Thursday, December 26, 2013

Happy Holidays from New Vision Wilderness






The Holidays bring about a beautiful time of year in the Wilderness. Snow blankets the forest and the stars shine clear in the night time sky.
 
New Vision Wilderness wishes you a season willed with warm moments and cherished memories.  

A Visit To The Field with New Vision Wilderness - Drew Hornbeck
A Visit To The Field with New Vision Wilderness - Drew Hornbeck


New Vision Wilderness is delighted to have been working with youth in the wilderness since 2007 and we only hope we can continue to share our joy and love of the outdoors for many more years to come.


Happy Holidays,

Drew Hornbeck, Steve Sawyer and the NVW Team
New Vision Wilderness with Programs in Wisconsin & Oregon:

                                                                                

Wisconsin:                                                                                    Oregon:
Pre-Teens & Adolescents                                                                             Adolescents & Young Adults

New Vision Wilderness (NVW) is an effective and exciting alternative for struggling teens, young adults, and their families, and is a nationally recognized wilderness therapy and intervention program.


Focus Areas Include:
  • ADHD/ADD
  • Depression
  • Relationships/Communication
  • Dual Diagnosis
  • Low Self Esteem or Lack of Motivation
  • Impulse Control
  • Bi-Polar Disorder
  • Family System Dynamics

Specializations in:
  • Unresolved Trauma
  • Attachment and Adoption Concerns
  • Anxiety and Mood Disorders
"Inspiring Change...By Nature"

Monday, November 25, 2013

New Vision WIlderness expands to Bend, Oregon




New Vision Wilderness expands... 

  A view overlooking the mountain ranges of Central Oregon.

New Vision Wilderness - West Coast is happy to announce that we have relocated our offices and primary operating area to the high desert of Central Oregon.  With the changing of the seasons, and in preparations for the coming winter, moving our operations to Bend is an exciting development that will allow our team to have greater accessibility and better communications with our field operations. 
 
Drew Hornbeck, President and Co-Founder has relocated his family to Bend, Oregon as well.  "With the growth and success of our North Wood's program in Central Wisconsin. I'm thrilled to be able to join the dynamic and talented team that we've got here in Oregon. The move has allowed me to dedicate a substantial amount of my energy translating and growing all of the special elements that makes New Vision Wilderness an amazing therapeutic option for our clients." 

The lake where our clients get to spend their time in the wilderness.

New Vision West Coast serves adolescent 14-17 and young adults 18-25.  Our Trauma Informed Care model is a sensitive approach to working with clients experiencing depression, anxiety, relational and adoption issues and dual diagnosis.  By combining the healing power of nature with advanced brain based clinical techniques and bio-feedback, our highly trained therapists are able to help instill lasting positive change with our clients without harmful behavioral modification strategies.

"New Vision is more than just a name" says Rob Koning, Executive Director.  "It's a new approach to wilderness therapy which continues to rewrite what's possible working with clients in the outdoors."

New Vision Wilderness offers two locations with programs for adolescents and young adults in Oregon and pre-teens and adolescents in Wisconsin.
  

Please contact admissions for more information,  info@newvisionwilderness.comor 855.689.8326.


Tuesday, October 15, 2013

HeartMath Webinar with Steve Sawyer

In this webinar, Steve shares how he is using HeartMath Interventions with tough client populations that include treatment resistant teens, severe addiction and traumatic stress. Treatment protocols, what to be aware of as a professional, case studies and implementation in practice are all covered in great depth during this session. Steve's experience comes from over a decade of intervention with tough to reach client populations in therapy settings ranging from residential, community-based, outpatient and wilderness therapy.  http://goo.gl/ul3Iwp

Monday, October 14, 2013

Core Purpose


New Vision Wilderness is at the forefront of wilderness immersion therapy. Specializing in sensitive populations, NVW uses a confidence building, trauma-informed approach. Our students get more time with their therapists in the wilderness than with any other program. New Vision Wilderness are experts in trauma and abuse histories, attachment and adoption issues, anxiety and mood disorders ADHD/ADD, dual diagnosis, family system dynamics, and relationships/communication.

NVW staff are driven by our core purpose: To heal children and unite families.

