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Kudos for LifeRing -- Read the Testimonials Page and Add Your Own

Reports From the 2002 LifeRing Recovery Congress, Berkeley CA March 15-16-17

Thanks   Letters   Report   Minutes   Program Materials   Photographs

 
It Takes a Village To Raise a Congress

A Message of Thanks to Everyone


By Marty N. and Marjorie J.

Organizing the 2002 LifeRing Congress was a great adventure. We owe its success to the contributions of a great many individuals.

Our two guest speakers, Dr. Howard Kornfeld and Lonny Shavelson MD, deserve very special thanks. Dr. Kornfeld gave a highly educational talk and answered a long series of audience questions. Lonny Shavelson was our guest at an informal lunch Saturday where he met the workshop leaders and members of the LifeRing Board of Directors. He then gave a moving, inspiring talk that had many in the audience on their feet in a standing ovation at the end.

Many thanks for making the event a success are owed to the members of the local Congress organizing committee. This body met three times and we had numerous consultations with individual members between meetings. Members of the organizing committee included Alicia B., Tracey D., Marylou B., Bill S., Gillian E., Chet G., David M., Francine M., Bill C., Leeza V., and ourselves. The organizing committee, chaired by Marjorie, made the key decisions regarding budget and program, and the enthusiasm of its members gave the project wings.

Special thanks are due to the workshop leaders who came forward and took responsibility for preparing a topic. Alicia B. and Teresa B., Jacquie Jones, Betts, Angie N., Mark Connors, Glo, Gillian E., Deena B., Patrick B., Lin L., Leeza V. and Bill S. each spent a lot of time and energy sweating out the issues and getting themselves ready. They and the whole organization are the richer for it. We will be seeing a series of new publications in coming weeks based on these workshop presentations.

The delegates who came to represent their meetings at the Congress proper on Sunday morning deserve special appreciation. Each of them took on the additional responsibility of preparing a report on the status of their meeting and educating themselves on the issues before the Congress. Those who attended the Delegates' Assembly were: Lori A. - Pleasanton, CA ; Larry S. - Tues. Oakland, CA ; Tracey D. - Sun. Oakland Mandana House, CA ; Patrick B. - Austin, TX ; Craig W. - LSR EMail list ; Mark C. - Wed. online chat ; Raphael E. - Mon. San Francisco, CA ; LouAnthony G. - Union City, CA ; Chet G. - Wed. Oakland, CA ; Mary Lou B. - Sat. San Francisco, CA ; Gillian E. - Thurs. San Francisco, CA ; Robert B. - Morgantown, WV and BOD member ; Ben G. - Missoula, MT ; Syl S. - Bonita House, Berkeley, CA ; Ang N. - Women's EMail list ; CA E. - LSR BodyList ; Aram A. - San Rafael, CA ; Amy L. - Thurs. Oakland Mandana House, CA ; Marjorie J. - Herrick Hospital Berkeley and BOD member, CA ; Bill C - Mon. Berkeley, CA ; Chris G. - Tues. San Francisco, CA ; Marty N. - Wed. MPI Oakland and BOD member, CA ; Tom S. - St. Petersburg & Tampa, FL and BOD member ; Glo M. - Online Chat and BOD member ; Andree G. - Sat. Oakland CDRP, CA.; Jacquie J. - BOD member; Bill S. - BOD member; and David Lee B, member.

The Congress would not have been possible without the help of numerous individuals in setup, registration, and related assignments. Marylou B. prepared the Continuing Education forms and staffed the CE registration table. Mark Connors, Bill S., Larry S. , Aram A., Alicia B., Patrick B., Jenny A., Rick W., Terry H., and others helped with registration and book table sales. Mark Fisher brought big urns of Royal Coffee both Saturday and Sunday. Gillian E. made the sign on the lectern and the two-color directional signs, as well as the red "Stop Stigma" buttons. Bill Carpenter took photographs.

