Connie Kilmark Kilmark & Associates, LLC

Similar documents
Their stories are tragic. A new chapter starts now. now.

Personal Action / Crisis Prevention Plan

It s helpful to watch the video Who is Slick on the slickrecovery.com website before completing this form.

The Many Emotions of Grief

@ Home FAMILY Study Session

Step 1 - I admit that I am powerless over my addiction and that my life has become unmanageable

Becoming A Spiritually Healthy Family Avoiding the 6 Dysfunctional Parenting Styles Authors: Michelle Anthony

Understanding. Depression. The Road to Feeling Better Helping Yourself. Your Treatment Options A Note for Family Members

Finding a Happy, Satisfying Life 1

Diabetes and Emotions

Real Life Financial Planning

Self Assessment: Substance Abuse

100 Tips for Building a Strong Recovery

Activity

A Personal Guide to Managing Change

Positive Coping with Rheumatoid Arthritis a skills workshop

Working with Youth to Develop Critical Thinking Skills On Sexual Violence and Dating Violence: Three Suggested Classroom Activities

Depression. Introduction Depression is a common condition that affects millions of people every year.

Finding Balance in Your Grieving. Dr. Jo Christner, Psy.D. The death of your spouse most likely turned your whole world upside down

Personality Difficulties

Speaker notes from Indigo Daya at the Borderline Personality Disorder What Works Conference, 2014.

Supporting your child after a burn injury

Understanding anxiety and depression

Listen, Protect, and Connect

Yogi Tea Bag Inspirations received from all the Yogi Tea Debby has consumed over the last year

Bullying 101: Guide for Middle and High School Students

THE EFFECTS OF FAMILY VIOLENCE ON CHILDREN. Where Does It Hurt?

Age-Appropriate Reactions & Specific Interventions for Children & Adolescents Experiencing A Traumatic Incident

Rapid Refresh & Reboot

Detachment, Love, and Forgiveness

Dr Barbara Murphy, Director of Research, Heart Research Centre

The Heroic Journey: Metaphor for the path through addiction and recovery. to becoming one who has gifts to share

Mental Health in the Workplace. Kate Hubl- Occupational Therapist

Charles Bolden, NASA Administrator. Mount Vernon High School Commencement. Alexandria, VA. June 20, 2014

Understanding your ENGAGE Results

Conducting Emotionally Difficult Conversations. John Banja, PhD Center For Ethics Emory University

Family role in recovery

Inspiring Leadership through Emotional Intelligence

cannabis TOO MUCH TOO OFTEN?

RECOVERY ALTERNATIVES

It s an awfully risky thing to live. Carl Rogers. her family. Daily routines that people were used to are now gone.

Communicating with families about children s learning

Psychological First Aid Red Cross Preparedness Academy 2014

DAYS. Drug & Alcohol Youth Support

SCRIPT FOR OUTREACH. Disconnected and Cyber Predators. Introduction. How many of you have your own cell phones or smart phone?

Managing Transitions by William Bridges. Brief summary of key points

Presented to Compassionate Care Conference By Bill Cross PhD LMFT

It can also be linked to someone s frustration at not being able to express themselves or perform at the level they previously expected.

Kids Have Stress Too! Especially at Back to School Time As a Parent, You Can Help!

What Is Bipolar Disorder? Dha. Dat. DJane F. Mountain, MD

How to become a Professional!

Practicing Interventions: Role Playing

Facing the Facts about Borderline Personality Disorder

SOS FOR EMOTIONS TOOLS FOR EMOTIONAL HEALTH

The Little Red Book of Selling By Jeffrey Gitomer

USVH Disease of the Week #1: Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

The Emotional Bank Account

NEW PATIENT INFORMATION

Engaging young people in mental health care: The role of youth workers

Common Reactions to Life Changes

Financial Freedom: Three Steps to Creating and Enjoying the Wealth You Deserve

New Beginnings: Managing the Emotional Impact of Diabetes Module 1

Chapter 3. Online Bullying

Self-Acceptance. A Frog Thing by E. Drachman (2005) California: Kidwick Books LLC. ISBN Grade Level: Third grade

Tips for potential Capital Market Investors

School-Age Child Guidance Technical Assistance Paper #2

Christian Accountability: A Discussion Guide

Meanings of different Social Services meetings

Recovering from Injury By Marvin Zauderer [PezCyclingNews.com/August 2007]

Are you feeling... Tired, Sad, Angry, Irritable, Hopeless?

Stress can become a problem when you are not sure how to handle it. Worry sets in, and you feel stressed.

younger-onset alzheimer s I m too young to have Alzheimer s disease

Healing the Trauma of Adoption:

Alzheimer s disease. Reducing caregiver stress

MATERIALS: Chart paper/markers; pens; Student handouts: Instant Replay and Staying SAFE

Investing in shares became all the rage during the late 1990s. Everyone

why happiness is good for business

10 steps to planning for Alzheimer s disease & other dementias A guide for family caregivers

Take Care of Yourself: Identifying and Responding to Caregiver Compassion Fatigue. February 18, :00-3:30 p.m. ET

Grandparents Top Tips for a child with Aspergers Syndrome by Dave Angel

Financial Advisors and Alzheimer s Disease: What You Need to Know

Take Creditors and Collection Agents to Small Claims Court

Look after your mental health

Psychological Issues in Cancer Survivorship. Dr Andy Ashley Clinical Psychologist South Worcestershire Specialist Palliative Care, 2015

When it comes to creating memories and sharing

Bipolar Disorder. Some people with these symptoms have bipolar disorder, a serious mental illness. Read this brochure to find out more.