Sign hung by students in the field, October 2013.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

NVW Staff Challenges Tough Mudder

















The New Vision Wilderness staff is always incorporating staff-wellness events into their weekly and monthly schedules. Bringing each other together outside the workplace helps strengthen their bonds at work. From smaller events, such as cookouts and movie nights, to larger events, such as marathons and Tough Mudder obstacle courses, the New Vision staff enjoys wellness events.

If you’ve never hear of Tough Mudder before, than you’re in for a surprise.

What is Tough Mudder?
Tough Mudder events are hardcore obstacle courses designed to test your all around strength, stamina, mental grit and camaraderie. With the most innovative courses, over one million inspiring participants worldwide to date, and more than $5 million raised for the Wounded Warrior Project, Tough Mudder is the premier adventure challenge series in the world. But Tough Mudder is more than an event; it’s a way of thinking. By running a Tough Mudder challenge, you’ll unlock a true sense of accomplishment, have a great time and discover a camaraderie with your fellow participants that’s experienced all too rarely these days.

Dave Mosse, Field Director, Challenges Tough Mudder
“The race was great. It was a total of 11.8 miles with approximately 20 obstacles. Our average mile pace was about 8:30 minutes per mile. All the obstacles were fun but my favorite with out a doubt was an obstacle called the funky monkey, which came at about the 11-mile mark. This was a new take on the monkey bars we all know and love from our days on playground except instead of straight across it had a 45 degree pitch going up and the same going down on the other side! We rocked it with no problems. Another obstacle that was fun was a leap from a 30ft platform, which was reached by climbing up a nearly vertical and very muddy wall with small wood ledges with enough room to step on with one toe. That one was great. When you hit the water and mud, it was very refreshing. The other obstacle that sticks out as a favorite would be the "Berlin Wall," which is a 15ft wall where you have to use your team mates as a ladder to get to the top and the help the last person over the wall by pulling them up! Great team work. My least favorite was called "electroshock" therapy. For this obstacle we had to crawl under 20ft of barbed wire, which had electrically charged wire hanging down, and damn did they pack a wallop! I saw two people get knocked out for a moment when they got shocked. I was lucky and only was shocked twice it the back, but damn it hurt. Our total time was 2hr 20min and it was a blast! I'm a lot more confident as I move into training for a 24hr obstacle course race next spring or fall.”

More Resources:
Dave Mosse, Field Director Biography: http://goo.gl/8GSKqm
Tough Mudder Website: http://goo.gl/4cNFzo

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Therapist’s Healing Work with Children Hits Close to Home

Urging Others to Donate Blood

by Colleen McGee, MA, Lead Field Therapist (Wisconsin)


As a wilderness therapist, it’s probably no secret to most that my career in wilderness is a life guided by activism and advocacy for children and the environment. I am witness to healing and transformation every day and I take great pride in my work as a helping professional. Today’s teens are a misunderstood population to say the least, and in a world further complicated by technology and increasing demands it seems the need to get back to basics in nature couldn’t be more urgent. This philosophical foundation, among others, has guided my journey in this field and the rewards it has brought me has enriched my soul and strengthened my commitment to see the young people I work with heal the wounds of their body, mind and spirit. Recently, my sense of the necessity of helping and healing professionals has hit close to home for me in a very different and unexpected way; when I learned that my 13 year-old nephew and godson Christopher had cancer.

Initially, I was consumed by grief and paralyzing fear, my sense of powerlessness rendering little other than the words “Why?” and “How?” constantly ringing through my head. As the dust eventually settled on this seemingly earth-shattering news, I found myself humbled and hopeful, and at the mercy of the dedicated medical staff and their commitment to healing and helping children. Turns out, Stage 2 Hodgkin’s Lymphoma is a treatable cancer with a high recovery rate and I’m not so powerless in this process after all. I am reminded in some ways here of what families go through when they enroll their child at New Vision Wilderness. And just like my relationship with the families who have entrusted their child to me and the capable staff at NVW, I could hear my own advice popping up in my head when I reminded myself to trust the process. I wished the medical staff could make the same guarantee to me that my families ask me to make to them when they urge me to promise this intervention will work and their child is going to get better. Just like the families I work with there is more I can do than just sit and wait for the next bit of news.

