UCI comes to faculty, student aid
Jeff Benson
Some university faculty, staff and students here have personally
experienced loss from the Dec. 26 tsunami in Southeast Asia. Some
just can’t bear to watch the painful images on TV, and some are even
questioning God’s resolve.
People are affected in many different ways, and now there are
places UC Irvine community members can go for help.
When the university’s Faculty and Staff Counseling Center and its
Student Counseling Center opened their doors Monday, workers were
prepared to give free and confidential one-on-one counseling to
members of the campus community and their families, some of whom are
having trouble dealing with the tsunami disaster.
The faculty counseling center, which used to permit five free
one-hour sessions per year before referring campus staff to other
mental health agencies, is allowing unlimited visits for those who
visit for tsunami-related reasons, director Njeeri wa Ngugi said.
Most of the people seeking help from the center haven’t lost
friends or family members in Africa or Asia, but are losing sleep
worrying about people half a world away. Others just want to donate
money to organizations such as the American Red Cross or UNICEF, and
the center provides contact information, she said.
“It’s an unusual situation,” Ngugi said. “People aren’t
necessarily directly affected because they’ve lost loved ones, but
some people want to give, or they’re affected by what’s going on. An
issue to a lot of people was the grief over the magnitude [of the
catastrophe].”
Ngugi declined to say how many people are currently benefiting
from the faculty counseling centers’ services. The doctor-client
privilege at the center gives visitors confidentiality, she said. The
center has also received numerous phone calls suggesting meditation
as a remedy, and Ngugi said she’s strongly considering added it as a
suggestion.
Though turnout at the student counseling center has been modest
thus far, it may increase as news of the tragedy continues to unfold,
and students look for ways to cope with it, said assistant vice
chancellor for counseling and health services Thomas Parham.
The student center provides individual and group therapy and
counseling, program development and outreach, and crisis
intervention, he said.
Eleven people are servicing a student body of about 25,000
students, he said.
“With the few people we’ve seen, some people just have anxiety
about situations, or ambiguity about friends and loved ones,” Parham
said. “People they know may have been traveling in the region and may
have been impacted by that. Or they could have their own sense of
uneasiness about what’s going on. It’s not objective data that
they’re worried about; it’s the fear of the unknown.”
Psychologist and minister Doyle Edson is one of three people
helping out in the faculty counseling center. Faculty and staff come
to him for spiritual support.
“It’s interesting,” he said. “These people cannot keep from
watching [tsunami disaster coverage]. As a rule, they cannot turn the
television off about it, and they search channels to get more
information about it. And that’s part of the problem -- they can’t
get it out of their mind.”
To combat this problem, Edson gives them spiritual alternatives,
like blending with other members of their respective faiths or
elevating their state of consciousness, out of the daily grind, to
become more reconnected with life.
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