Helpline Volunteers provide confidential and identity-affirming emotional support and resource referrals, taking 3.5-hour shifts weekly between Fridays-Mondays, 1.00PM-7.00PM. Applicants for the Fall Training Class must be available on Saturdays 12.30-5.30PM from Sept. 26, 2020 to Dec. 19, 2020 for the 48-hour peer counselor training. Applicants will go through two interview rounds and must be at least 18 years old before starting to take shifts.
Applications for the Fall Training Class close on August 28 and recur twice every year.
Call 314-380-7774. You will hear a voice message:
The volunteer will ask if you are in a safe place to talk.
The volunteer will then ask what you would like to talk about today. Go ahead and share as much or as little as you’d like with them. We're here to listen.
At the end of your call, we may ask you to fill out a brief, anonymous online survey about your call experience. We value your feedback and will use it to better serve you and the rest of our community.
If you can, do something nice to take care of yourself and decompress after the call! We welcome you to call back again anytime between Friday - Monday, 1PM - 7PM.
Yes! Anyone of any romantic / sexual orientation, gender identity, or gender expression can call.
There will always be two helpline volunteers working at the same time. If you call and know the volunteer who answers, you can always ask to talk to the other volunteer on shift. We prioritize your comfort level and would be happy to make the switch.
By peer support, we mean the identity-affirming, relational support that only peers who share similar experiences or identities are able to provide. The source of support is a peer, a person who is similar in fundamental ways to the recipient of the support; their relationship is one of equality. A peer is in a position to offer support by virtue of relevant experience: they have "been there, done that" and can relate to others who are in a similar situation.
We started this project using an initial $5,000 Civic Scholars grant from Washington University's Gephardt Institute for Civic & Community Engagement. We hope to sustain this project through local donations and grants. We spend our funds on training, printing resource manuals, food for volunteers, and liability insurance. Going forward, we aim to publish quarterly or biannual expense reports to be fully transparent with how we spend our money.
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