I have learned that cancer patients, like any other human being going through a period of distress, thrive on the support, guidance and well wishes of others. I have been moved and inspired by the outpouring Christopher and his family have received through neighbors, friends and even a few professional athletes! In addition to support and encouragement, part of Christopher’s treatment includes several blood transfusions; an especially touching piece considering this part of his healing is contingent on the kindness of absolute strangers who are willing to endure the discomfort and time associated with this process. In the spirit of paying it forward, I have happily signed up and donated. Now I’m asking you to do the same. Did you know that according to the American Red Cross, one blood donation can save the lives of up to three people? And in the U.S. someone needs a blood transfusion every two second? This adds up to almost 44,000 needs per day! And although only 38% of the population are actually eligible to give blood, most of the people who don’t cite excuses such as “I never thought about it” or “Needles are scary” to avoid a measure that saves millions of lives. Just knowing these transfusions are helping my godson heal are enough to take my advocacy skills in a different direction. One of the tenets of NVW’s model includes placing a high value on giving back and being part of a community and from one community member to another. I ask you to do the same. Donating blood and volunteering are just a couple of the ways we can take action to fight this disease and play a larger role in the betterment of self, others and the world.

In closing, I want to take a moment to tip my bug-sprayed, campfire smoke-infused hat to those medical professionals who have dedicated their careers to heal children fighting this horrible disease. From one helping professional to another, I am inspired by your commitment and your kindness. Most importantly, I am inspired by your love. In the spirit of humility and hope I thank you for the lives you save.



Monday, August 12, 2013

Celebrating Our First Adolescent Graduates

New Vision Wilderness – West Coast (Oregon)
Celebrating Our First Adolescent Graduates

“Inspiring Change… by Nature.”

In early 2013, New Vision Wilderness’ highly successful wilderness challenge program in Medford, Wisconsin, deemed “North Woods,” was expanded to a new region. The Pacific Northwest was long-researched as a supreme location to conduct our wilderness therapy and mental health intervention programming. As Summer 2013 approached, West Coast was granted a license allowing the intake of preteens and adolescents. As the program evolves into a larger force, it permits us to continually increase the daily census.

The first three clients have completed and graduated from New Vision Wilderness (West Coast)! These three graduates emerged from the wilderness successfully, and ready to move forward into a productive life ahead of them. We memorialize this event as the culmination of the hard work our program has put forth in the mental health of our countries’ youth, and for the blood, sweat, and tears that our staff has given in the name of progress.

Thank you for reading and keep following New Vision Wilderness social media for more news, updates, and events.

A Parent Speaks Up

I am sure many parents feel the same apprehension when sending their child to a wilderness program. Did I do the right thing? Will my child resent me?  When I picked my son up from his graduation he said to me ‘Mom, thank you for making the decision I needed, not the one that I wanted.’ Having my son back, seeing him smile, the clarity in his eyes, his sense of humor coming back to life is all the assurances I needed. Having the time to focus on the things I needed to work on without the worry of wondering if my son was ok and knowing he was in good hands allowed me the time I needed to work parallel on being ready to start a new relationship with him when he came home and it also allowed me the opportunity for the first time to see that I wasn't alone and that many other parents had gone through what I had, made the mistakes I had made, felt confused and lost as to what to do. That in itself allowed me to put my own defenses down and look at not only myself but my family as a whole and see how we can all work together towards a peaceful and happy home again. I also learned to hear my son in the way that he needs to be heard by me. I gained immense insight into who my son is and what he needs in order to live a happy sober life from working with his therapist who gave me the tools that I needed to be there for him without rescuing him and allowing him to take responsibility for his own life.” – (mother)

A Word From Our Clinical Team

“They were the pioneers in our program and took that to heart. Within the beginning growth of the West Coast program they were able to transform, grow and be an integral part in the culture of the group. Through the development of the group, they too developed as young men with direction, excitement and meaning for their future. Their journey at NVWC showed strength and an inspiring ability to look for insight. They showed what it meant to challenge themselves and what you receive from that challenge physically and emotionally. They were able to gain insight and be able to exhibit the insight via with artwork, peer feedback and modeling how to take the opportunities to move forward and find that new path.” – E. Deardorff, APSW MSW, Assistant Clinical Director

“It is such a great feeling to see my first NVW-West Coast graduate feeling proud and ready for the next step of his life. What a thrill to be able to bring the magic of NVW to the Pacific Northwest, my home. It has been an exiting, challenging and a very fulfilling endeavor to be a part of the clinical team responsible for getting the West Coast program up, running, and thriving. The amount of energy, commitment and pride that the West Coast Program and staff bring to the New Vision philosophy has been inspiring and makes me proud to be a part of the most clinically intense and effective wilderness therapy out there!” – R. Becker, MSW, Lead Field Therapist

“Inspiring Change… by Nature.”

