227 episodes

Around the meal table, needs are met. As participants we celebrate the common solution to our physical need - bread. While we do so, bread of another type is broken as well. Help, hope and encouragement are shared to meet the needs of our struggles, heartaches and questions. Breaking Bread is reminiscent of these life giving conversations. This podcast strives to meet some of our common needs through our common solution – The Bread of Life.

Breaking Bread Podcast ACCFS Staff

    • Kids & Family

Around the meal table, needs are met. As participants we celebrate the common solution to our physical need - bread. While we do so, bread of another type is broken as well. Help, hope and encouragement are shared to meet the needs of our struggles, heartaches and questions. Breaking Bread is reminiscent of these life giving conversations. This podcast strives to meet some of our common needs through our common solution – The Bread of Life.

    Child’s Play: Not at all Unimportant

    Child’s Play: Not at all Unimportant

    Play lies at the center of life for a child, and it should. In this episode of Breaking Bread, Amy Mammadov, a speech language pathologist, along with Brian Sutter, shine light on this important aspect of human growth and development. Additionally, parents should encourage, teach, evaluate and share in the enjoyment of play with our children. 

     
    Show notes: 

    Encourage Play: 

    Play is critical in the development of language, thought and human relations.  

    Teach Play: 

    The norms and technology of the day have stunted play. Some children need to be taught how to play.  

    Evaluate Play: 

    Not all play is equal. Many toys and forms of amusement today are adult directed play. Child directed play, on the other hand, provides rich areas of growth and potential. 

    Utilize Play: 

    Playing with your child gives you insights into where they are developmentally and provides an opportunity to model healthy reasoning. 


    Share in the enjoyment of play: 

    Shared enjoyment is key. If play is anything at all, it is fun. Parents are encouraged to connect with their children at the level of shared fun. 

    • 20 min
    Helping our Kids Explore their Identity

    Helping our Kids Explore their Identity

    Exploration is a prerequisite to having a settled identity. For parents with kids unsettled and exploring, this can be a frightening time. What role do we play in the exploration process? In this episode of Breaking Bread, Kathy Knochel and Brian Sutter will help us sort it out. 

    Show notes: 

    Identity: 

    Is the sense of self – Who I am and who I am not.  

    Identity Formation: 

    Starts with exploration and ends with commitment. 

    Exploration is trying, investigating, experiencing, researching. 
    Commitment is being settled, resolved and grounded. 

    Identity Culture in “the west”: 

    It is constructed individually. This means that the community has a limited influence on placing an identity on an individual. Rather, the individual has the ownness of discovering and embracing their identity.  

    Challenge: 

    Our young people are saddled with the task of sorting out their identity for themselves. 

    Angst: 

    Watching young people explore their identity. 

    Opportunity: 


    Support and guide exploration in community.  

    As possible, try not to rigidly force closure on those in the exploration phase. Rather, have dialogue that prompts healthy exploration. Thoughtful open-ended questions, and critical thinking prompts are necessary to guide wise investigation.  
    Have patience in the process with a goal to maintain relationship. 

    Fear: 

    Suppose an unwise identity is chosen? 

    Remember: Where there is life, there is experience. Where there is experience, there is exploration. Where there is exploration, there is hope yet for a good commitment. 

    • 29 min
    Lessons from my Left Hand: Being Members One of Another

    Lessons from my Left Hand: Being Members One of Another

    We all know that the body is made up of different members. Members one of another. The hand needs the foot. The eye needs the ear. But even more profound than these examples is the uncommon humility that my non-dominate left hand has with my dominate right. Similar in frame and made to do everything the right hand can… it performs well, but not as well. Yet it serves my body selflessly and without dissention. In this podcast we will listen and learn from our non-dominate hands a lesson on cooperation and being a member one of another. 
     
    An Imagined Interview with my Left Hand: 

    Me: When did you learn that I was going to be what they call “right-handed?”
    Left-hand: I learned this early. I noticed you were using the right hand to lead and do the more sensitive tasks. 

    Me: Do you compare yourself with the right?
    Left-hand: I don’t. My right hand does his job so well, and I’m glad. I do my job well.  

    Me: What do you understand your job to be?
    Left-hand: My job is to be a good left-hand complement to the right-hand.  

    Me: How do you understand your relationship to be with the right-hand?
    Left-hand: I don’t see myself separate from my right-hand. We are of the same body. Everything we do separately or together comes from you and is for you. You get the credit for anything we do, and you should. 

