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  1. Grow Your Tenner!

    GYT Facebook Cover 2015

     

    Every donation up to £10 made to RSVP via Local Giving from 13th October to 18th November will be matched, so your donation is doubled at no extra cost to you. Can you give, and grow, a tenner?

    We’ll use the money to build more counselling rooms. We need to make sure that more abuse survivors are receiving support to cope with trauma, and that they don’t have to wait long for this support.  We have confirmed a lease on a space next door to our current premises (hurrah!) but we need to refurbish it and convert the one big space into three individual counselling rooms, including a dedicated facility for the children we support.

    We have the counsellors, we have the space, now we just need to refurbish and decorate so more abuse survivors have quicker access to counselling. Can you help us?

    Go to https://localgiving.com/charity/rsvp-wm to donate, and please spread the word!

    Posted 15 October 2015
  2. Training event: Working therapeutically with survivors of sexual trauma, with Zoe Lodrick

    Saturday 7th November 10am – 5pm

    The Priory Rooms
    Quaker Meeting House, 40 Bull Street, Birmingham, B4 6AF

    Trainer: Zoe Lodrick

    Tickets: £85 + booking fee for voluntary organisations and individuals. £100 + booking fee for statutory and private organisations.

    Book tickets via www.eventbrite.co.uk

    What will be covered?

    The neurobiology of threat: including, why people do not usually react in ‘logical’ or ‘active’ ways when faced with intimate interpersonal threat, how, and why, people become vulnerable to repeated victimisation, specific vulnerabilities of children and teenagers to sex offenders.

    The ‘replay’ in the therapy room: including, how neurobiology can help us to understand what will get ‘re-enacted’ in the therapeutic work.

    The psychology of the offender: including, the process that precedes offending, the ‘socially skilled’ sex offender, how, and why, they target certain people.

    Suggestions for utilising the above to inform how we structure our therapeutic work and how we support disclosure.

    Working with guilt and shame: including, the psychological underpinnings of guilt, how to hear guilt and challenge it.

    About Zoe Lodrick.

    Zoe is a UKCP registered psychotherapist and an experienced trainer.  She has over 19 years experience of providing psychotherapy to women and men who have experienced rape, sexual assault and/or childhood sexual abuse; and providing training and consultation to professionals who work with victims/survivors of sexualised traumas. Zoe has specialist knowledge/expertise with regard to human behaviour/response when faced with a perceived threat (especially sexual threat).

    Zoe held the full time position of Senior Practitioner at Portsmouth Area Rape Crisis Service (PARCS) from 1994 to 2009.  Since April 2009, Zoe has been a self-employed trainer and consultant.

     

    Posted 17 September 2015
  3. Counselling feedback

    We’re gathering feedback on our specialist rape and abuse counselling service. If you have received, or are currently receiving,counselling at RSVP, would you spare a few minutes and complete a short online survey? All feedback is totally confidential and will help us to improve the service and support more survivors.
    Click through to the survey www.surveymonkey.com/r/S5M9DG7

    Many thanks!

    Posted 6 August 2015
  4. We’re recruiting helpline volunteers

    RSVP is recruiting Telephone Helpline Volunteers. You will be required to offer telephone support, signposting and referrals at our Birmingham city centre premises to survivors who have experienced rape, childhood sexual abuse and sexual violence. Candidates will be able to offer warmth, empathy and have the ability to hear sensitive information.

    We welcome counselling students to apply as well as those with little or no experience as full training will be given. All applicants must be over 18 years old.

    A DBS (CRB) check will be undertaken and references are required.

    Please download the application pack or contact Nasreen on 0121 643 0301 for further details.

    Application Pack:

    Cover letter

    Helpline application form

    Training dates

    RSVP Leaflet

    We do not accept CVs. This is a volunteer position and not paid employment.

    Please return completed application to info@rsvporg.co.uk.

    Closing date for applications to be returned by: Monday 28th September 2015.

    Posted 6 August 2015
  5. New email

    Dog-at-Computer

    We’ve updated our systems and have a new email contact address. If you need to contact us by email, please do so via info@rsvporg.co.uk. If you have sent us an email recently to our old address, don’t worry, you don’t need to resend it, we’ll still have seen that.

    Our telephone number remains 0121 643 0301.

     

    Posted 7 July 2015
  6. The Rewind Technique for Post-Traumatic Stress

    RSVP are offering training for all professionals working in rape and sexual abuse support services on Saturday 18th July, 9.30am-4.30pm in Birmingham city centre.

    The Rewind Technique has become internationally recognised as an effective treatment for PTS/PTSD. The treatment is different to other imaginal exposure therapies as details of trauma don’t need to be disclosed to the therapist, reducing the risk of clients being re-traumatised.

    This event is suitable for practitioners working with clients that have been traumatised by surviving or witnessing trauma, such as sexual abuse, and are consequently suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress. The course is suitable for statutory, voluntary and private organisations, as well as individual counsellors/therapists.

    By the end of the course participants will have:

    • Competence in applying the Rewind Technique,
    • A clear understanding of how and why the Rewind Technique works,
    • A solid grounding in recognising and treating PTSD.

    The full-day course costs £100 for voluntary organisations and individuals + booking fee/ £120 for statutory organisations + booking fee. Price includes lunch and refreshments.

    Places can be booked at www.eventbrite.co.uk

    Venue: 7th Floor, Grosvenor House, Bennett’s Hill, Birmingham, B2 5RS. 5 minute walk from New Street station.

    The session will be run by Dr David Muss. Prior to his involvement in developing the Rewind Technique Dr Muss was a Paediatric Surgeon and a family doctor. Since 1988 Dr Muss has worked as the Director of the PTSD UNIT at the BMI Hospital, Birmingham.