Transcription:

The Psychology of Money in Financial Aid Why Numbers Are Never Just Numbers Connie Kilmark Kilmark & Associates, LLC 211 S. Paterson Street Madison, WI 53703 608.255.9500 connie@kilmark.com 2014 All Rights Reserved Is Money Rational? Money is a symbol Expressed in numbers and looks like math BUT Experienced in a web of life experience and individual neurobiology 1

What Does Money Stand For? Success Security Status Sex Appeal Survival Satiety Powerful Emotions Given what money stands for, we are --Fearful --Angry --Envious --In Denial --Greedy --Controlling --Generous --Anxious --Proud --Embarrassed --Ashamed --Grateful --Jealous --Bewildered, etc. A Short History of Money Barter Invention of a symbol Real at first: cows, then precious metals Paper Increasing abstraction Now, electrons at the speed of light CDO s, SIV s, CDS s are IED s (Improvised Explosive Devices) as we have learned 2

Everyone Is Different Moment in history Particular family history Place and stuff (neighborhood/house/car/room) Peer experience Religion Education Neurobiology Both you and each student (and each student s parent) are comprised of these interacting, intersecting variables When you meet, variables multiply Cost of Education Has risen 80% in the ten years between 2003 and 2013 We are asking families and young people to take an extraordinary amount of risk investing in a young, unproven product You are the point at which student and Education Policy touch Consider the degree of risk through the lens of social class Families less financially stable since Great Recession 3

Asymmetry of the Financial Aid Encounter You are the expert, student is a beginner To the student, YOU are an N of 1 To you, the student is one of thousands You have the money and the power You appear to be the decider Student is the petitioner From the student s perspective (especially the incoming new student): You guard the gold You have the combination to the safe You dispense the gold Student needs the gold THE STUDENT S CRISIS IS YOUR ROUTINE 4

They Call It Aid First aid, foreign aid, traveller s aid The common understanding of the word Aid is at odds with the reality of contracts, loans, interest, collections Big award means big debt Language of helping tangled with language of contracts and lending Hope, Expectation, Entitlement A lot is at stake for student Collision! student s hopes meets your facts and policies Epic, once in a lifetime quest meets a bookkeeper, and IRS agent Think Lord of the Rings meets a CPA Each student lands somewhere between a completely free education and an infinitely costly one Some students land at another institution because of your decision You are truly in charge of so little of this drama 5

The Business of Disappointing People How do you connect with a student humanely? How do you defend yourself emotionally? Distance? Judgment? Cynicism? Irritation? Know Your Particular Triggers Entitlement? Self-pity? Really sad story? Anger? A combination? This Is Tough Work Easy to fall into supporting each other in negative ways just to release the stress Become cold, cynical Gossip with colleagues to get understanding, comfort Feel contempt Deride, laugh, use sarcasm 6

These Habits Harm You You become crude, blunted and discouraged You lose nuance Your humanity erodes Your departmental culture becomes toxic You Are Better Than That! This is a service job The essence of this job is TO HELP PEOPLE Financial Aid Team It takes a team to understand Talk TO each other, not ABOUT students Stay focused on the mission: fair awards and the most opportunity possible for students 7

Self Care Work that is emotionally hard is HARD WORK Get enough sleep Eat right Get some exercise, outside if possible Get face to face social time Use a transitional activity to leave work at work Cultivate a hobby that makes something from beginning to middle to end Personal Responsibility You are responsible for your stuff If there is pain or unresolved conflict within you, work it out or get help Hurt people can hurt people You Work for the Students They are the reason for your job They are your customers: the good, the bad and the ugly Don t expect students to understand or take care of you Q-TIP rule 8

You Support Each Other Have compassion for yourself and each other Nobody has a totally complete skillset Help each other compensate for the bites in the cookie Have compassion for the students Sympathy vs. Compassion It is not useful to the student and it is not healthful for you to feel with the student, to experience their emotions Compassion, however, has a wise, and loving quality Keeps you human Keeps student human Keeps the distinction of expertise and experience Does not have to be reciprocal You Are a Teacher Easy to function as just a technician Challenge: be an expert without forgetting beginner s mind Enter the world of the student and teach from there The story of money and the story of life Build a bridge between what you know and what the student knows 9

Content vs. Delivery You are not responsible for the content of the rules, the award You are responsible for the delivery Opportunity vs. Outcome You deliver opportunity Many factors influence outcomes Sometimes you are Cassandra Just as we have learned from living, so will the students Each Encounter You may be the only financial aid person a student ever meets Each encounter is potentially transformational Even when you have bad news, you have holy work 10

Each Encounter When you touch a human life, you touch an infinite mystery Unknown biography, unknown potential, unknown future You were once that student In Closing Crisis can mean opportunity No human encounter has to be routine As you return to your daily work, understand it has many openings for mercy and for learning 11