Experiential Psychotherapy Training
Experiential Psychotherapy Training
  • Видео 55
  • Просмотров 209 978
Emotion Focused Therapy – An Interview with Dr. Robert Elliott
More interviews at: tinyurl.com/mrx42mcc
Listen to the Podcast Version at: tinyurl.com/yyafzj4b
Dr. Robert Elliott, Co-Founder of Emotion Focused Therapy received his doctorate in clinical psychology from the University of California, Los Angeles, and taught clinical psychology at the University of Toledo (Ohio) for nearly 30 years; during that time, in collaboration with Leslie Greenberg and Laura Rice, he developed Emotion-Focused Therapy (EFT).
He is Professor Emeritus of Counselling in the School of Psychological Sciences and Health at the University of Strathclyde and where he directed its research clinic and taught counselling research and EFT. He currently lives in Northern Californi...
Просмотров: 207

Видео

Hakomi as an Experiential Therapy - An Interview with Georgia Marvin
Просмотров 3782 месяца назад
More interviews at: tinyurl.com/mrx42mcc Hakomi Education Network (membership site for in-depth Hakomi video trainings): www.hakomieducation.net Georgia Marvin is a Senior Trainer with the international Hakomi Network. She studied with Ron Kurtz, the founder of Hakomi, for 10 years until his death in 2011. Ron Kurtz named Georgia in his will as one of seven “legacy holders” of his work. She sup...
Psychedelic Assisted Psychotherapy & Memory Reconsolidation - Interview with Michal Jasiński, Ph.D
Просмотров 4323 месяца назад
More interviews at: tinyurl.com/mrx42mcc Links to individuals and groups referenced in this interview: - the Hermanosis Association: hermanosis.org/en/ - Jules Evans and the Challenging Psychedelic Experiences Project (on adverse effects of psychedelics in therapy): challengingpsychedelicexperiences.com - Fluence (Psychedelic-Assisted Psychotherapy & Integration): www.fluencetraining.com - The ...
Deliberate Practice for Experiential Therapies - interview with Sophie Cote
Просмотров 4336 месяцев назад
More interviews at: tinyurl.com/mrx42mcc Sophie's Deliberate Practice modules for Coherence Therapy: www.psymomentum.com/deliberate-practice-for-coherence-therapy/ Sophie's Memory Reconsolidation course: www.psymomentum.com/coherence-therapy-course/ Sophie's Deliberate Practice modules for Coherence Therapy are finally available! Now you can practice your therapeutic "scales and arpeggios" a li...
Memory Reconsolidation -- an interview with Richard Hill
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.9 месяцев назад
More interviews at: tinyurl.com/mrx42mcc www.thescienceofpsychotherapy.net Free webinars from Richard: tinyurl.com/2tn92w5p Primer on Memory Reconsolidation: www.coherencetherapy.org/files/Ecker-etal-NPT2013April-Primer.pdf Richard Hill has emerged from a diverse and fascinating journey to become an innovative speaker on the mind, brain and the human condition. From a satisfying, if not quite f...
Hakomi and Psoma Yoga Therapy -- an interview with Donna Martin
Просмотров 6659 месяцев назад
More interviews at: tinyurl.com/mrx42mcc Books by Donna Martin: • The Practice of Loving Presence: A Mindful Guide to Open-Hearted Relating by Ron Kurtz and Donna Martin: tinyurl.com/4d9dz54m • Seeing Your Life Through New Eyes by Paul Brenner and Donna Martin: tinyurl.com/493n6whd • Embodied Mindfulness: The Hakomi Way: Psychotherapy as Spiritual Practice by Donna Martin: tinyurl.com/3cxk9nya ...
The Comprehensive Resource Model (CRM) -- an interview with Lisa Schwarz
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.10 месяцев назад
More interviews at: tinyurl.com/mrx42mcc More info on CRM: comprehensiveresourcemodel.com CRM Book on Amazon - tinyurl.com/mdvej5kh Newsweek article on CRM - tinyurl.com/bdze7eer CRM Podcast - tinyurl.com/3m7rxpwh CRM Demo Session - tinyurl.com/kkxzhkv3 The Comprehensive Resource Model® (CRM) is a neuro-biologically based, affect-focused trauma treatment model which facilitates targeting of tra...
Inner Relationship Focusing -- an interview with Ann Weiser Cornell
Просмотров 1,8 тыс.Год назад
More experiential therapy interviews at: tinyurl.com/ypwfbh46 Podcast version: open.spotify.com/episode/1jz3c7AIA5JbnXnIRBS092 Ann Weiser Cornell offers live, online courses tinyurl.com/yras4yby as well as On Demand courses on Focusing tinyurl.com/4m28yrz4 at her website: focusingresources.com Ann is author of: - Focusing in Clinical Practice tinyurl.com/khejfjur - The Power of Focusing: A Prac...
Internal Family Systems: An Interview with Bonnie Weiss, LCSW
Просмотров 2 тыс.Год назад
More experiential therapy interviews at: tinyurl.com/ypwfbh46 Podcast version: podcasters.spotify.com/pod/dashboard/episode/e2a6fcp More info on Bonnie Weiss: www.selfcapacities.com Bonnie can be contacted at bonnieweiss@gmail.com Bonnie Weiss, M.A., LCSW, is an Internal Family Systems clinician, teacher, and supervisor. Her distinctive approach is an emotionally-deep, present-centered, yet act...
Integrating Experiential Psychotherapies: An interview with Juliane Taylor Shore LMFT
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.Год назад
