THE PELICAN ROOM

Good Grief


Finding Peace After Loss

Gold Necklaces on Brown Satin Cloth
Painting Frame Cutout

One of the hardest and unavoidable things ​we face in life is loss.


Whether we have lost a loved one, or lost a part of how we ​identify ourselves through a big change, understanding and ​actively engaging with the grief process can help us not ​only better cope through it, but use the loss as an ​opportunity to transform our sorrow and pain into

wisdom and growth.



Text Divider Antique
Text Divider Antique

Who is this for?


  • Anyone who has experienced the ​death of a loved one (recent or past),
  • Anyone who is going through a life ​transition with a role identity loss *


*this includes the loss of a sense of

safety and security felt in the community





Text Divider Antique

90 minutes of enriching educational and experiential ​support and guidance through the complex journey of grief.



Come for one, or join all three in this series designed to help you:


  • Place yourself in the process through learning about various grief models.


  • Learn what is normal in grief: emotionally, mentally, and physically.


  • Understand the importance of ritual and how to bring it into your life.


  • Tend to your grief with a community (we’ve planned everything, you just need to ​block the time).


  • Transform your sorrow into a meaning that brings wisdom and growth.


Event Details




SESSION 1


WEDNESDAY


SEPTEMBER 25TH, 2024


10:30AM-12:00PM

$95


SESSION 2


WEDNESDAY


OCTOBR 23RD, 20024


10:30AM-12:00PM

$95


SESSION 3


WEDNESDAY


NOVEMBER 20TH, 20024


10:30AM-12:00PM

$95


BUNDLE

ALL 3 SESSIONS


$245

OUR FACILITATOR FOR THE EVENT:


Jillian Eichel-Dobray, LCPC, PCC

Individual, Couples & Premarital Coaching

Groups, Workshops & Corporate Trainings

773.909.6039

www.jillianeichel.com


Jillian Eichel-Dobray, PCC, LCPC has been a ​life/career/relationship/couples coach for over 18 years in ​Chicago, and a psychotherapist for 5 years at the Josselyn Center ​in Northfield. She holds a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology from ​Northwestern University, a Master’s degree in Counseling from ​Loyola University Chicago, and a Master’s degree in ​Transformational Leadership and Coaching. An advocate of ​supporting her clients to embrace and feel their feelings, her ​interest specifically in the grief process came after her own ​experience of - in the space of 5 months – her father’s death, ​getting married for the first time at age 50, and closing down a ​company where she had been affiliated for 25 years.

She found extreme comfort in having spaces to address her grief ​and is delighted to partner with Heima House to offer a space ​where people can find solace, comfort, knowledge and support ​during these times.