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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Lookout Mountain Presbyterian Church
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DTSTART:20261101T060000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260208T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260208T104500
DTSTAMP:20260411T212913
CREATED:20260109T144000Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260204T213701Z
UID:10000335-1770544800-1770547500@lmpc.org
SUMMARY:Safeguarding Training
DESCRIPTION:The Session of LMPC has committed to providing ongoing safeguarding training for the congregation. This year\, we’re grateful to welcome Dr. Jana Pressley from the Complex Trauma Treatment Center in Boston for an essential safeguarding workshop. \nThis training will explore how chronic\, relational trauma shapes the whole person—emotionally\, relationally\, cognitively\, physically\, and spiritually. Dr. Pressley will help us understand how trauma can affect faith itself\, and how the church can become a wiser\, safer\, and more compassionate community of care. Practical application will focus on supporting individuals in the context of the church community. \nFriday\, Feb. 6 from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. (Chapel)\nIntroduction to complex trauma (chronic\, relational trauma)\nIntroduction to how trauma impacts lifelong development\nEmotional impact: feeling too much or too little\nCognitive impact: executive functioning of the brain\nPhysiological impact: how the body holds the trauma\nRelational impact: how interpersonal patterns can be shaped\nSpiritual impact: shaping of worldview\, perception of relationship with God \nSaturday\, Feb. 7 from 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. (Chapel)\nWhat does complex trauma “look like” in the people in your life?\nUnderstanding the complicated emotions\, behaviors\, and relational patterns associated with complex trauma\nWhat are common triggers for trauma survivors?\nWhat are common coping responses for trauma responses?\nHow to support complex trauma survivors in a faith community context\nHelpful support and potential pitfalls\nVicarious traumatization when supporting vulnerable community members \nSunday\, Feb. 8 from 10:00 to 10:45 a.m. (High School Room in JHYB)\nHow trauma impacts lifelong development – emotionally\, cognitively\, interpersonally\, spiritually Trauma examples in a faith community setting\nHow to help \nThe Session of LMPC has committed to providing ongoing safeguarding training for the congregation. This year\, we’re grateful to welcome Dr. Jana Pressley from the Complex Trauma Treatment Center in Boston for an essential safeguarding workshop. \nThis training will explore how chronic\, relational trauma shapes the whole person—emotionally\, relationally\, cognitively\, physically\, and spiritually. Dr. Pressley will help us understand how trauma can affect faith itself\, and how the church can become a wiser\, safer\, and more compassionate community of care. Practical application will focus on supporting individuals in the context of the church community. \nIf you serve\, lead\, teach\, care\, or simply want to love others more wisely\, this training matters. It’s an opportunity to grow in awareness\, deepen compassion\, and strengthen our calling to love and protect God’s people. \nDr. Jana Pressley\, Psy.D\, is a licensed clinical psychologist\, trainer\, and consultant. She serves as Director of Clinical Services at the Complex Trauma Treatment Center-Boston\, Co-Director of the Complex Trauma Treatment Affiliates\, Founding Faculty at the Complex Trauma Training Institute\, and Senior Training Associate of the Foundation Trust. She specializes in the treatment of youth\, adults\, and couples/families impacted by developmental trauma\, as well as providing consultation supporting systems-level implementation of trauma-informed care in community settings and state-wide organizations.  \nDr. Pressley is also an Adjunct Associate Professor at Richmont Graduate University\, where she designed and directed a trauma-based specialization certificate program. She teaches trauma-related courses at the graduate level\, and implemented trauma treatment specialization courses and qualitative trauma-focused research labs for multiple graduate programs. Dr. Pressley’s research focuses on the experience of court-involved young adults who have suffered relational trauma in the midst of chronic poverty and community violence\, as well as the impact of complex trauma history on adult spirituality and meaning-making. She has authored multiple articles and book chapters on these topics.  \nDr. Pressley is also a content developer for www.complextrauma.org\, a comprehensive information and resource website for trauma-impacted consumers\, families and providers. She is a national trainer and consultant in the Attachment\, Regulation\, and Competency (ARC) and Component-Based Psychotherapy (CBP) complex trauma intervention models.