    Me: Do you get jealous of the right hand?
    Left-hand: No, not at all. I know you are pleased with me and that’s all that matters.  

    • 12 min
    Music Therapy

    Music Therapy

    The Christian life has music interwoven into its fabric. We use it to worship God. We are instructed to sing. It should not be surprising then to learn that music has the potential to benefit the mind and emotion. In this episode, music therapist Nick Lanz gives us tips on how to use music therapeutically. 

    Show notes: 

    Music Therapy: The clinical & evidence-based use of music interventions to accomplish individualized goals within a therapeutic relationship by a credentialed professional who has completed an approved music therapy program.  

    What do music therapists do?​ 

    Assess emotional well-being, physical health, social functioning, communication abilities, and cognitive skills through musical responses. 
    Design music sessions for individuals and groups based on client needs using various musical interventions. 
    Participate in interdisciplinary treatment planning, ongoing evaluation, and follow up.​ 

     

    Music therapy interventions for mental health can address a variety of healthcare & educational goals: 

    Develop healthy coping skills 
    Identify/express/explore emotions 
    Process trauma 
    Improve depressive symptoms 
    Decrease anxiety/agitation 
    Promote relaxation 


    Promote positive thinking/self-esteem 
    Develop sense of belonging/community 
    Promote positive social interaction/group cohesion 
    Address loneliness, grief, loss and stigma that persist despite treatment 
    Develop independence/decision-making skills 
    Manage stress 
    Promote wellness 

    “Music therapists use music to accomplish non-musical goals.” 

    There are four main approaches: 

    Receptive 

    Music listening 
    Song discussion/lyric analysis 
    Music-assisted relaxation/progressive muscle relaxation 

    Can also include music for sleep 

    Movement & music 
    Bonny Method of Guided Imagery & Music (requires post-graduate training) 

    Re-creative 

    Instrument instruction 
    Instrument playing 
    Sing-along 


    Recording sessions 

    Compositional 

    Therapeutic songwriting (multiple methods) 

    Improvisational  

    Instrumental/vocal improvisation 
    Drum circle/instrumental circle (groups) 

    • 28 min
    Making Peace with Pain (Part 2 of 2)

    Making Peace with Pain (Part 2 of 2)

    The question before every human being is not if they have pain, but rather, what they do with the pain that they have. Some people make peace with their pain. Unfortunately, many do not. In this Breaking Bread two-part series, Brian Sutter and Kaleb Beyer help us understand what making peace with pain means, why it is important and how to do it.  

    Show notes: 

    What does making peace with pain mean?  

    Answer: Making peace with pain happens when we change our relationship with pain. Instead of orbiting the pain, we are freed from the unhealthy attachment we have with it. While pain may remain, we are able to live with it as a part of our story but it does not govern our identity. Pain has its proper effect on our lives - not too much, yet not ignored. 

    Why is making peace with pain important? 

    Answer: Pain unattended has a tendency to generate unhealthy attachments in our lives. We orbit closely to the pain. Some will try to soothe the pain by unhealthy means. Others will over identify with the pain. Still others will expend tremendous energies to change circumstances to make the pain go away. As a result, we become less responsive to our present lives because pain management requires so much attention. We don’t live well now. 

    How do we know if there is pain in our lives for which peace needs to be made? 

    Answer: If we have a past relationship with our pain and not a present relationship we may need to make peace with pain. This can be seen in our response to present circumstances. For example, if we react to present circumstances inappropriately, our past pain may be speaking.  

    How do we make peace with pain? 

    Answer: We make peace with pain by first understanding that God is present with us in our pain. We are not alone. Alowing yourself to sit with God in your pain is a healthy exercise. Next, acceptance will need to be practiced. Acceptance is letting go of circumstances that are not and will not be. It includes a trust that God loves you, is good and sees a wider expanse. For some pain, forgiveness will need to be extended to the offending parties.  

    • 16 min
    Making Peace with Pain (Part 1 of 2)

    Making Peace with Pain (Part 1 of 2)

    The question before every human being is not if they have pain, but rather, what they do with the pain that they have. Some people make peace with their pain. Unfortunately, many do not. In this Breaking Bread two-part series, Brian Sutter and Kaleb Beyer help us understand what making peace with pain means, why it is important and how to do it.

    • 22 min

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