Determined not to repeat her parents’ pattern of divorce, she studied communication at Texas Christian University, searching for ways to stave off the “sleeper effect” in her own life. Lauren found learning relationship education skills was the key to break the legacy.
“Wishing to stay together doesn’t do the trick,” Lauren said. “Marriage is not the problem. We should not fear marriage. The toxic patterns of relationships are the problem. If we can get skills to kids and families before crisis, we can save a generation from the fear of something that was not meant to hurt them.”
Lauren bases her recommendations on her 15 years of experience speaking and teaching relationship skills to teens, adults and corporate teams. She’s currently the Vice President of Strategy and Communications at The Center for Relationship Education (CRE), where she shares these lessons with others through relationship skills training.
CRE created the Real Essentials curricula for people from fourth grade to adulthood. Relationship skills training, starting in childhood, sets a foundation for success, she said. Educators teach how to be a good friend, how to work with people, how to take ownership and responsibility for behavior, using activity-based learning founded on research. Whether resources for nurses, high school health teachers, marriage and family pastors, or leadership teams in the workplace, Real Essentials curricula teaches prevention-based skills to break long-term cycles.
“Why is shame associated with bettering yourself with a relationship skill?” Lauren asked. “You sign up for a math class, you are considered brilliant. But people who take a relationship class are deemed wounded or out of touch.
“We want to debunk the stereotypes that relationships are common sense and that we should know how to do them because we are human,” Lauren said.
Lauren further explained that professionals at CRE approach solving problems from a root cause mindset. She noted that so often the societal issues and problems of our day — increased detachment disorders, suicide prevalence, societal risk factors like teen pregnancy, substance abuse — all relate to the stress and trauma rooted in relationships. Instead of creating programs that address the symptoms as the problem, they strive to tie the root cause of every high-risk behavior back to a disconnected or misconnected relationship. Once they identify the underlying cause, they can address it with healthy coping strategies.
Whether through curricula or speaking events, Real Essentials uses unforgettable, metaphorical activity-based learning to make relationship skills practical.
One demographic on which CRE focuses are emergency responders and those serving in the military. CRE is committed to serving those who serve others so selflessly. Personnel in these fields tend to experience heightened stress due to chronic exposure to trauma that drains emotional energy. Sometimes this leaves their families vulnerable to getting the emotional leftovers.
CRE created Real Essentials Respond, a certification experience that earned a federal grant to provide 12 hours of relationship and skills training to 300 Colorado responder couples annually for the next four years. The all-expense paid, five-star experience for couples in the responder and military community is not meant to offer in-depth therapy, rather applicable skills training framed in a workshop series capped off by a fun weekend retreat.
“We’ve seen crazy amounts of life change,” Lauren said. Participants receive date night takeaways and best practice videos afterward to help them remember what they’ve learned.
As Real Essentials has been scaled and duplicated, CRE hopes that others will seek training to take Real Essentials Respond to responder and military communities outside of Colorado.
CRE envisions equipping bases all over the country and also trains peer support leaders. Peer support is a structure that can help de-stigmatize getting mental health help. An organization like a fire academy can send even a few people to learn resources relevant to trauma. The training is affordable and dynamic and can be utilized in Peer Support circles as an efficient and effective way to increase return on investment.