The Congress owed much of its upbeat ambiance to the contributions of a series of talented musicians who donated their time and equipment. Terry R. and his associate Bill provided first rate keyboard and bass performances at the Friday evening reception at the Durant. Bill S. and Chet G. organized an after-dinner entertainment program Saturday evening that featured themselves, vocalist C.A. from Hokkaido Japan, Oaklander David M. on bass, Patrick B. on bass from Austin TX., Itchy B. on guitar from Morgantown W.Va., and Chris W. and his friend playing bluegrass. Bill S. and Glo M. contributed poems. The night climaxed with a tight set by Chet's rock and roll quartet, Easy Way Out; they had other hotel guests wandering into our dining room to catch the sound.

Weeks before the Congress, a publicity committee got the word out via mailings. Marylou B., Mark C., Jenti W., Andy Y., Nanita S. and others participated in mailing design, production, and with the stuff-and-lick operation. We did all the mailing and publicity in-house.

Thanks are due also to individuals whom few participants had occasion to meet. Michiko Murillo, the Facilities Coordinator at Alta Bates Hospital, spent many hours meeting with us before the event and helping us get set up. Her attention to detail and her cooperative attitude and patience were very much appreciated. Bee Bernstein, the Education Coordinator at the hospital, contributed forms and support. Suzanne Stromme, also of Alta Bates, drafted the workshop feedback forms. Melissa Holley, the Parking Coordinator, extended every courtesy to provide discount parking stickers. Security and kitchen personnel went out of their way to help us whenever we asked.

We had many compliments during and after the Congress for a well-planned, smooth-running operation. The credit belongs to the wonderful spirit of volunteerism and cooperation that everybody involved in this project caught from early on. Many times we were faced with seemingly impossible deadlines and last-minute crises, but each time someone came up with a save and pulled it out. It was a great experience working with this entire ad hoc network of people to make this event happen. Of course it was a lot of work, but it was a great privilege to have been at the center of it and we're already thinking about the next one.

II.

Now, for those who may be interested in a look behind the scenes, we'd like to share a little background. First off, we're veterans of the September 1999 "Secular Recovery Convention" in Berkeley. Marty was the over-all coordinator then and Marjorie was in charge of finances, registration, and everything else. That event had its rocky moments but we felt that its basic format was a success and we should do it again, so we used that as a model.  This time Marjorie was over-all coordinator and Marty headed the program committee. 

Although we'd like to take credit for experience and foresight in making it work again this time, the truth is that luck played a big role here. Take the venue, for instance. We originally planned to set the workshops in the conference center in the basement of Herrick Hospital, same as in 1999. But the hospital's Facilities Coordinator delayed and delayed the room assignment - somehow the events of 9/11 threw off the timetable here - and finally told us there was a conflict, we could not have that venue on our weekend. We felt panic rising. But, said the F.C., the conference facilities at nearby Alta Bates Hospital were available instead if we were interested in those. We had never seen those facilities and weren't enthusiastic about an unfamiliar venue, but what was the alternative? Reluctantly we visited Alta Bates - and were blown away. Alta Bates is a much nicer venue in every respect. It's newer, lighter, cleaner, has a good cafeteria, and there's a slew of restaurants ten minutes away. And the price was the same - absolutely nothing. That was stroke of luck No. 1.

(A couple of weeks before the event we learned that one of the conference rooms that had been assigned to us had been remodeled into a mail room, and we would have to do some squeezing, but everyone rolled with that punch and no one had to be turned away for lack of seating.)

Stroke of luck No. 2 was finding Lonny Shavelson as principal guest speaker. His book was a great read and we gave it enthusiastic reviews on the www.unhooked.com Booktalk page six months earlier, before we were thinking Congress program. As it happened, Shavelson lives in Berkeley. Not only lives in Berkeley, but has a day job as a physician in the Emergency Room at Alta Bates Hospital. And was very happy to cut a deal with us for a very reasonable honorarium. We didn't have to pay him travel or hotel. Thus we got a star speaker on his way up to a national reputation at a price our micro-budget could afford.

Shavelson was also a big sweetheart to agree to have lunch with our workshop leaders and other invited guests in the hospital cafeteria. We each got a chance to introduce ourselves and he got a chance to see what we looked like. Now he can tell the people he knows that he met a bunch of the LifeRing people from different parts of the country. That never hurts. He has been a really kind, decent person to deal with.

