Join Dr. John Fitzgerald, a clinician with 25 years of experience, for a FREE Webinar on "Understanding and Addressing the Challenges of Addiction."

Wed April 24th 6-7pm ET

Register Here
Become a member of Allies in Recovery and we’ll teach you how to intervene, communicate and guide your loved one toward treatment.Become a member of Allies in Recovery today.

“What We All Require Is To Be Heard”: Kayla Solomon On Effective Communication and Connection

In March 2023, Allies in Recovery’s very own Kayla Solomon led a 90-minute ZOOM conversation with leaders of the East Bay chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) based in Sacramento, California. The result was a dynamic primer on the use of CRAFT, the Allies approach to building trust and connection with Loved Ones, and the vital role of listening and affirming when supporting a Loved One with mental health and/or substance use challenges.

Kayla Solomon has many skills. One of them is introducing Kayla Solomon. “I come from a Brooklyn Jewish family,” she says. “You don’t think before you speak—you speak and then you apologize.” Or maybe, she adds, you don’t apologize either, but simply “make a mess, and then spend years cleaning the mess.”

The real skills on display right there, of course, are disarming humor and humility. To those we can add amazing energy, clarity, and passion for her subject, the latter being techniques for reaching and building trust with our Loved Ones struggling with mental illness, substance use, or both. Although this video is a hefty 90 minutes long, Kayla’s presentation style makes the time fly by. Indeed she covers so much ground you may feel like you’ve spent three or four hours talking with an especially well-informed friend.

After introducing her broad theme of communication and connection, Kayla drills down into specifics. Key among these is her discussion of the technique of “mirroring” or giving a Loved One’s words right back to them, without reacting or editorializing, This is a lot harder than it sounds, and a lot more effective than we might think. Kayla walks us through the approach step by step—while taking care to acknowledge that it takes a lot of practice to get it right.

There are pitfalls aplenty. Kayla strongly advises listeners not to say, “I understand” when our Loved Ones confide in us (it’s not true that we understand, she argues, and is often received as dismissal and erasure). In like fashion, she asserts that responding to our Loved Ones accusations by “explaining what we were really doing or saying” never works. In situations of hurt and conflict, she insists, everyone just needs to be affirmed.

Kayla’s great remarks are informed by years with Allies in Recovery, CRAFT, and Imago relationship therapy (where mirroring is practiced), and more. You can watch the whole conversation at the link below—and also note the required passcode. There’s wisdom here to benefit us all.

CLICK HERE TO WATCH KAYLA’S TALK with NAMI EAST BAY

ZOOM PASSCODE TO VIEW VIDEO: !=5*K%*=

Loading

Related Posts from "Member Blogs"

When Song, Faith, and Joy are Enough

The full name of the song is “Ndikhokhele Bawo,” which means “Lead me, Father” in Xhosa. These South African youths, assembled in their school’s courtyard, transform their place of learning into a concert hall with nothing more than the power of their voices. But it’s their spirit of joy and solidarity that lifts the beautiful into the realm of the sublime.

Evidence From Oregon: Decriminalizing Drugs Can’t Solve Every Problem, but It’s an Important Step All the Same

Oregon has just rescinded Measure 110, the historic law that decriminalized possession of small amounts of hard drugs. But the reasoning behind the rollback is muddled. As guest author Christina Dent reveals, M110 took the blame for spikes in lethal overdoses, homelessness, and public drug use, none of which it likely caused. Rather, she argues that the law represented a small but important step forward. In the effort to end the drug crisis, its repeal is a loss.

Ah-Ha Moments

When the noise dissipates and there’s clarity, that’s an “ah-ha moment.” You can move forward in a different way. You might even find new commitment to a way of thinking or behaving that you didn’t have access to before. Allies in Recovery uses CRAFT to give you the tool set for your own ah-ha moments, but also to help create the conditions for your loved one to find their own moments and possibilities for long-term change.

Learning About Depression. And Fighting Back.

Forty percent of Americans will suffer a major depressive episode at some point in their lives. Five percent of the world’s population is suffering from it at any given time. It’s a disease that’s too often misunderstood—when it’s not overlooked entirely. Recovery writer Annie Highwater offers this primer on the many forms depression can take, and the variety of paths available for dealing with it.

What Are the Three Questions?

When you’re in the middle of crisis, feeling reactive or uncertain about what to do, use the “three questions” to helps create space and time and take the best action. What am I feeling? What can I do about it (think as broadly as possible)? What am I actually gonna do? Kayla likes to consider a fourth: What’s happening that’s making me feel this way?

Getting the Most Out of This Site

Personal trainers and the like are terrific—when they’re accessible. Unfortunately, individual counseling is still a rarity with CRAFT, despite its proven effectiveness. Allies in Recovery was created to bridge that gap. In this post, founder and CEO Dominique Simon-Levine outlines the many forms of training, education, and guidance that we offer on this website. We hope it helps you find the support you need.

What We Can and Can’t Control: It’s Good to Know the Difference

Erica2727 has a husband who’s working hard on his recovery, but his place of work concerns her. She would like him to consider various options, but isn’t sure about how to talk over such matters with him. Allies’ writer Laurie MacDougall offers a guide to a vital distinction: on the one hand, what we can and should seek to control; and on the other, what we cannot, and don’t need to burden ourselves with attempting.

LEAVE A COMMENT / ASK A QUESTION

In your comments, please show respect for each other and do not give advice. Please consider that your choice of words has the power to reduce stigma and change opinions (ie, "person struggling with substance use" vs. "addict", "use" vs. "abuse"...)