Holidays can be a lot. Music, decorations, food, gifts, travel. Overstimulation. Pressure for feelings of joy, even magic. Intensification of social and family time. Aloneness. Add the realities of an unwanted, life-altering event and things get complicated. Sarah Diehl, MDiv, MS, LCPC, a therapist who has worked with people living with cancer for over twenty-five years, will be our guest speaker in November. She will help explore the shadow side of the holidays as well as ideas for taking care.
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Sarah Diehl, MDiv, MS, LCPC is a psychotherapist in private practice in Baltimore. She has particular expertise working with people suffering grief and loss, including more than twenty-five years working with people affected by cancer. Prior to becoming a therapist, Sarah held leadership roles in non-profit organizations, and then served as a chaplain with Gilchrist Cares and Johns Hopkins. She has provided support to patients and their loved ones at home, and as part of inpatient palliative and critical care teams. She says, “Along the way, people have helped me better understand the experience of being human – including my own.”