More experiential therapy interviews at: tinyurl.com/ypwfbh46 Podcast version: podcasters.spotify.com/pod/dashboard/episode/e2804o1 Jules’ course on interweaving experiential psychotherapies course is called Neurobiology with Heart: therapywisdom.com/neurobiology-with-heart/ Jules’ course on Memory Reconsolidation, also on Therapy Wisdom: therapywisdom.com/memory-reconsolidation/ Other resource...
Dynamic Emotion Focused Therapy: An interview with Susan Warren Warshow, LCSW, LMFT
Просмотров 685Год назад
More interviews at: tinyurl.com/mrymdnn2 Susan Warren-Warshow is the founder of the Dynamic Emotion Focused Therapy (DEFT) Institute and author of "A Therapist’s Handbook to Dissolve Shame and Defense: Master the Moment" (Routledge, 2022). DEFT is a shame-sensitive, compassion centered, attachment oriented, inter-subjective, relational psychodynamic, experiential, spiritually integrated, somati...
Schema Therapy and Coherence Therapy: and interview with Pierre Cousineau trailer
Просмотров 5122 года назад
Full interview is at: ruclips.net/video/A1mnSH52SKo/видео.html Other interviews at: tinyurl.com/mrymdnn2 Schema therapy (ST) is an integrative approach that brings together elements from cognitive behavioral therapy, attachment and object relations theories, and Gestalt and experiential therapies. It was introduced by Jeff Young in 1990 and has been developed and refined since then. Schema ther...
Schema Therapy and Coherence Therapy: and interview with Pierre Cousineau
Просмотров 4,6 тыс.2 года назад
More interviews at: tinyurl.com/mrymdnn2 Schema therapy (ST) is an integrative approach that brings together elements from cognitive behavioral therapy, attachment and object relations theories, and Gestalt and experiential therapies. It was introduced by Jeff Young in 1990 and has been developed and refined since then. Schema therapy is considered an effective way of conceptualizing and treati...
IFS and IFIO couples therapy - an interview with Liz Phillips
Просмотров 3,6 тыс.2 года назад
More interviews with experiential practitioners at: tinyurl.com/mrymdnn2 Intimacy from the Inside Out©, Developed by Toni Herbine Blank, is a model of couples therapy that draws primarily from the Internal Family Systems (IFS) model of psychotherapy, but also includes aspects of psychodynamic theory, systems thinking and neuroscience. It is an experiential model born out of a desire to carry th...
IFS and IFIO with Liz Phillips interview trailer
Просмотров 3322 года назад
View full interview at: ruclips.net/video/ol08Z4mdLk4/видео.html Intimacy from the Inside Out©, Developed by Toni Herbine Blank, is a model of couples therapy that draws primarily from the Internal Family Systems (IFS) model of psychotherapy, but also includes aspects of psychodynamic theory, systems thinking and neuroscience. It is an experiential model born out of a desire to carry the concep...
ISTDP: Interview with Patricia Coughlin - 4 min trailer
Просмотров 4222 года назад
ISTDP: Interview with Patricia Coughlin - 4 min trailer
ISTDP and Experiential Psychotherapy - an interview with Patricia Coughlin
Просмотров 3,4 тыс.2 года назад
ISTDP and Experiential Psychotherapy - an interview with Patricia Coughlin
Brainspotting: an interview with David Grand, Ph.D. -- 4 minute trailer
Просмотров 3952 года назад
Brainspotting: an interview with David Grand, Ph.D. 4 minute trailer
Brainspotting: an interview with David Grand, Ph.D.
Просмотров 9 тыс.2 года назад
Brainspotting: an interview with David Grand, Ph.D.
Shame, Pride and Relational Trauma: an interview with Ken Benau
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.2 года назад
Shame, Pride and Relational Trauma: an interview with Ken Benau
Shame, Pride and Relational Trauma: an interview with Ken Benau, trailer
Просмотров 2302 года назад
Shame, Pride and Relational Trauma: an interview with Ken Benau, trailer
EMDR, Trauma and Memory Reconsolidation with Dr. James Alexander - 3 min trailer
Просмотров 4172 года назад
EMDR, Trauma and Memory Reconsolidation with Dr. James Alexander - 3 min trailer
EMDR, Trauma and Memory Reconsolidation - an interview with Dr. James Alexander
Просмотров 8872 года назад
EMDR, Trauma and Memory Reconsolidation - an interview with Dr. James Alexander
Brainspotting demonstration session trailer
Просмотров 7 тыс.2 года назад
Brainspotting demonstration session trailer
Coherent Narrative Therapy with Gail Noppe-Brandon Interview
Просмотров 9872 года назад
Coherent Narrative Therapy with Gail Noppe-Brandon Interview
Coherent Narrative Therapy with Gail Noppe-Brandon Trailer
Просмотров 2112 года назад
Coherent Narrative Therapy with Gail Noppe-Brandon Trailer
Process Work Therapy with Lane Arye interview trailer
Просмотров 2482 года назад
Process Work Therapy with Lane Arye interview trailer
Process Work Therapy: Lane Arye, Ph.D. interviewed by Vincent Ryan
Просмотров 7782 года назад
Process Work Therapy: Lane Arye, Ph.D. interviewed by Vincent Ryan
Tori Olds Interview Trailer -- "Integrating Experiential Psychotherapies"
Просмотров 2572 года назад
Tori Olds Interview Trailer "Integrating Experiential Psychotherapies"
Tori Olds Interview - Integrating Experiential Psychotherapies
Просмотров 4,3 тыс.2 года назад
Tori Olds Interview - Integrating Experiential Psychotherapies

