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About Smoke signals. (Grand Ronde, Or.) 19??-current | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1990)
Smoke Signals June 1990 PageS Nanitch Sahallie Feature By Brent Merrill This is part III b a three part scries about the Tribes' Youth Residential Drug Treatment Center in Kcizcr, Oregon. Part III of this scries will focus on the Food Services Coordinator, the Intake Specialist, aftercare policies and a conversation with a client the day before she graduated from the center. I I At Nanitch Sahallie, special emphasis is placed on a client's need for a balanced, nutritional diet. According to the center's Food Services Coordinator Kathy Aicher a client's diet plays a big part in the recovery process. "The diet that we have here is just a basic nutritional diet. We have a real low sugar or no sugar diet because of the nutritional levels of the clients that are recovering. Nutrition plays a big part because they are going through withdrawal from the sugar, the alcohol and the drugs and it can be tough on them so we try to give them good nutrition without the sugar." Aicher explained that she tries to impress upon the clients just how important their diet is to their recovery. "We're here to help them recover from what they are going through." Aicher oversees a limited staff of just herself and two other cooks, one full-time and one just part-time. During one typical month at the treatment center Aicher and her staff (Karen Scharf and Grand Rondc Tribal member, Carol Nelson) served 2,134 meals to 28 clients. Aicher is proud of her staff and the work that they are able to accomplish. "Karen is a wonderful food service person and she is a great cook as well." Scharf is studying to be a counselor and will be missed by the kitchen staff. "I can't tell you enough about her, she just docs a great job and she will be an outstanding counselor," said Aicher. Aicher is equally pleased with the abilities of Carol Nelson. "Carol and I were the first cooks hired on here," explained Aicher. "She is really concerned about the kids and she has an excellent repore with them. I'm very lucky to have two good people." The center operates on a six-week menu that is posted so the clients can see what they are going to be eating each meal. Aichcr's philosophy for quality food service is simple. "I think that good health and good nutrition go hand in hand." Kathy Tom Aicher Josephine Bigelow is an Intake Specialist at the center. INTAKE SPECIALIST Intake specialist Josephine Bigelow has been working at Nanitch Sahallie since October of 1989. Bigelow, who was born on the Sioux Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota, brought a wealth of experience in a variety of fields with her when she began working at the Treatment Center. According to Bigelow, she has accomplished a degree in nursing, has worked as an L.P.N., and she has been working in the alcohol and drug treatment field for several years. She has gained valuable experience while working at the Carlton House in Eugene and Red Willow treatment center in Gervais, Oregon. While she was in Eugene she served on the Lane County Board of Health and she has also traveled to Germany where she taught workshops to German women about Native American women. "Our children deserve treatment. Tliey deserve good treatment because they deserve to live. - Josephine Bigelow Despite all of her travels, Bigelow echoes many of Nanitch Sahallie's employees when she says that she feels she belongs at the Tribe's treatment center. "Working here has given me a renewed sense of self worth. We need more of our Native American people to work with our youth. A lot of our people need to be taught to retrieve our power through self esteem building. It is a very important part of the treatment process." BigekWs duties at the center range from working with referrals to deciding if the center is appropriate to help a particular client. She talks to people who want to get their kids into treatment, she docs their paperwork and she interviews all potential clients before she helps them through the intake process. Bigelow feels her job is very important and she does her work with pride. "Our children deserve treatment. They deserve good treatment because they deserve to live." AFTERCARE When a client completes the treatment process and has earned graduation, the work isn't over, in fact, it's just beginning. That is where Nanitch Sahallie's aftercare program begins. First, the client meets with their counselor for an individual session to receive information about relapse warning signs, a relapse prevention plan and a relapse prevention workbook. Next, the client has a second individual session where their materials on relapse are reviewed and the client is asked to complete the workbook and the prevention plan. The clients then begin attending weekly sessions with their counselors and devote the time to aftercare work like problem solving. They also work on develop ing coping skills. Aftercare is very important to main taining sobriety and special emphasis is put on aftercare counseling of Nanitch Sahallie. In the future, counselors at the center would like to be able to network with other rehabilitation workers and to use the information they gather to establish realistic and measurable relapse prevention plans. They would also like to open communications and stabilize and broaden the scope of the current aftercare program. CLIENT DISCUSSES TREATMENT When you are 17 years old and addicted to drugs and or alcohol the world can be a scary place. It can be even worse if you live in a dysfunctional family and have no foundation of support. Add to that combination parents and other family members who are also addicted and you can end up with a highly volatile situation. Accepting the fact that you need to get treatment is just the first step in the recovery process - often it can be the most difficult step. Clients who are lucky enough to get into a treatment center must begin by accepting the fact that they do have an addiction problem. "Now I have a weapon to use against my addic tion and that means alot to me.... It feels good to have people trust me. A Treatment Center Client One of the young clients at Nanitch Sahallie (whose identity is confidential) explained that it took her awhile to accept her problems. "I came in here in denial. Big time denial. My problem was marijuana and alcohol," explained the client. "I was willing to give up everything to be with people who partied." The client explained that her realization of her prob lems came during a group counseling sessions when another client shared what had happened to her. "During group there was a girl who talked about her problems and it really made me realize a lot of things. That's when I realized I had a problem too. I had so many things blocked out and being here in the treatment center has allowed me to deal with them." The client explained that the guidance she has received at Nanitch Sahallie has given her a renewed sense of strength. "Now I have a weapon to use against my addiction and that means a lot to me." When asked what was the most important thing that she learned while at Nanitch Sahallie she responded by saying, "Probably to respect other people and most importantly to respect myself. It feels good to have people trust me." Healthy Lifestyle and Baby Sitting Workshop June 15th, 1990 9:00 cum. to 3:00 p.m. At the Depot Office This workshop is for students 8 years old and up For more information and to register please contact: Camille Van Vleet or Margaret Provost at 879-5211