Speaker

Sharon Coyle-Saeed

Sharon Coyle-Saeed LSW, MSW, ACHP-SW, AGRS

Sharon Coyle-Saeed is a licensed therapist in New Jersey with a graduate degree from the Rutgers School of Social Work with a focus on Health & Aging. She also is an Advanced Certified Hospice and Palliative Social Worker (NASW) and death doula. She currently works for Integrated Care Concepts as a therapist with private clients and VNA (Visiting Nurses Association) as a Bereavement Counselor.

Sharon is the Co-Author of Loss, Grief and Bereavement, a CEU-approved training manual for healthcare professionals. She especially focused on the chapters pertaining to suicide, homicide, children in grief, and cultural and religious competencies.

She has many certifications: Compassionate Bereavement Care (MISS Foundation), Grief Recovery (advanced level), Prolonged Grief Therapy (Columbia University School of Social Work), and Thanatology (Open Center). Her approach is holistic, strengths-based, culturally-competent, and trauma-sensitive.

Other certifications: Functional Health Coach, Grief Movement, Clinical Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT), CBT (Beck Institute), Meditation, and Reiki Master. Sharon is working towards her RYT-200 Trauma Informed Yoga Teacher Certification under the tutelage of Judy Thompson.

WEGO Health Award winner (multiple times).

CEO of Nirvanerapy LLC and founder of ibdjourneys, an online global support group for those with Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD, an autoimmune disease).

She is a proud member of: National Association of Social Workers(NASW), American Psychological Association(APA), and Association for Death Education(ADEC).

Sharon is also an accomplished singer and has performed in musical theater productions in New Jersey and New York.

Sharon's Presentations

Workshop

Grief Across the Lifespan

There are more than forty-two types of losses a person may experience over a lifetime, with death being just one of them. This presentation explores how families grieve—or sometimes avoid grieving—and examines the six common myths of grief, such as “Just Keep Busy,” “Grieve Alone,” and “Don’t Feel Bad.” We’ll also discuss how unresolved grief often manifests through “STERBs” (Short Term Energy Relieving Behaviors) and offer actionable steps to begin “completing” unresolved grief (a process distinct from seeking closure). These steps support healing, foster a renewed sense of aliveness, and help create a future where we are no longer held back by fear of loving or living fully.

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