Комментарии

  • @kimwindsor2349
    @kimwindsor2349 День назад

    2:31 1-4 quadrillion synaptic connections

  • @drbeganyi
    @drbeganyi 2 дня назад

    So much wisdom in this one. Keep them coming! I've been reading Remembering with emotion by Steven B Sandler and would be delighted to listen to an interview with him.

  • @eugeneano285
    @eugeneano285 29 дней назад

    When your latest book be published in English?

  • @iw9338
    @iw9338 Месяц назад

    This is very helpful, thanks very much 😅

  • @iw9338
    @iw9338 Месяц назад

    Excellent thanks very much 😅

  • @martialmusic
    @martialmusic Месяц назад

    Your series of four lectures is brilliant. What I do not understand -- and this goes for all science - is how slow some things are to 'get out there'. After ten years there are just 13k views. This is not okay. Best wishes, Robert Morecook PhD Houston

    • @experiential-psychotherapy
      @experiential-psychotherapy Месяц назад

      Thanks Robert! Glad you found it helpful. I originally created this series with the intention of showing it to 36 participants of a workshop, so the fact that 13k people have watched all four episodes is just fine by me! If you haven't already found experiential-psychotherapies.com, there is more material of mine on the Coherence Therapy page.

  • @emilycox5439
    @emilycox5439 Месяц назад

    Previewing Bonnie's personality, teaching style, I already have her book and the IFS method is congruent with my experiential style. Now I believe I may do the 8 week training she's providing online!

