This webinar is designed for professionals working in care, support, health, education, and community roles who support people through wellbeing, loss, grief, and times of transition. It is relevant for counsellors, social workers, support workers, nurses and other healthcare professionals, educators, hospice and palliative care workers, funeral service staff, mental health practitioners, volunteers, caregivers, and others working in roles that involve relational, emotional, or holistic support.
Spirituality is a significant dimension of wellbeing for many Rainbow community members. Yet practitioners often feel uncertain about how to acknowledge and support spirituality safely, respectfully, and without making assumptions – particularly where identities, beliefs, and cultural frameworks intersect, or where spiritual and religious spaces have caused harm or exclusion.
This webinar explores how to work confidently and respectfully with the spiritual lives of Rainbow community members in Aotearoa. It invites practitioners to reflect on their own positioning and comfort levels, while building understanding of the diverse spiritual experiences and needs of Rainbow community members. The session will examine how experiences such as grief, loss of belonging, and spiritual or religious harm can shape spiritual identity and influence a person’s ongoing journey to wellbeing. Participants will learn key considerations, practical tools, and supportive approaches for engaging with spirituality – including when addressing the impacts of exclusion, harm, or spiritual abuse.
All registered participants will receive a link to the recording to catch up. It will be available for 30 days.
David Sander
In 2018, David completed his Master of Counselling, focusing his dissertation on gay men’s Spirituality in Aotearoa New Zealand. This research was later published in the New Zealand Journal of Counselling. Since then, he has worked as a registered NZAC counsellor and supervisor with a particular interest in supporting the spiritual lives of his clients.
David's therapeutic work involves working with people who have experienced trauma arising from harmful religious or spiritual environments, including high-demand or high-control groups and cultic settings. His aim is to support clients in finding what nurtures their wellbeing—spiritual or otherwise—in ways that honour their identity and lived experience.
David also has the privilege of serving in leadership and governance of his local faith community, in Ngāmotu, New Plymouth, and at a national level, on the executive of the New Zealand Association of Counsellors.
We can provide a certificate of accomplishment for all our training courses. The requirement for receiving a certificate to confirm professional development is as follows:
- You must view a minimum of 80% of a live-presented webinar workshop or
- You must view a minimum of 80% of a recorded webinar workshop
- You must complete a short quiz on the webinar content
We are accredited to provide points/credits to the following organisations, educational institutes, and associations:
- FDANZ
- NZEA
- NZIFH
- AROH