Friday, June 28, 2013

NVW Success Stories - A Parent's Note to Steve


June 27, 2013

Dear Steve,

Susan and I wanted to write you to update you on what’s happening with our son, and to thank you again for all you did for him on the positive path he seems to be on.

H. graduated Cherokee Creek Boys School two weeks ago, a full year since he first arrived at New Vision Wilderness and only nine months since he went to South Carolina. In that time, he has grown so much both physically and emotionally that it seems a miracle. We are so excited that he has come home and that we have the opportunity to be a strong and loving family again.

What New Vision and you, specifically, did for H. was amazing. Not only did you arrest his bad behaviors but you opened his mind and heart to a whole new future. Cherokee Creek made a point of telling us that none of their students had ever come out of the wilderness in such a strong and stable condition as our son did. He was open to his new therapist and made a fairly easy transition to the new environment. Most importantly, he had become self-aware and less impulse-driven.

The key to all this was the incredible work you did to break through all the emotional barriers he had built around himself. You were able to help him find awareness of what he was feeling and the vocabulary to describe it clearly to others. He was able to talk to you as he had never talked to anyone else; parents, friend or therapist. He is now not only someone who can talk, but he is someone who wants to communicate.

At Cherokee Creek, he has become a mentor and leader. Several times this year he has been asked to mentor new students. He has also spent time rooming with student’s having real difficulties, helping to get them on track again.

H. also worked very hard to put himself in a position where coming home was first a possibility, and then a reality. While he still has issues to work on; He has come a long way. He has found a passion working with animals. He organized a volunteer program at a local animal shelter, which he and several students go to on Saturdays. He also asked for and was able to arrange an internship at a Veterinary Hospital around the corner from us for the two weeks he is home, before going to summer camp.

Thank you again for doing so much to help set H. on the path he is on. Our best wishes go to you and everyone at New Vision and good luck on your new endeavors.

Forever in you debt,

Adam S. and Susan S.

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Tour Writeup by The Price Group! [article]

Trip to New Vision Wilderness
by The Price Group - Educational Planning Services
May Peach and Louise Slater

As we arrived at New Vision Wilderness, each of us was outfitted with the outdoor gear we needed to go into the woods. That was a real experience for us Southern girls! Getting the gear on correctly  nearly made us break out into a sweat. Once we had on all of the many layers, we looked and felt like astronauts! May learned quickly that there was an art to walking in the snow. Drew Hornbeck, the executive director, told May to walk as if she was determined to get somewhere fast. She resembled an elephant as she stomped through the snow, but she didn’t fall down!

photo 6

It was beneficial hearing from several of the young people about the different aspects of the program. New Visions does not use a level system but rather a relationship model. The adolescents are asked to find something they are passionate about, and are expected to develop a Mastery Project around this new passion. One girl taught herself sign language because she had stopped talking due to her trauma. Another girl taught herself how to play the trumpet because she only played string instruments.  We visited one camp site and learned how maple syrup is made. Louise and I had our first ride on a snow mobile – it was thrilling!

photo 5
photo 3
photo 4

Louise sat on a log that day with another educational consultant and a young man who had been adopted from Guatemala. He talked about his drug use, his anger, and his fear of abandonment by his adoptive family. At first, he was very fearful about his new surroundings. Slowly he began to learn to explore his emotions and feelings. New Vision Wilderness is unique in many of its approaches to therapy. Most young people who come to New Visions have experienced significant loss, trauma, or have some attachment issues. This young man told us about a process he was involved in called “Brainspotting”. He had been taught how to relax and breathe deeply. He then was told to follow a moving object with his eyes until the therapist told him to pause. He was able to identify and release some early fearful memories; however, what was most significant was that he told us he had woken one day with a very strange feeling. When he was able to process the feeling with his therapist, he was surprised that he could label the feeling as joy! Since then, when he focuses his eyes on that certain spot and breathes deeply on his own, his experiences of joy become stronger and longer. A therapist, as well as one of the owners, Steve Sawyer, explained to him that new neuro pathways were being strengthened during these times.

