Felipe Mendez
Felipe Mendez
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FELIPE MENDEZ

9223 N. 13th Street • Phoenix, Arizona 85020


(602) 527-0082
     Felipe85032@icloud.com

Objective

 

Experience

Behavioral Health Technician

Rio Salado Behavioral Health Systems, INC.

January 2023-Present, Phoenix, Arizona.

  • Under supervision, performing work with children of average difficulty by providing information and referral, home-based counseling, and, under established protocol, group services and limited community interventions.
  • Performs related work as required.
  • Interview clients and significant others, conduct intake assessments to obtain social data, and provide information and referral to clients in need of community services.
  • Provides crisis intervention.
  • Provides outreach and advocacy for clients in the community and health care system.
  • Provide care management and counseling to assigned clients.
  • May provide staff training, collect and compile statistical data for the facility.

 

Skills

  • Knowledge of human behavior, family and group dynamics, social and cultural factors, interventions for individual, family and social change.
  • Skills in interviewing and counseling.
  • Ability to stablish effective working relationship with clients, staff, and community organizations.
  • Assist in the treatment of patients who are struggling with behavioral issues.

 

  • Implement treatment plans, monitor clients’ behavior, and provide a safe environment.

 

Owner of DSM Cleaning Services, LLC

Owner, Abril 2008-Present, Phoenix, Arizona

  • Clean and organize areas of commercial and residential offices.
  • Perform preventive maintenance, check, clean and repair equipment periodically.
  • Machines are used to clean and maintain the floor and carpet.
  • Deliver residential cleaning services to a diverse customer base, ensuring adherence.
  • Company policies and service standards and execute projects on time.
  • Manage the transportation, tracking, and maintenance of cleaning equipment and
  • inventory supplies, including the safe handling of hazardous cleaning solutions.
  • Provide superior customer service, interface with clients, field inquiries, and resolve.
  • Challenges arise with cleaning projects and services, affecting our ability to maintain a 90% satisfaction rating.

 

Skills

  • Disposal of biohazardous medical waste

Safe use of detergents and other chemicals
, Sanitizing surfaces according to employer policies

  • Attention to detail
, Daily cleaning
Deep cleaning
, Vacuuming with industrial equipment
  • 
Carpet cleaning
, Supply management

 

 

 

Project Manager and Construction Technician.

T.W. Lewis Company, Phoenix, Arizona, October 1993 - April 2008

Construction project manager with 4+ years of experience in managing large-scale construction projects.

Proven track record directing project-wide operations, administering million-dollar budgets, negotiating contracts, controlling expenses, and boosting efficiency and productivity.

  • Direct 40 construction projects per year, managing all aspects including site survey,
  • Construction budgeting, bidding, negotiations and awards, and project operations.
  • Complete $600k to 1.1M construction projects, ensuring quality and adherence to
  • building standards.
  • Optimize the company's resources and implement new policies and systems that cut the department's operational expenses by 47%.

 

Education

Bachelor of Science, Psychology

Grand Canyon University, Phoenix, Arizona

Graduation Date: January 2022.

 

Now:

Working on my Master of Science in Clinical Mental Health Counseling with an Emphasis on Trauma.

Graduation is scheduled for August 2026.

Awards and Acknowledgements

  • Graduated from my Bachelor of Science, Psychology with a Magna Cum Laude, GPA 3.7

 

 

self-care

 

Grand Canyon University 

CNL-624 Topic 5 Self-Care Assessment and Reflection

Part 1: Self-Care Assessment

Directions: As a counselor, self-care is extremely important as it helps prevent burnout, compassion fatigue, and job dissatisfaction. The assessment tool below provides an overview of effective strategies that can be used to maintain self-care. Complete the assessment tool below indicating any areas that have changed in frequency. Refer to the self-care assessment you completed during Week 2.

Using the scale below, rate the following areas in terms of frequency:

            5 = Frequently

            4 = Occasionally

            3 = Rarely

            2 = Never

            1 = It never occurred to me

Physical Self-Care

4

Eat regular healthy meals (e.g., breakfast, lunch, and dinner)

3

Exercise

4

Get regular medical care for prevention

4

Get medical care when needed

4

Take time off when needed

5

Participate in a hobby you enjoy

4

Get enough sleep

4

Take vacations, day trips, or mini-vacations

3

Make time away from technology

4

Other: Swimming.

 

Psychological Self-Care

5

Make time for self-reflection

4

Have your own personal psychotherapy

3

Write in a journal

5

Do something at which you are not an expert or in charge

4

Decrease stress in your life

3

Notice your inner experience—listen to your thoughts, judgments, beliefs, attitudes, and feelings

4

Engage your intelligence in a new area (e.g., go to an art museum, history exhibit, sports event, auction, or theater performance)

5

Practice receiving from others

3

Say “no” to extra responsibilities sometimes

4

Other: Better relationship with my God.

 

Emotional Self-Care

4

Spend time with others whose company you enjoy

5

Stay in contact with important people in your life

4

Give yourself affirmations, praise yourself

4

Identify comforting activities, objects, people, relationships, places, and seek them out

4

Allow yourself to cry

5

Find things that make you laugh

4

Express your outrage in social action, letters and donations, marches, and protests 

4

Other: Talk to fiends

 

Spiritual Self-Care

5

Make time for spiritual reflection

4

Spend time with nature, see what God created

5

Find a spiritual connection or community

5

Be open to inspiration

4

Cherish your optimism and hope

4

Be aware of nonmaterial aspects of life

5

Be open to not knowing

5

Identify what is meaningful to you and notice its place in your life

5

Meditate

5

Pray

4

Sing

4

Have experiences of awe

4

Contribute to causes in which you believe

5

Read inspirational literature (talks, music, etc.)

4

Other: Talk other about the love of God.

 

Workplace or Professional Self-Care

4

Take a break during the workday (e.g., lunch)

3

Take time to chat with co-workers

4

Make quiet time to complete tasks

4

Identify projects or tasks that are exciting and rewarding

4

Set limits with your clients and colleagues

4

Balance your caseload so that no one day or part of a day is “too much”

4

Arrange your workspace so it is comfortable and comforting

5

Get regular supervision or consultation

5

Have a peer support group

4

Other: Help my co-workers.

 

Balance

4

Strive for balance within your work-life and workday

4

Strive for balance among work, family, relationships, play, and rest

 

Part 2: Self-Care Reflection

Directions: Provide short answers, 100-150 words, for each of the following questions/statements. Do not exceed 200 words for your response.

  1. In what specific areas have you noticed strengths in your self-care ? Explain. One of the areas in my self-care is social connections, cultiving and maintaining supportive relationship, asking for help when I need it, and knowing how to set baundaries are part of preserving self-care. I can also, maintain and process health express emotions, manage stress and maintaining a positive outlook with self-compassion and creativity. 

 

  1. What growth areas are you noticing? What healthy strategies will support your development? I need to work on the physical aspects of my life to maintain self-care, be consistent, engage in regular exorcise, pay more attention to what I put in my mouth and sleep better. Once the professional aspects is accomplish, it is considered some crucial steps like to say NO, stting boundaries on dual relationships, especially with people in the church and close ones who are looking for help to refer them to other counselors or the professionals that they need.

 

 

 

 

Adapted from Transforming the Pain: A Workbook on Vicarious Traumatization. Saakvitne, Pearlman & Staff of TSI/CAAP (Norton, 1996)         

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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