, PhD, a licensed psychologist and founder of a workplace training and consulting practice on Tuesday, September 24th from 11-12:30pm (90 minutes). This presentation will explore ways to establish and sustain trust within your team. You will (a) discover how six key trustworthiness indicators affect your work relationships, and (b) identify steps you can take right away to strengthen trust with your coworkers. Sign-up via UT Learn: https://utexas.csod.com/ui/lms-learning-details/app/event/22383f7d-f9d5…
Event Status
Scheduled
Date and time: Sept. 19, 2024, 1 to 3 p.m.
A Collaboration of the Center for Teaching and Learning, the Employee Assistance Program, the Counseling and Mental Health Center, and the Dean of Students Part 1: All UT instructors (faculty, staff, graduate student instructors, and postdoctoral instructors) are welcome to join us for the first session of Teaching During Times of Crisis, an event co-facilitated by the Employee Assistance Program (EAP), the Counseling and Mental Health Center (CMHC), the Center for Teaching and Learning (CTL), and the Dean of Students (DoS). We will discuss ways to identify and regulate bodily stress responses, process how to navigate ongoing and unexpected difficult moments in the classroom and on campus, and explore strategies for designing and facilitating courses with flexibility, compassion, and instructor and student wellbeing in mind. The DoS will review resources available to instructors should a disruption occur in the classroom or on campus. This workshop will be held virtually over Zoom on September 19 from 1-3pm. Sign-up here: https://ctl.utexas.edu/events/teaching-during-times-crisis-workshop-par…
Event Status
Scheduled
Date and time: Sept. 18, 2024, 11 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.
Changes, big or small, can be stressful to live through and can bring up feelings of overwhelm, anxiety, and grief, to name a few. The body can sometimes experience the stress of change through panic, digestive issues, sleep disturbance, or other somatic symptoms. This 75-minute virtual therapeutic yoga workshop offers a space to turn towards the body to gently acknowledge and express the vulnerable and uncomfortable emotions spurred by various life changes. The workshop entails deepening and strengthening mindfulness-based practices for resiliency including a gentle hatha yoga practice appropriate for all levels and ability, meditation, breathwork, and exploration of emotions. Members will learn to embody a compassionate approach to mental and physical well-being. The workshop will be facilitated by Geeti Shirazi Mahajan, LCSW-S (she/her), one of the counselors at the Employee Assistance Program. Geeti is also certified as a Yoga Therapist (C-IAYT). The workshop will be held online via Zoom on Wednesday, September 18th, 2024 from 11am-12:15pm. Please sign up through UT Learn. https://utexas.csod.com/ui/lms-learning-details/app/event/b2acbf63-4d22…
Event Status
Scheduled
Text bubbles next to words that read "Building Community During Times of Change"
Date and time: May 17, 2024, 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Location:Virtual
"Structural Integrity" presented by Gareth White, LICSW & Zac Carter, LMSW on 5/17 at 11:30am. An interactive presentation where we take time to focus on the lived experiences of oppression of fat people, how fat people interact with various systems, how those systems further marginalize fat people, and our own internal biases against fatness. Talking about bodies is hard but there is no wrong way to have a body, and there is always time to be kind to our bodies.