Banner
Mary J. Sherlach

December 14, 2024 is Sandy Hook remembrance day. Twelve years since that tragic day. With that in our minds we wanted to share a little bit of why our Counseling Center was rededicated to the legacy of Mary J. Sherlach, the Trumbull resident and School Psychologist that was lost that day. 

 

 Resdfgsdgfs

Remembering Mary J. Sherlach:

 

Our guest blogger is Bill Sherlach, Co-founder and Board Member of Sandy Hook Promise. His beloved wife Mary was murdered at Sandy Hook Elementary School while rushing to protect her students. Here he shares how Mary’s legacy inspires our mission today.


My wife, Mary Sherlach, was the school psychologist at Sandy Hook Elementary School the morning of December 14, 2012. She was one of the first people killed. It has never surprised me that she died while confronting the shooter in the front hallway.

She was safeguarding all there, as she had every day of her 18 years at Sandy Hook Elementary School. Her kids – her students – were all incredibly important to her. Same as her work family, her colleagues – I know she would do anything to keep them safe.

Mary’s Commitment to Family and Students

When Mary would come home at night she would very much be wearing her job on her sleeve.  Mary’s sense of being, totally revolved around kids. Our daughters at the front of the line and her Sandy Hook kids right behind, in lockstep.

While testing and assessment were the public face of her job, Mary’s real strength was her all-encompassing concern and compassion when it involved her Sandy Hook kids and their families. Mary always wanted to get the proper process in place for all concerned. She always made sure to convey to the parents of her kids just where their best next steps should take them.

Her Life’s Work on Social Emotional Learning and Development

On numerous occasions I have had a parent approach me to let me know just how deftly Mary had moved within the system to make sure the right things happened for their child, how it helped their family, and just how important it was to their child’s development and ultimate success. That was Mary’s version of being “all in”. I couldn’t be any prouder of the way Mary handled herself in all these interactions.

Mary would be a champion of Sandy Hook Promise’s programs to protect students and educators. Our programs also align with Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning (CASEL) competencies for Social-Emotional Learning. These include relationship skills, social awareness, responsible decision-making and self-awareness. Mary’s work as a school psychologist has helped enhance mental health and wellness for students everywhere through these important programs.

Legacy of Inspiring Mental Health Legislation

I’m passionate about policy reform in this area as well. I love everything we do at Sandy Hook Promise. I’m especially proud of what we have achieved legislatively. Passing four federal laws since 2016 is a pretty amazing feat for any organization. And those laws, the Mental Health Reform Act, the STOP School Violence Act, STANDUP Act and the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act have made great inroads to helping people, especially children, and funding violence prevention, including self-harm and suicide.

Reflections on the Ten-Year Remembrance

Every day that leads up to Dec. 14 is another haunting reminder that she was murdered while trying to save the kids at Sandy Hook Elementary that terrible day. Eleven years later, I still miss her every day – especially during the holidays which were once the most joyful time of the year.

I can’t help but think about how excited she would be to wrap presents for her two granddaughters and put them under the tree. Mary was so looking forward to doting on her future grandchildren – but they never had a chance to meet her. We, as a family, continue to celebrate the best we can, for our granddaughters, because Mary would expect nothing less.

While nothing I do can ever bring Mary back, I can still do everything in my power to protect more children from gun violence in her honor.

Please join me in making the Promise, to honor Mary’s legacy, to do everything you can to protect innocent children from gun violence.  SandyHookPromise.org

https://www.sandyhookpromise.org/blog/stories/remembering-mary-sherlach/  Written by: Bill Sherlach. Published 2023. Accessed 11/21/2024


December events

December 4, 2024

Coffee and Learn with Dr. Morris. 9:00 AM. 23 Priscilla Place.

Tutoring: Elementary School students 5:30 PM - 6:30PM. 121 Old Mine Road. (Pre-registration required).

Tutoring: Middle School students 6:30 PM - 7:30PM. 121 Old Mine Road. (Pre-registration required).

December 5, 2024

Tutoring: High School students 5:30 PM - 6:30PM. 121 Old Mine Road. (Pre-registration required)

December 10, 2024

Grief and Loss Support Group, 9:00 AM. 23 Priscilla Place. 

December 11, 2024

Tutoring: Elementary School students 5:30 PM - 6:30PM. 121 Old Mine Road. (Pre-registration required).

Tutoring: Middle School students 6:30 PM - 7:30PM. 121 Old Mine Road. (Pre-registration required).

Suicide Loss Support Group 7:00 PM Virtual. 

December 12, 2024

Tutoring: High School students 5:30 PM - 6:30PM. 121 Old Mine Road. (Pre-registration required)

December 18, 2024

Coffee and Learn with Dr. Morris. 9:00 AM. 23 Priscilla Place.

Tutoring: Elementary School students 5:30 PM - 6:30PM. 121 Old Mine Road. (Pre-registration required).

Tutoring: Middle School students 6:30 PM - 7:30PM. 121 Old Mine Road. (Pre-registration required).

December 19, 2024 

Tutoring: High School students 5:30 PM - 6:30PM. 121 Old Mine Road. (Pre-registration required)

December 23, 2024

Teen Pride Connection Middle School students 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM. 121 Old Mine Road.

Teen Pride Connection High School students 5:00 PM - 6:30 PM. 121 Old Mine Road. 

December 24, 2024

Grief and Loss Support Group, 9:00 AM. 23 Priscilla Place. 

Mary J. Sherlach Center closing at 12:00pm Christmas Eve.