Stroke of luck No. 3 was finding Dr. Howard Kornfeld. This was a real coup for us, which we owe entirely to the efforts of Tracey D. with an assist from Alicia B. They are both patients of Dr. Kornfeld, and Tracey personally conveyed the invitation to the good Doctor and had the pleasure of introducing him. Dr. Kornfeld generously donated his time. Let's hope that he picked up some patients from the trip by way of compensation. Dr. Kornfeld's waiting room has featured LifeRing literature for a long time and he has been consistently supportive of the patient's right to have a broader choice of support groups.

Dr. Kornfeld waited until almost noon, hoping to meet Lonny Shavelson, but just before that happened his cell phone rang and he was called away.

But probably the most amazing and significant breakthrough of this whole Congress was achieved by Marylou B.: getting LifeRing certified as a provider of Continuing Education credits for the presentations by Drs. Kornfeld and Shavelson. Professional counselors, like members of many other professions, have to take continuing education classes. To get certified as a provider of CE credits requires jumping through a long and time-consuming series of hoops, and neither Kornfeld nor Shavelson thought that it could be done in the time available. They did not reckon with Marylou's diplomatic skills and persistence. With incredible speed, just in time for the mass mailings, Marylou got LifeRing certified as a provider of CE units not only for holders of the LCSW and MFT licenses (Licensed Clinical Social Worker and Marriage and Family Therapist) but also for counselors with CAADAC certificates (California Association of Alcohol and Drug Abuse Counselors). All the CAADAC counselors work in treatment programs.

Marylou also obtained for us the mailing list of CAADAC members in the Bay Area. We are sure that this mailing was the very first time that many treatment counselors had heard of LifeRing. Their first impression of us was a strongly positive one: we provided CE credits, and we had prominent speakers on our program. Even if the counselors did not show up this had to leave a positive impression.

And counselors did show up. At the '99 convention, we had exactly three counselors in the audience. This time, based on incomplete figures, we had well over a dozen and perhaps twice that many. Not only counselors, but several program directors were present to check us out, and two of them approached us afterward and expressed interest in having LifeRing speakers and possibly LifeRing meetings at their facilities. We are following up with that.

We want to give Marylou B. a big hand for her role in engineering this portion of the Congress. We have been striving for years to gain a measure of recognition from the treatment profession as a legitimate support group option, and Marylou's initiative moved us a big step forward toward that goal. This should translate into more meetings and an increased flow of referrals to our meetings in the future.

Scheduling the program presentations required a lot of difficult choices and tradeoffs. It was impossible to predict what kind of turnout the different workshops would get. Fortunately, with one exception early in the morning, all the workshops got a good audience and workshop leaders felt rewarded for their efforts in preparation. We very much appreciate the flexibility of the workshop leaders with room reassignments. Some of the sessions were highly participatory, others were straightforward lectures. We made a mental note that we would title the workshops "breakouts" or "sessions" next time so as to give the leaders more flexibility in choosing their format.

Marty wants to give a special Pioneer Award to workshop leaders Mark C., Jacquie J., Gillian E. and Lin L. Mark and Jacquie's Surviving 12-Step Treatment is a groundbreaking effort that required a tremendous amount of preparation. They wrote an extensive handout that will be posted on unhooked.com soon and will probably become a LifeRing Press publication. Gillian tackled an issue area - confidentiality, anonymity, and stigma - that has received very little discussion in our groups so far. We all know we cannot approach this exactly the same way as AA, but few people have given much thought to what we ought to be doing here. Gillian's preparatory work will benefit the whole organization when we get around to discussing these issues. Marty was responsible for suggesting the Sex in Recovery workshop and for inviting Lin to lead it. Marty feels that there is too much prudishness and hypocrisy in the recovery atmosphere on the sex issue and that Lin was well qualified to break through it and help us get into more real-life and open-minded territory. People ought to be discussing sex in recovery openly, instead of sweeping it under the rug, and Lin's wide-open workshop went a long way toward getting the discussion moving.