URL:https://lmpc.org/event/safeguarding-training/2026-02-08/
LOCATION:Chapel
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://lmpc.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Safeguarding-Training-2.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Jocelyn Christie":MAILTO:jocelyn@lmpc.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260207T083000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260207T120000
DTSTAMP:20260411T212913
CREATED:20260109T144000Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260204T213701Z
UID:10000334-1770453000-1770465600@lmpc.org
SUMMARY:Safeguarding Training
DESCRIPTION:The Session of LMPC has committed to providing ongoing safeguarding training for the congregation. This year\, we’re grateful to welcome Dr. Jana Pressley from the Complex Trauma Treatment Center in Boston for an essential safeguarding workshop. \nThis training will explore how chronic\, relational trauma shapes the whole person—emotionally\, relationally\, cognitively\, physically\, and spiritually. Dr. Pressley will help us understand how trauma can affect faith itself\, and how the church can become a wiser\, safer\, and more compassionate community of care. Practical application will focus on supporting individuals in the context of the church community. \nFriday\, Feb. 6 from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. (Chapel)\nIntroduction to complex trauma (chronic\, relational trauma)\nIntroduction to how trauma impacts lifelong development\nEmotional impact: feeling too much or too little\nCognitive impact: executive functioning of the brain\nPhysiological impact: how the body holds the trauma\nRelational impact: how interpersonal patterns can be shaped\nSpiritual impact: shaping of worldview\, perception of relationship with God \nSaturday\, Feb. 7 from 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. (Chapel)\nWhat does complex trauma “look like” in the people in your life?\nUnderstanding the complicated emotions\, behaviors\, and relational patterns associated with complex trauma\nWhat are common triggers for trauma survivors?\nWhat are common coping responses for trauma responses?\nHow to support complex trauma survivors in a faith community context\nHelpful support and potential pitfalls\nVicarious traumatization when supporting vulnerable community members \nSunday\, Feb. 8 from 10:00 to 10:45 a.m. (High School Room in JHYB)\nHow trauma impacts lifelong development – emotionally\, cognitively\, interpersonally\, spiritually Trauma examples in a faith community setting\nHow to help \nThe Session of LMPC has committed to providing ongoing safeguarding training for the congregation. This year\, we’re grateful to welcome Dr. Jana Pressley from the Complex Trauma Treatment Center in Boston for an essential safeguarding workshop. \nThis training will explore how chronic\, relational trauma shapes the whole person—emotionally\, relationally\, cognitively\, physically\, and spiritually. Dr. Pressley will help us understand how trauma can affect faith itself\, and how the church can become a wiser\, safer\, and more compassionate community of care. Practical application will focus on supporting individuals in the context of the church community. \nIf you serve\, lead\, teach\, care\, or simply want to love others more wisely\, this training matters. It’s an opportunity to grow in awareness\, deepen compassion\, and strengthen our calling to love and protect God’s people. \nDr. Jana Pressley\, Psy.D\, is a licensed clinical psychologist\, trainer\, and consultant. She serves as Director of Clinical Services at the Complex Trauma Treatment Center-Boston\, Co-Director of the Complex Trauma Treatment Affiliates\, Founding Faculty at the Complex Trauma Training Institute\, and Senior Training Associate of the Foundation Trust. She specializes in the treatment of youth\, adults\, and couples/families impacted by developmental trauma\, as well as providing consultation supporting systems-level implementation of trauma-informed care in community settings and state-wide organizations.  \nDr. Pressley is also an Adjunct Associate Professor at Richmont Graduate University\, where she designed and directed a trauma-based specialization certificate program. She teaches trauma-related courses at the graduate level\, and implemented trauma treatment specialization courses and qualitative trauma-focused research labs for multiple graduate programs. Dr. Pressley’s research focuses on the experience of court-involved young adults who have suffered relational trauma in the midst of chronic poverty and community violence\, as well as the impact of complex trauma history on adult spirituality and meaning-making. She has authored multiple articles and book chapters on these topics.  \nDr. Pressley is also a content developer for www.complextrauma.org\, a comprehensive information and resource website for trauma-impacted consumers\, families and providers. She is a national trainer and consultant in the Attachment\, Regulation\, and Competency (ARC) and Component-Based Psychotherapy (CBP) complex trauma intervention models.
