

My one opportunity to take my daughter to a mommy and me class was canceled as was the class with my youngest daughter. Then Covid happened and turned our lives upside down.
Generation mindful full#
It was nice to give her my full attention and see how she was outside of her element. I sang songs to her and she got to interact with other little ones her age. My youngest and I also started a library class together. It still hangs on our fridge because that was the last class we had before quarantine. She made a lady bug craft and was so proud of herself. It was the first time that her and I were able to do something together, just the two of us. I was starting a mommy and me with my three year old and taking her twice a week. Karate was helping him socially and emotionally. My son was finally finding his groove in school and found a new passion, karate. I did most of my work while my son was at school and anything additional was done at night once the kids were in bed. Prior to quarantine, I really thought I had it all together.
Generation mindful how to#
Our kids are filled with emotions that they do not know how to express. We are around the same people, day in, day out.

Generation mindful professional#
Wiseley, an Army veteran, earned a doctorate from Wright State University’s School of Professional Psychology after receiving a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Eastern Kentucky University.We are currently home, all day long. He has made technology usage presentations at Association for University and College Counseling Center Directors conferences and consulted to help streamline operations at university counseling centers across the country. Wiseley has served as vice president of the Intercollegiate Counselors Consortium and a member of the advisory board for the Center for Collegiate Mental Health. He also has partnered with Women’s Studies departments to offer sexual and domestic violence education and prevention events, and worked to support the unique needs of first-generation, LGBTQ+ and military veteran students. In these roles, Wiseley worked with a variety of office stakeholders across college campuses to provide institutional counseling and mental health services. From 2006-2015, he was director of counseling services at Lindsey Wilson College in Columbia, Kentucky, after spending a year as director of Project ADDVANCE trauma services operations for Kentucky River Community Care in Hazard, Kentucky. Wiseley has been director of counseling and psychological services at Misericordia University in Dallas, Pennsylvania, since 2016. He has been nationally recognized for supervising counseling center performance has experience organizing and providing prevention and outreach programming and has advanced expertise with clinical technology. Wiseley has 16 years of experience as a director of mental health service operations, including the establishment of treatment facilities across multiple higher education institutions, and nine years as an associate/assistant professor in a mental health counseling program. The M INDful College Connections program has an office at DePauw, but Wiseley and other staff members will regularly visit Rose-Hulman and SMWC throughout the school year to meet with students, counselors and administrators. Improving student mental health services is a top priority of Rose-Hulman, DePauw, and SMWC, and Wiseley will work within the consortium to develop its innovative model and shape the future of college student mental health service delivery. grant, the M INDful College Connections program is an unprecedented investment of shared resources that enables the three Indiana higher education institutions to focus more efficiently and effectively on preventive care strategies and expand mental health services to students who need assistance. Supported by an $8.1 million Lilly Endowment Inc. Wiseley, Psy.D., has been named the first executive director of a unique consortium collaborating to address the mental health needs of students attending Rose-Hulman, DePauw University, and Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College.