  • @brynnasibilla1207
    @brynnasibilla1207 2 месяца назад

    So valuable - thank you.

  • @buildingemotionalintelligence
    @buildingemotionalintelligence 2 месяца назад

    Totally enjoy your recommendations not to get stuck on any one way of approaching this material. It is quite clear that we are all interacting with the very same fundamental brain processes and they are being presented in many different explanatory ways. Getting stuck in any one perspective (even if its very effective) limits the opportunities to learn more as the story emphasizes certain aspects and misses other aspects. Essentially, the particular perspective is not the whole story, there is always more to understand and getting stuck in that perspective limits the ability to see beyond that limited perspective. In all of this MR rocks as a foundational phenomenon.

  • @kimwindsor2349
    @kimwindsor2349 2 месяца назад

    I learned the swallow is a sign of autonomic nervous system relaxation?

  • @eugeneano285
    @eugeneano285 2 месяца назад

    Perhaps you talk in another video about situation of past rape and loving partner unable to help. Same with therapeutic relationship. Just because there is one person / situation that juxtaposes, it will not mismatch as likely there is another emotional truth: there still might be another rapist out there, just because my partner is not, it does not change this possibility at all. I don't see beliefs as boolean entities: I am good enough or not good enough at all. In math there are so called fuzzy sets. They describe a spectrum of possible values: I am quite unlovable, I am lovable fifty fifty, etc. Same in life - some of my friends don't like me but many do. How one would find mismatch then? Much appreciated

  • @TheCrisses
    @TheCrisses 2 месяца назад

    Does this technique work for men?

  • @faithcurtinkoch8657
    @faithcurtinkoch8657 3 месяца назад

    Thank you so much, Niall and Michal! Wonderful information about what is a long-known mode of healing that is newly (re-)emerging in more mainstream circles, bringing such powerful potential for healing and growth!

  • @dek2000utube
    @dek2000utube 3 месяца назад

    So Valuable ... Thank you.

  • @toriolds5848
    @toriolds5848 3 месяца назад

    Thanks for this wonderful video, Niall and Michal! What a gift to our community of learners and memory reconsolidation enthusiasts :) I can't wait to see what kind of results are possible with the addition of identifying and integrating schemas ahead of time. Very promising...

  • @ThorClemensDC
    @ThorClemensDC 3 месяца назад

    This information is incredibly valuable. Wouldn't it be lovely to see this course taught in high school classrooms? People need mental healing majorly in the year. 2024. Thanks so much for putting this together!

  • @kiva822
    @kiva822 4 месяца назад

    I love the office...common environment of creative mind :)

  • @ManiSaint-VictorMD
    @ManiSaint-VictorMD 4 месяца назад

    Happened upon this video through RUclips links that I landed on researching coherence therapy after taking the mirroring hands course so this is full circle for me

  • @Damnchaosemerald_e.e
    @Damnchaosemerald_e.e 4 месяца назад

    this is youtube

  • @nyxmorris5726
    @nyxmorris5726 5 месяцев назад

    After burnout fried my brain, stumbling upon her books felt like Neo finding Morpheus in The Matrix. Suddenly, the world of self-care made sense! Thank you soooo much for sharing your knowledge!!

  • @jacquelinesmith2994
    @jacquelinesmith2994 5 месяцев назад

    This! So good. As a therapist, I too have volunteered with colleagues to further their practice. It takes courage and openness and the therapist here in the video was so welcoming and appreciative of that, it made that inter subjective space come to life in a very safe way.

  • @letypineda5839
    @letypineda5839 6 месяцев назад

    This woman is amazing! Her sensibility and understanding of the clients and their pain is fantastic. I have read her and her husband´s books and they are so clear.

  • @juanjoseredondo2314
    @juanjoseredondo2314 7 месяцев назад

    I really apreciate Richard Hill. He has the BEST Projective Identification explanation ever on his Channel. ❤

  • @TomMcKay-k1i
    @TomMcKay-k1i 7 месяцев назад

    YES!. This work, this co-journeying with another human is BEAUTY. Thank you Tori!