The original plan was for all of the educational consultants to return to the wilderness to the next day to see a girl’s group. However, once we had learned about Brainspotting from the young people, we had lots of questions about EMDR, Brainspotting, and Core Resourcing. Steve Sawyer explained the concepts and showed us segments of two YouTube videos. One of these was from Dr. David Grand (YouTube Parts 1 2 3).

At dinner, the staff at New Visions asked us if we would like to go back to the feel or stay at the lodge and learn more about Brainspotting. It was unanimous – all of the consultants preferred to learn more about Brain Spotting. To be honest, most of us had real concerns that this process seemed a little “out there” and “new age” so we wanted to understand more about how it worked. After further explanation, the clinical director, Liz Deardorff, got ready to demonstrated brain spotting, and Louise volunteered – intrigued by the report from the young man the day before.

photo 7

Here are Louise’s memories from Brainspotting:

I was asked to sit quietly, close my eyes, and begin to relax while focusing on my breathing. Since I had been practicing a few beginning sessions of breathing through a yoga program on my Ipad, this part seemed easy. Then Liz asked me to tell her a place on my body that felt calm and neutral. She then asked me to find another neutral point ( a resource point). She asked me to draw a line of energy between these two points – could I feel the energy? Liz assured me that my body knew how to do this. Could I tell her a color I was seeing? We continued along this line until I had several resource points and lines of energy. We made a grid of sorts from point to point in my body, which is called your sacred place ,or the point where all of the other points intersect. Strangely, I felt tension between my left shoulder blades. When I was asked to slow down and become more aware of my surrounds, it felt as if I was coming out of a very relaxed, safe deep place. I could feel energy vibrating though me and my hands were tingling almost as I had an electrical current running through my body. It was so much energy, in fact, that in order to relax (and I still had tension in my left should blade), I dropped into my new yoga pose.

After a short while, Steve Sawyer led me to his office to try a short relaxation procedure that involved focusing on that pain point, breathing, and following my eyes through a few movements. While the entire experience was a little bizarre for me, it is very clear to me that the staff is moving energy and unblocking energy, similar to a massage or intense exercise. Could I see sending one of our clients with trauma or attachment issues to New Visions for wilderness therapy? Absolutely! It is unlike any other wilderness therapy in the use of brain spotting and trauma work.

We left New Vision Wilderness with a deep respect for the work they are doing in the field. On our long van ride to Chicago, we stopped at the headquarters for New Vision and met some of the office staff. It was great to meet them since these are usually the people we talk to on the telephone when we call with a referral.

photo 8
A big thanks to everyone at New Vision Wilderness for hosting us! We truly enjoyed our visit!

Outdoor Wisconsin features New Vision Wilderness [video]

Outdoor Wisconsin | Program | #2904

Dan Small joins Drew Hornbeck of New Vision Wilderness and campers on a winter campout in the 1.5 million-acre Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest.

Watch as our mission and philosophies are outlined, several clients are interviewed, and our founders Drew Hornbeck and Steve Sawyer are interviewed. 

Watch the video here. (Length 12:00, first 12min of the video)

New Vision Wilderness, LLC
Programs in Wisconsin and Oregon
Website: NewVisionWilderness.com
Admissions: 855.689.8326
Email: info@newvisionwilderness.com

Institute of HeartMath Talks About New Vision Wilderness! [article]

HeartMath Helps New Vision Wilderness Reach At-Risk Youth in Rural Wisconsin

"Taking a break from ice fishing with three adolescent boys in Northern Wisconsin’s 1.5 million-acre Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest, Steve Sawyer climbed a modest mountain for better phone reception.

It was freezing as Sawyer, a therapist, licensed clinical social worker and certified substance-abuse counselor, talked on the phone for nearly an hour, describing how, years before, he co-launched New Vision Wilderness, a wilderness therapy intervention program for at-risk youth."

Read the full article here.

New Vision Wilderness, LLC
Programs in Wisconsin and Oregon
Website: NewVisionWilderness.com
Admissions: 855.689.8326
Email: info@newvisionwilderness.com