Activity Brief

The Art of Listening and Being Heard: BAC YMHP Session 2 report

Youth, Families, Growth & Development BAC Youth Mental Health Co-Design Project
About this activity

The November session shifted from primarily educational to experiential and embodied learning, emphasizing applied communication, emotional intelligence, and symbolic expression. It affirmed that listening is not a passive act, it is a radical form of care. 1. Opening and Thematic Framing Youth were welcomed with music, informal networking, and opening remarks introducing the session theme: listening as care, listening as power, listening as healing. The core framing question: “What does it feel like to be unheard-and what could change if you were truly listened to?” 2. Active Listening Training Facilitators led a focused micro-curriculum on listening skills using: Body language and presence Curiosity and inquiry Reflective listening Open-ended questioning The “broken-record” technique for boundary-setting This phase introduced communication as both a clinical skill and a community tool-essential in mental wellness, conflict management, and peer support. 3. Wellness Integration The inclusion of a shared meal and stretching break reinforced: The link between nutrition and mental health The social dimensions of healing Informal peer bonding as therapeutic value 4. Creative Co-Design & Expression Youth were invited into arts-based reflection, storytelling, and performance through visual and dramatic exercises, including: Drawing and poster creation Video role-play and dramatization Symbolic visuals Narrative storytelling Short performance scenes The core creative prompt: “Show us what it looks like when you are heard - or not heard.” Youth created artwork, scripts, and filmed content depicting: School stress Emotional isolation Family conflict Bullying Mental health stigma Advocacy through friendship Healing through connection Each presentation was time-limited and supported by emotionally safe sharing structures. 5. Role-Play and Empathy Training Participants practiced structured scenarios including: Helping a distressed peer Navigating mental health stigma Approaching adults for support Advocating for access Managing emotion and validation Facilitators guided youth through reflection: What worked? What felt real? What felt unsafe? What changed inside the room? 6. Closure and Reflection The session concluded with: Group reflection Exit surveys Youth-to-youth validation Reinforcement of leadership identity