  • @antheakaranasos2047
    @antheakaranasos2047 7 месяцев назад

    Hi there … You might consider that many people … likely most … who come here are not therapists but rather folks like me learning new ways to understand resistance to change after years of work to recover from childhood & ongoing trauma. I stumbled on IFS & parts work through Dr. Jacob Ham on RUclips (amazing!) & Stephanie Woo’s memoir detailing her time as Dr, Ham’s patient. That led me to Richard Schwartz’s teaching to learn the bones of parts work (his book No Bad Parts). The book was ok but a bit abstract imo & kept me too much in my head. So I searched for more on IFS & found Dr. Tori Olds who gives simple, embodied examples I need on her RUclips channel. Tori’s generous video series on IFS led to her other video series on Coherence Therapy which I’m on the front end of exploring. She is brilliant & presents the technique is such a compassionate & easy to understand way. I’m thrilled I found Dr. Olds I suppose the algorithm put your video in my path. Grateful to expand my small group of teachers, I listened to your video then felt very disappointed to discover the bait & switch tactic midway -> first free then pay to listen to the whole video. Therapists listening here who have a career & paying clients can afford to pay, but many of us cannot. And not having insurance to be able to access a qualified trauma informed therapist often moves us to find information & resources online to help ourselves while saving money to afford therapy. This Aetna is so Wright with privilege which is why I appreciate the generosity of Jacob Ham & Tori Olds who offer solid help free of charge through their online teaching videos. I did learn one thing listening to you, which is to eliminate the word *not* when reframing experiences for using self-guided Coherence Therapy & System Deprivation. My desire is to eventually find a therapist or a group that uses both. Until then, as a trauma impacted adult, I’ll be reading & listening to the work of Tori Olds & her mentor Bruce Ecker. All the best to you!

  • @tinokshenishba
    @tinokshenishba 7 месяцев назад

    Lisa, you look beautiful. So happy to see you.

  • @capngrace84
    @capngrace84 8 месяцев назад

    This is great! The positive framing of a new experience is so important to communicate to new folks interested in therapy

  • @LilaHorton
    @LilaHorton 8 месяцев назад

    Do you work on emotions too because it is connected to memory!?

    • @MrJalex1000
      @MrJalex1000 8 месяцев назад

      yes, emotions are a major focus of EMDR. Memories are worked with because traumatic ones entail a range of distressed emotions- these accumulate to constitute a person's burden of distress, which tends to drive their 'symptoms' and dominate their emotional life. Emotions need to be reactivated in order for EMDR to be effective, and they are one of the main indicators that the process has been effective or not. EMDR shares this with other approaches that utilise memory reconsolidation (MR- a form of neuroplasticity)- the distress needs to be felt as a necessary precondition for MR to be initiated. People know that the process has been effective (in part) by what their emotions are telling them.

  • @unlocklimitlessyou
    @unlocklimitlessyou 8 месяцев назад

    Would love to have you both on my podcast How to be happier for entrepreneurs ❤

  • @unlocklimitlessyou
    @unlocklimitlessyou 8 месяцев назад

    Great stuff!❤❤❤

  • @RomanBuchok
    @RomanBuchok 8 месяцев назад

    Maybe It isn't the memory of things past that creates intense feelings in the present. Maybe the feeling is created by mistaking memory, or thinking for that matter, with some thing real. The fear response is appropriate when danger is present when the thing is happening. Once the truth is known; that thinking is an internal description of something that happened, it's not the actual thing, the intense feeling doesn't materialize and if it does it's very short lived; it's not real. The only difference between experiencing intense emotion during a movie and experiencing intense emotion from memories and past events, is that in a movie we know we are experiencing something illusory and transitory and it passes shortly after the scene ends. Thinking and memories are no more real than sound & images on a movie screen.