December 25, 2024

Christmas Day – Mary J. Sherlach Center Closed.

December 26, 2024

Floating Holiday - Mary J. Sherlach Center Closed.

December 31, 2024  

Day after Thanksgiving - Mary J. Sherlach Center closed. 

Mary J. Sherlach Center closing at 12:00pm New Years Eve

January 1, 2025  

 New Years Day – Mary J. Sherlach Center closed. 

Coping Strategies
Seasons

Ask the expert: five ways to approach political conversations with family over the holidays

In an environment as polarized as today’s, spending the holidays around family you have political differences with can elicit emotions ranging from anxiety to dread — and exacerbate already complex family dynamics.

Elizabeth Dorrance Hall, associate professor of communication in the Michigan State University College of Communication Arts and Sciences and director of MSU’s Family and Communication Relationships Lab, studies communication processes in close relationships, with a particular focus on family.

Here, Dorrance Hall shares five ways to approach conversations with emotional health in mind.

1. Consider your goal

Political conversations with family members can be tricky at best and disastrous at worst. As we consider discussing politics with family, it may be helpful to think about your goals. Is your goal to change minds? Prove you are right? Or preserve a harmonious family environment?

If your goal is the latter, consider topic avoidance and boundary setting as acceptable options. If you do want to engage in a political discussion with family members who likely disagree with you, here are a few tips:

  •       Listen to understand, not to respond or judge others. Ask questions and stay curious.
  •       Consider multiple features of your family relationships when deciding what to say: your past experiences and conversations, the state of the relationship now, and how your conversation today may affect the future of the relationship.
  •       Accept the reality that you may never agree. Even though families may start off with a shared worldview, people and their beliefs change over time as they grow and experience new things. Accept that you may need to live with disagreement.

2. Be honest about the stress you’re under

Elizabeth Dorrance Hall, associate professor of communication and director of MSU's Family Communication and Relationships Lab.
Elizabeth Dorrance Hall, associate professor of communication and director of MSU's Family Communication and Relationships Lab.

Carols, lights and cheery holiday movies all proclaim feelings of joy, but the holidays can be an emotionally fraught time for a lot of people — especially coming off an election season.

During the holidays, people have a lot on their minds. This mental tax can make it hard to give your full self to any conversation or experience.

When the dinner table conversation shifts from pleasantly reminiscing about shared memories to an intense conversation about the 2024 election, you might have or make an impulsive response because of your built-up stress.

If someone pushes your buttons and you’re already maxed out on your cognitive load, you’re less able to use what we call ‘cool system emotions,’ where we think rationally and slowly and carefully about our responses. Instead, you might be quicker to respond, more reactive.

Talking with others who can relate may help relieve some pressure, freeing up space to have deeper conversations and be present with family members.

Self-disclosure is often met with self-disclosure. When building and maintaining relationships, vulnerability and trust are key: People feel safe to share how they’re really doing if you also are willing to honestly share that with them.

3. Lean into what you have in common

Discuss shared experiences as a means to overcome differences.

Something really cool about family relationships is that those relationships have existed for a long time, which can help us reconnect. Reminiscing on old times — telling stories about loved ones that make everyone smile and laugh — is one way to do this. Remembering the people you all care about and the memories you collectively share can be a great way to connect.

4. Listen and validate

Chances are, your entire family isn’t going to agree on current events or politics — and chances are, someone is going to bring one of these topics up at a holiday gathering.

In such instances, your instinct may be to passionately defend your views, which can result in what ends up being a one-sided conversation. A lot of times in those conversations, you’re listening only to make your next point instead of listening to really understand the other person.

Going back to the basics about how to be a good listener can be helpful for those kinds of conversations.

If you want to maintain healthy family relationships, it’s important to not automatically dismiss a viewpoint you disagree with.

When we are listening, an important thing to do is validate the other person’s feelings, beliefs and emotions. Even if you don’t agree, you can validate others’ views by recognizing the reasons for their beliefs, asking genuine follow-up questions, giving your undivided attention and being curious about their experiences.

The foundation for having healthy tough conversations requires trust, respect and regular communication — not just a one-off interaction each year. Talking to a relative we think negatively about because of their different beliefs or opinions once or twice a year makes it hard to build the trust and respect needed for difficult conversations.  

5. Have an ally

Spending time with family over the holidays is complex. You can be happy to see them and grateful for the opportunity to be together, but still feel alone, especially if you don’t share the same values and beliefs as many of your family members.

To cope with this, identify an ally in the family: someone with whom you share similar beliefs and values and who has been through experiences similar to yours. This person can be a sister, cousin, brother-in-law, parent — anyone you feel like you can vent to or make knowing eye contact with at the dinner table.

When you feel like you’re the only one that has a certain opinion or belief or experience, you can feel very isolated even though you’re surrounded by people who supposedly support you and love you. Having one other person in your family who you can lean on — and that you talk to regularly outside of the holidays — can make holiday get-togethers less stressful and overwhelming emotionally.

Ask the expert: five ways to approach political conversations with family over the holidays | MSUToday | Michigan State University  Written by: Alex Tekip. Published 11/14/2024. Accessed 11/21/2024 

tutoring
Seasons

Add the Mary J. Sherlach Center to your list for holiday giving. Give today and help fund after school tutoring and summer camp scholarships. Happy Holidays.

Seasons
Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
Share via Email

Copyright 2024 Town of Trumbull. All Rights Reserved.
5866 Main Street, Trumbull, CT 06611

Powered by
CivicSend - A product of CivicPlus