URL:https://lmpc.org/event/safeguarding-training/2026-02-07/
LOCATION:Chapel
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://lmpc.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Safeguarding-Training-2.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Jocelyn Christie":MAILTO:jocelyn@lmpc.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260206T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260206T203000
DTSTAMP:20260411T212913
CREATED:20260109T144000Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260204T213701Z
UID:10000333-1770404400-1770409800@lmpc.org
SUMMARY:Safeguarding Training
DESCRIPTION:The Session of LMPC has committed to providing ongoing safeguarding training for the congregation. This year\, we’re grateful to welcome Dr. Jana Pressley from the Complex Trauma Treatment Center in Boston for an essential safeguarding workshop. \nThis training will explore how chronic\, relational trauma shapes the whole person—emotionally\, relationally\, cognitively\, physically\, and spiritually. Dr. Pressley will help us understand how trauma can affect faith itself\, and how the church can become a wiser\, safer\, and more compassionate community of care. Practical application will focus on supporting individuals in the context of the church community. \nFriday\, Feb. 6 from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. (Chapel)\nIntroduction to complex trauma (chronic\, relational trauma)\nIntroduction to how trauma impacts lifelong development\nEmotional impact: feeling too much or too little\nCognitive impact: executive functioning of the brain\nPhysiological impact: how the body holds the trauma\nRelational impact: how interpersonal patterns can be shaped\nSpiritual impact: shaping of worldview\, perception of relationship with God \nSaturday\, Feb. 7 from 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. (Chapel)\nWhat does complex trauma “look like” in the people in your life?\nUnderstanding the complicated emotions\, behaviors\, and relational patterns associated with complex trauma\nWhat are common triggers for trauma survivors?\nWhat are common coping responses for trauma responses?\nHow to support complex trauma survivors in a faith community context\nHelpful support and potential pitfalls\nVicarious traumatization when supporting vulnerable community members \nSunday\, Feb. 8 from 10:00 to 10:45 a.m. (High School Room in JHYB)\nHow trauma impacts lifelong development – emotionally\, cognitively\, interpersonally\, spiritually Trauma examples in a faith community setting\nHow to help \nThe Session of LMPC has committed to providing ongoing safeguarding training for the congregation. This year\, we’re grateful to welcome Dr. Jana Pressley from the Complex Trauma Treatment Center in Boston for an essential safeguarding workshop. \nThis training will explore how chronic\, relational trauma shapes the whole person—emotionally\, relationally\, cognitively\, physically\, and spiritually. Dr. Pressley will help us understand how trauma can affect faith itself\, and how the church can become a wiser\, safer\, and more compassionate community of care. Practical application will focus on supporting individuals in the context of the church community. \nIf you serve\, lead\, teach\, care\, or simply want to love others more wisely\, this training matters. It’s an opportunity to grow in awareness\, deepen compassion\, and strengthen our calling to love and protect God’s people. \nDr. Jana Pressley\, Psy.D\, is a licensed clinical psychologist\, trainer\, and consultant. She serves as Director of Clinical Services at the Complex Trauma Treatment Center-Boston\, Co-Director of the Complex Trauma Treatment Affiliates\, Founding Faculty at the Complex Trauma Training Institute\, and Senior Training Associate of the Foundation Trust. She specializes in the treatment of youth\, adults\, and couples/families impacted by developmental trauma\, as well as providing consultation supporting systems-level implementation of trauma-informed care in community settings and state-wide organizations.  \nDr. Pressley is also an Adjunct Associate Professor at Richmont Graduate University\, where she designed and directed a trauma-based specialization certificate program. She teaches trauma-related courses at the graduate level\, and implemented trauma treatment specialization courses and qualitative trauma-focused research labs for multiple graduate programs. Dr. Pressley’s research focuses on the experience of court-involved young adults who have suffered relational trauma in the midst of chronic poverty and community violence\, as well as the impact of complex trauma history on adult spirituality and meaning-making. She has authored multiple articles and book chapters on these topics.  \nDr. Pressley is also a content developer for www.complextrauma.org\, a comprehensive information and resource website for trauma-impacted consumers\, families and providers. She is a national trainer and consultant in the Attachment\, Regulation\, and Competency (ARC) and Component-Based Psychotherapy (CBP) complex trauma intervention models.
URL:https://lmpc.org/event/safeguarding-training/2026-02-06/
LOCATION:Chapel
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://lmpc.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Safeguarding-Training-2.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Jocelyn Christie":MAILTO:jocelyn@lmpc.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251221T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251221T161500
DTSTAMP:20260411T212913
CREATED:20231121T183057Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251204T205207Z
UID:10000134-1766323800-1766333700@lmpc.org
SUMMARY:Christmas Caroling
DESCRIPTION:Bring your family or small group and go caroling at 1:30 p.m. at Morning Pointe at Happy Valley or 3:15 p.m. at Thrive at Brow Wood. Or\, come to both! \nPlease register on Realm Connect.
URL:https://lmpc.org/event/christmas-caroling/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://lmpc.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Caroling-web-image.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Jocelyn Christie":MAILTO:jocelyn@lmpc.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251021T063000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251021T074500
DTSTAMP:20260411T212913
CREATED:20230814T121846Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251010T135940Z
UID:10000048-1761028200-1761032700@lmpc.org
SUMMARY:Men's Breakfast
DESCRIPTION:Enjoy food\, fellowship\, and an encouraging word from Barry Smith\, Metanoia Prison Ministries Regional Director. Invite your friend\, neighbor\, or coworker along. No registration required. \nBarry Smith serves as the Metanoia Prison Ministries Regional Director for the Tennessee Valley Presbytery Region. He is a graduate of Trinity Evangelical Divinity School and Miami International Seminary\, and he is a ruling elder at North Shore Fellowship. He is the author of Grace in the Morning: A former pastor’s memoir of overcoming childhood trauma and addiction and A Study in the Love and Grace of God from Deuteronomy. Barry and his wife\, Gail\, live in Hixson and have eight children and eight grandchildren between them.
URL:https://lmpc.org/event/mens-breakfast/
LOCATION:Fellowship Hall
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://lmpc.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/mens-breakfast-web-image.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Jocelyn Christie":MAILTO:jocelyn@lmpc.org
END:VEVENT
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