    • @richardhillcuriosity
      @richardhillcuriosity 8 месяцев назад

      That is an important aspect of the concept. It is not only the memory of the past, but the associations and connections that are made at the time and then over time when the memory or those things associated with it are recalled. Other dangers, repeated traumas (complex trauma) or other traumas become "consolidated" into the current experience. The juxtaposing truth is exactly as you describe - that the current truth is different from the "associated memory complex". This happens naturally through ongoing experience and through a deliberate therapy process. There are various therapies that can change the connections - time line; EMDR; coherence; several NLP processes; and even CBT in the appropriate circumstances. Mirroring Hands and other implicit processes are also effective in the appropriate circumstances. There are many more actions that can reconsolidate the memory in a way that changes the effect of recall of the past memory, desensitize triggers that associate, and other things that are more than there is space for here. What you have written about above is all spot on. Memory reconsolidation is simply the name given to the neurological process that facilitates the changes of perception and improvement in ongoing experience. As you say, a film is not traumatizing because the person knows it is not true or a current danger. This is a fascinating discussion and there are more interesting things to cover, but that is the gist for now :)

  • @bennyummer
    @bennyummer 8 месяцев назад

    I don't seem to be able to find you on Apple podcast, are you not on there? Is there an easy way to download your podcasts to my phone? I'm kind of a caveman and it would be nice if you were on an easy to use platform, FYI

    • @experiential-psychotherapy
      @experiential-psychotherapy 8 месяцев назад

      Thanks for asking! The podcast version of this and other interviews is here: podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/experientialpsychotherapy.

  • @cuttingthrough4718
    @cuttingthrough4718 9 месяцев назад

    Does memory reconsolidation not also require juxtaposition for the memory to become labile, rather than just recall?

    • @richardhillcuriosity
      @richardhillcuriosity 9 месяцев назад

      Good question. The synaptic connections for the memory become labile on recall. This allows for the current environment to re-consolidate the connection based on the truth or perceived truth of current environment. So the juxtaposing "truth" is about the current environment, not the lability of the memory. It may be that the current environment confirms the existing memory - or even amplifies it with additional disturbance. So, memory reconsolidation is not about troubling memories getting better. Sometimes re-consolidation makes things worse, especially when there is ongoing trauma (complex trauma) or unresolved situations. Grief is another situation where reconsolidation often confirms the sadness and may even amplify it. A positive juxtaposing truth is added through therapies like coherence therapy, but juxtaposing truths are also just the change in the "environment". This can be natural problem resolution. sometimes, just getting older is enough of a change. If you think in the way of systems you are looking to change the initial conditions, or maybe the attractors or some of the organising principles. Juxtaposing truths can come in many ways :)

    • @robinticic
      @robinticic 8 месяцев назад

      Yes, many studies have shown that recall (or reactivation) alone does not induce destabilization. Destabilization of the target learning requires a mismatch to what that learning expects, creating a “prediction error” experience. However, different degrees and types of mismatch can do that. What we term a “juxtaposition experience” is a sharp *contradiction* of the target learning’s model of reality, which is a special type of mismatch. Once destabilization occurs, contradiction is then needed for *unlearning* to occur, nullifying the target learning to eliminate its effects entirely (what we term transformational change). The most thorough explanation of all this is in the 2021 article cited below. The 2022 article contains this important clarification: “While destabilized, the target learning may be updated in virtually any way by experiences that deviate from the original learning. The target learning can be strengthened, weakened, or modified in its specific content, or its encoding can be conjoined with the encoding of the memory of a salient new experience…. Thus, by itself the term “memory reconsolidation” denotes not a particular type or degree of change, but rather the fundamental mechanism that destabilizes and then restabilizes (deconsolidates and then reconsolidates) the encoding of a target learning. That deconsolidation/reconsolidation process allows a target learning to be re-encoded and updated but does not in itself cause a target learning to be changed. Change is separately driven by current learning experiences during the reconsolidation window.” Ecker, B. (2021, November 19). Reconsolidation behavioral updating of human emotional memory: A comprehensive review and unified analysis of successes, replication failures, and clinical translation. PsyArXiv. doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/atz3m Ecker, B., & Vaz, A. (2022). Memory reconsolidation and the crisis of mechanism in psychotherapy. New Ideas in Psychology, 66, 100945, 1-11. DOI: 10.1016/j.newideapsych.2022.100945 (download: bit.ly/3luadsb)

  • @SKR0130
    @SKR0130 9 месяцев назад

    Awesome podcast episode, Juliane. Wow so fun listening to you and your expertise.

  • @FlyinDogRecords
    @FlyinDogRecords 9 месяцев назад

    This was excellent!!! After a while therapies all start looking the same. This really clarified how this one is different. Very clear and great examples. Thank you.