    Posted 23 June 2015
  7. Volunteering – a work of heart

    This year’s Volunteers Week took place 1-7 June. We currently work with over 60 volunteers who help RSVP deliver  vital support to survivors in various ways, from direct client care (counselling, helpline) to marketing, fundraising and research. But, why volunteer? Here’s a little insight from one of our amazing volunteer counsellors.

    When I tell people that I volunteer as a counsellor, I’m usually met with hushed silence. I suspect I’m sometimes dismissed as a bit of a ‘do-gooder.’ One of those irritating people with too much time on their hands who make a big deal of their selflessness.

    None of these labels quite fit. I’m certainly no angel. And while my empty nest has relieved me of big financial burdens, I still have to bring home some bread.

    Maybe the real question underlying ‘why volunteer?’ is curiosity about my motives? Doing “owt for nowt” makes little sense in a society where value is quantified in an hourly rate. Never mind that I don’t properly value myself by working for nothing, what possible worth could voluntary work have for the world at large? I think we all know the answer to that one. Volunteering probably contributes billions to the UK economy, though that’s the very least of its virtues, even in a society that monetises everything. Its big-heartedness can be felt in every household, community, town and city across the land, providing everything that makes life worth living.

    The fact that I’m not paid for my voluntary work is less a reflection of its worth – more a critique on how we organise our economy.

    group of women

    But none of this really explains why over 19 million people in the UK choose to volunteer every year. I suspect that for most, like me, the motivation is a simple one. I absolutely love what I do. It stirs my heart and expands my mind. Most of all it connects me deeply to people in a way that would never be sanctioned in the commercial world where profit rules. I get to work in a great organisation which is fired by compassion and delivered with the kind of professionalism that would put the big corporates to shame.

    Volunteering is all about nurturing social relationships, the ‘greatest single cause of happiness’ according to psychologist Michael Argyle. That’s probably why RSVP’s 62 volunteers have a spring in their step. They apply their skills with love, whether they’re staffing the helpline, serving on the board, making arts and crafts, raising funds, doing IT and admin, overseeing the website and social media or offering counselling to clients.

    They know that if you want to be happy for a day, buy a Porsche. But if you want to be happy for a lifetime, volunteer.

    Mel Whyatt, RSVP Counselling Volunteer
    Posted 16 June 2015
  8. Fundraising success!

    We’ve had some wonderful fundraising successes over the past few weeks, which will enable us to employ more counsellors and increase our helpline opening hours.

    The Home Office has allocated additional funds to survivor support organisations and we’re delighted to inform you that we are one of them. We’ve been awarded funding from two funds totalling just over £155,000! We’re over the moon (and some more).

    We have also received £14,056 from the Brook Trust, a private charitable trust, towards counselling  costs.

    As the need for RSVP’s services increases each year, so do our running costs; needing more staff and resources to support new and existing clients. Our recent fundraising success will have a really positive impact – reducing our counselling waiting list and recruiting more volunteers to give helpline support.

    Our fundraising efforts don’t stop here, we still need to rent bigger premises to accommodate for the number of clients requiring our counselling and advocacy support. If you’re interested in donating, or fundraising for RSVP there are many ways you can help.

     

     

    Posted 3 April 2015
  9. Training for sexual violence support workers

    THE MENTAL HEALTH CONSEQUENCES OF CHILDHOOD SEXUAL ABUSE: THE SOCIAL / TRAUMA MODEL

    The aim of the course is to explore a model linking experiences of violence and abuse with mental distress and draw implications for practice.

    The course is aimed at practitioners delivering services to people who are, or may be, experiencing mental distress as a result of experiences of sexual violence, trauma and abuse.

    Participants will learn about the connections between childhood sexual abuse and later mental health distress. The course will look into the impact these connections have on service delivery and develop tools for participants’ practical application.

    Wednesday 3rd June. Arrival from 9.00am, training 9.30am-4.30pm

    Mailbox, Wharfside St, Birmingham, B1 1RD. 10 minute walk from New Street and Moor Street train stations.

    The full-day course costs £75 for voluntary organisations and individuals + booking fee/ £95 for statutory organisations + booking fee. Price includes lunch and refreshments.

    The session will be run by Sally Plumb, an independent trainer in mental health law and practice. Sally has worked as a mental health training officer and mental health specialist social worker and has facilitated self-help groups for women who have been sexually abused.

    Places are very limited. To book a place on the course, go to Eventbrite.co.uk

     

     

    Posted 2 April 2015
  10. Banger Rally – Birmingham to Venice

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    2015 is officially the year of banger racing! In September, the Rotary Banger Rally is taking place, seeing a convoy of beautiful bangers making the journey from Birmingham to Venice.

    The great people at the Rotary Club of Solihull Satellite Group (Team RSG) are collecting for RSVP and we want to encourage as many of our supporters to get involved as possible. Various sponsorship packages are available for businesses and you can see your name rallied around the roads of Europe, all in the name of RSVP.

    Would your place of work be interested in sponsoring the event? Speak to your employer about getting your company logo on one of the cars cruising through the continent – it could make a real impact! Supporters can also give direct, for as little as £10.

    Have you ever wanted to experience driving on the Autobahn in style, the wind in your hair, accompanied by the face of our favourite bear? That’s right – Pudsey’s Cash Car is joining the fun journey across Europe and continuing to raise money.

    For more information, and to see how you can get involved, go to www.rotary-banger-rally-2015.com and follow the journey on twitter #rotrally2015.

    Safe driving… and Ciao!

    Aleena x

     

     

    Posted 11 February 2015

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