12分

Episode one- identity Break Barriers (becoming mental health) by Lilah Rouse

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·        “In this session, I would like to focusing on the identity we have as
daughters of  Christ.”
·        “As a result of their participation in this session, students should be able
to: Understand we do put our identity in thing and what we put our identity in.
·        What poisonous thoughts are shape our identity
·         What God says about who we
·        Who are we in Christ?
·        Fervent prayer book by (Shirer, Priscilla)
·         God says about who we
 
·        “Abby, a nineteen-year-old college sophomore, was returning home with four other friends on a spring break outing to Disneyland, when the SUV in which she was riding experienced a blowout that turned into a fatal accident. Two of the girls were ejected from the car and died on the scene. Abby was identified as one of them. As word reached the families back in Arizona—two girls dead, three critically injured—typical parental worry over a college road trip turned to unspeakable grief. Abby’s parents spent the next few days combing through the shock and horror, planning the details of their daughter’s funeral while three other parents prayed for their own children’s recovery, some of whose bruises and swelling made them almost hard to recognize as they lay in the hospital. On Saturday, however, six days after the accident, hospital officials informed two of the families that there had been a horrible mistake. Two of the girls, who bore a striking resemblance, had been misidentified. Parents who’d been sitting by the bedside of a young woman they believed to be their daughter were told the staggering news: she wasn’t their daughter after all. Their daughter had actually died in the accident. And Abby’s parents? They were given news they could have never imagined receiving . . . Abby wasn’t dead. She was alive. The initial shock of what they were hearing turned to disbelief. Disbelief then turned to joy. But the joy was mingled, too, with anger—anger that they’d been forced to live for six days in agony because of a reality that wasn’t true, a grief that they had no need to feel or experience.”  Fervent prayer book by (Shirer, Priscilla Page 56)
 

·        “In this session, I would like to focusing on the identity we have as
daughters of  Christ.”
·        “As a result of their participation in this session, students should be able
to: Understand we do put our identity in thing and what we put our identity in.
·        What poisonous thoughts are shape our identity
·         What God says about who we
·        Who are we in Christ?
·        Fervent prayer book by (Shirer, Priscilla)
·         God says about who we
 
·        “Abby, a nineteen-year-old college sophomore, was returning home with four other friends on a spring break outing to Disneyland, when the SUV in which she was riding experienced a blowout that turned into a fatal accident. Two of the girls were ejected from the car and died on the scene. Abby was identified as one of them. As word reached the families back in Arizona—two girls dead, three critically injured—typical parental worry over a college road trip turned to unspeakable grief. Abby’s parents spent the next few days combing through the shock and horror, planning the details of their daughter’s funeral while three other parents prayed for their own children’s recovery, some of whose bruises and swelling made them almost hard to recognize as they lay in the hospital. On Saturday, however, six days after the accident, hospital officials informed two of the families that there had been a horrible mistake. Two of the girls, who bore a striking resemblance, had been misidentified. Parents who’d been sitting by the bedside of a young woman they believed to be their daughter were told the staggering news: she wasn’t their daughter after all. Their daughter had actually died in the accident. And Abby’s parents? They were given news they could have never imagined receiving . . . Abby wasn’t dead. She was alive. The initial shock of what they were hearing turned to disbelief. Disbelief then turned to joy. But the joy was mingled, too, with anger—anger that they’d been forced to live for six days in agony because of a reality that wasn’t true, a grief that they had no need to feel or experience.”  Fervent prayer book by (Shirer, Priscilla Page 56)
 

12分