  • @annaynely
    @annaynely 9 месяцев назад

    ruclips.net/video/cPiUj5VQGSQ/видео.htmlsi=EY7L1QPo0POJzUo_ It is marvelous to talk from a privileged stand point! Congrats to you Ma'am!

  • @ashnishah5703
    @ashnishah5703 9 месяцев назад

    This was valuable❤ Thank you so much for this video😊

  • @ericenvironmentalist9429
    @ericenvironmentalist9429 9 месяцев назад

    I think it’s also possible that the crying was a defense against deeper more intolerable feelings, like anger.

  • @wanderingdude.
    @wanderingdude. 9 месяцев назад

    "you can't leave a place till you arrive there" might be a new quote for my door, really simple and helpful :)

  • @sylviakanel9766
    @sylviakanel9766 Год назад

    Excellent, Tori! Thank you!💜🙏💜

  • @sylviakanel9766
    @sylviakanel9766 Год назад

    Wow! This was beautiful. I listened at Tori Old's recommendation from her open chat last Tuesday. I've been studying Gendlin for about three years now and Tori's manner makes me feel witnessed the way videos of Gene do. Now here, too, I felt a deep response to the two of you speaking of how you are present with your clients. There was a great deal of presence in this video and just in listening I felt spaces opening up -- ways I'd like to be with myself that I haven't experienced yet. Tori is teaching memory reconsolidation right now and I've been having trouble making the leap from theory to practice. You touched on how that can happen without forcing issues -- just letting them arise. I'm sure that will give me a better lens through which to view Tori's next session. Thank you!

  • @mikekoladam5988
    @mikekoladam5988 Год назад

    Thank you for this amazing content!

  • @LiveIFS
    @LiveIFS Год назад

    Lovely conversation! Thanks for sharing IFS with the world! 🥳

  • @carolrudd8980
    @carolrudd8980 Год назад

    beautiful to see Ann explicate her work with the attentive and receptive Sam. Thank you.

  • @emmagoldmansherman
    @emmagoldmansherman Год назад

    So much to learn here, thank you! Such great information! With so much heart and compassion. "To hold it lightly like a feather" I love this!

  • @claudiad.4954
    @claudiad.4954 Год назад

    I have only just started to practise brainspotting. So amazing. It's like an adventurous journey. I love it being so open, the interaction between equal partners, the field that is created. To me it's one of THE tools for this time on earth. Thank you!

    • @kdento2
      @kdento2 Год назад

      Who was your trainer?

  • @iananono9083
    @iananono9083 Год назад

    I came to the same conclusion as you did about many disorders being natural/survival reactions to “disorderly” conduct of the trauma giver. I don’t know if I’ve heard this perspective from another therapist before, so thank you!! I tried BSp on myself (I have a masters in it and a couple years experience giving it). I am amazed at the response I had. Is it ok to do it on/with oneself more extensively? I will find a BSp therapist soon, but also like doing self-therapy. Have done it for over 50 years. THANKS again! ❤

  • @gfitz91
    @gfitz91 Год назад

    Does this therapy approach work better for behavioural symptoms? In social anxiety for eg, would the target symptom be avoidance, or would it be the specific feeling, eg feeling worried about judgment of others?

    • @experiential-psychotherapy
      @experiential-psychotherapy Год назад

      Coherence Therapy could equally be applied to either the behavioral symptom or the experience. The most important first step is "symptom definition" -- getting crystal clear with the client about what the target of change is for this session, whether that be a change in their behavior or a change in how they experience the circumstances of their life. Which of these it needs to be will be different depending on the situation and the person, and this must be co-determined by both the client and therapist. Then we start discovery work (seeking the unconscious compelling reason for maintaining the symptom) from there.

  • @MauiViolinist
    @MauiViolinist Год назад

    Mahalo from Maui, where I am a trauma counselor. This was very informative and reassuring as I go into service for wildfire survivors.

    • @experiential-psychotherapy
      @experiential-psychotherapy Год назад

      Thank you for doing such powerful work and such an important time. Brainspotting is a wonderful resource for trauma work.

  • @kaziopu1
    @kaziopu1 Год назад

    Very nice experiential therapy interview