
Personal Story with Haili Crow, MSW
Explicit content warning
01/25/22 • 71 min
Listen in as host, Haili Crow shares her personal experiences navigating the child welfare system, substance use, and mental illness.
Viewer Discretion is Advised.
Listen in as host, Haili Crow shares her personal experiences navigating the child welfare system, substance use, and mental illness.
Viewer Discretion is Advised.
Previous Episode

Collective Trauma
On this week's episode Claire and Haili discuss collective trauma, its impacts on all of us, and how collective trauma impacts the work we do as social workers. In the midst of COVID-19 and so many other prevalent events that have happened over the past few years (ongoing school shootings, ongoing mass shootings in public spaces, ongoing violence toward people of color that goes unreconciled, natural disasters like floods and wildfires) the impacts of collective trauma become clearer every day in the field, and become heavier on everybody’s hearts every day in life. Through a five point discussion, Claire and Haili dive into the history behind collective trauma, the prevalence of collective trauma, how collective trauma manifests itself and its effects, events contributing to it today, and what we can do about it.
When talking about current events this week, we want to be careful about retraumatization in the wake of the school shooting at Oxford High School. If at any time you feel as though this is too much, please feel free to skip ahead, pause or end the episode. Signs to look for when you are starting to feel overwhelmed may include muscle tension, an increase in heart rate, your mind racing, changes in body temperature. Take care of yourself, because these are extremely difficult things for us to be talking about. Viewer discretion is advised.
Source Notes:
Branscombe N. R., Ellemers N., Spears R., Doosje B. (1999). “The context and content of social identity threat,” in Social Identity: Context, Commitment, Content, eds Ellemers N., Spears R., Doosje B. (Oxford: Blackwell; ), 35–58.
Imhoff R. (2010). The Dynamics of Collective Guilt Three Generations after the Holocaust: Young Germans’ Emotional Experiences in Response to the Nazi Past. Hamburg: Verlag Dr. Korac
Tajfel H., Turner J. C. (1979). “An integrative theory of intergroup conflict,” in The Social Psychology of Intergroup Relations, eds Austin W. G., Worchel S., (Monterey, CA: Brooks/Cole; ), 33–47.
Roth J., Huber M., Juenger A., Liu J. H. (2017). It’s about valence: historical continuity or historical discontinuity as a threat to social identity. J. Soc. Polit. Psychol. 5 320-341. 10.5964/jspp.v5i2.677
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15283488.2017.1340160
https://www.verywellmind.com/how-different-generations-are-responding-to-covid-19-4802517
https://www.dhs.wisconsin.gov/publications/p02779.pdf
https://about.kaiserpermanente.org/total-health/health-tips/healing-from-collective-trauma
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6095989/
https://www.michigan.gov/som/0,4669,7-192-29942_34762-573275--,00.html
Next Episode

Unpacking Roe V. Wade
Facilitating Voices Host, Haili comes out of hibernation to break down what is really at stake in light of Roe v. Wade potentially being overturned. Haili unpacks who the Supreme Court r is, how they function, and then takes a deeper dive into the history of Roe v. Wade. Haili also shares resources on how to get involved and make an impact during this terrifying time for women in the United States.
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