The Saturday night banquet turned out just right in terms of numbers. The room holds a maximum of 55 and we had 57 guests. Fortunately there were a few no-shows or there would have been a worse overcrowding problem than there was. We made a strategic decision not to have a head table and to avoid long boring speeches at the dinner. Instead, Marjorie briefly thanked those who had contributed and asked them to stand and get a round of applause. Then we went on to the entertainment.

The musicians had very little room to maneuver in the crowded dining room, and this contributed to some delays in the entertainment program. Dinner guests who left early because of slow spots in the entertainment lineup missed C.A.'s enthusiastic vocals and the smooth, memorable performance by Chet's rock and roll band that closed out the evening. We made a mental note to tighten up the entertainment program next time.

Hotel staff produced a good quality dinner, as in '99, and the servers, notably Calliope, worked hard to accommodate all our wishes. One of the two desserts offered, a tiramisu, caused surprise and consternation because it tasted of rum. Marjorie immediately went to the kitchen about it and learned that it was a flavoring containing no alcohol. We had ordered the same menu as in '99, and the tiramisu had contained no such flavor at that time. Apparently the hotel had a new chef. We'll make sure that there are no such unpleasant surprises next time. Fortunately there was an ample supply of the other dessert, a chocolate mousse cake with a chocolate violin on top.

It rained heavily the next morning, but there was a good turnout bright and early for the Delegates' Assembly. Both of us had participated in the fateful business meeting at the Sept. '99 convention and there could not have been a greater contrast. People at the '99 meeting had no votes - all decisions in those days were in the hands of our then financial sponsor -- and the atmosphere then was acrid with bitterness and division. This time it was a true Congress, a meeting of meetings. The assembled delegates are the masters in the house now. As Board members and officers we were conscious of our duty to report to the Congress about the organization's activities and finances, and to hold ourselves answerable. Remembering the bad old days, we both had a warm wonderful feeling that this here now is the way it ought to be. We were thrilled to look around and see that most of those present had no history with our predecessor organization, and took our current form of organization for granted as the normal way things ought to be. And rightly so. As a free-standing democratic organization, we have unlimited potential. This was our first full year of life as a national organization, and we have reason to be cheerful and confident about the future.

Congresses are hard work but they make a vital contribution to the organization. Because of the Congress deadline, we got out the financial report and the Board's report to the membership. Because of the Congress, a bunch of bright people hit the books and studied up in their area of interest so they could make workshop presentations. Because of the Congress, we made contacts with prominent speakers and became part of their map of the recovery world. Because of the Congress, we sent out mailings to our constituency and to our referral sources and got our name into their hands and minds. Because of the Congress, dozens of people reflected on the past year's experience of their LifeRing meetings and summed it up for their report to the body. Because of the Congress, we could make collective decisions and amend organizational rules and hold elections for leadership, and enjoy leaders who are answerable to the delegates and the whole membership. The Congress awakened new initiatives such as our certification to give CE credits. The Congress will directly lead to new meetings and to new Press publications. Most of all, the Congress created new bonds among participants and charged up many of us with a tremendous new energy that will send its ripples far and wide into the future. The Congress is like the organization's heartbeat; it refreshes and re-energizes everything in the whole circulatory network, near and far.

We were very pleased with the way the 2002 Congress turned out, but we also see considerable room for improvement. The Congress is still a kind of novel idea for many of our members worldwide and locally, and we have not yet succeeded in getting the message across that the Congress is a gathering for the entire membership and friends. We need to work out better ways of easing financial barriers to attendance. The three-part format of the event here needs to be explained and popularized earlier and more often so that people understand what is happening when and why. If we do a better job explaining what the Congress is about we will see substantial growth in participation. And as the numbers increase we will face new challenges in the area of venue, program, housing, finances, entertainment, transportation, and organization. Fortunately, as a free-standing democratic organization we are attracting and holding the collective talent that is required to solve each of these problems and to organize the LifeRing Congresses of the future.

-- MN & MWJ

Marjorie J. was Congress Coordinator and Marty N. chaired the Program Committee for the 2002 LifeRing Congress.