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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220205T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220205T140000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20210623T043638Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211227T195855Z
UID:10000456-1644055200-1644069600@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Moving from Chaos to Clarity: Core-Focused Family Therapy  – Presented by Judye Hess\, PhD [SEMINAR]
DESCRIPTION:A major strength of Core-Focused Family Therapy (CFFT) is that it addresses all three dimensions of our experience: individual\, interpersonal and systemic. One of the major critiques of family therapy in general is that\, while it focuses on the interpersonal dynamics\, it lacks the depth of individual therapy. CFFT attempts to correct this problem by encouraging clients to experience their core truths in several ways\, including\, the somatic level. This assists in communication among the family members. When the family can express their deepest truths to one another\, profound changes can occur that lead to greater differentiation authenticity and closeness. The role of the therapist is to help families uncover and communicate these truths by teaching better communication\, which\, in turn\, helps them to take greater responsibility for their role in conflict and alliances.  When dyads or triads change\, this leads to a systemic change in the family. \nLEARNING OBJECTIVES: \nUpon completion of this workshop\, participants should be able to: \n\nSummarize the clinical techniques and skills used in Core-Focused Family Therapy.\nExplain the concept of the “identified patient” (IP) and how it both serves and debilitates the family.\nRecognize\, elicit and deepen client emotions to further change by utilizing skills of:\ndeep empathy for each member\,\nguiding family members to move from defensiveness to open-hearted communication\nmaintaining a position of neutrality\nExplain “surface area of problem”\,\nDemonstrate Checking In at the start\, Checking Out when done.\nSelect and assess families in terms of readiness for Core-Focused Family Therapy.\nIdentify how the IP may be “holding” a certain emotion for the family.\nExplain how family therapy helps the family to see the broader context of a particular member’s difficulties\, by increasing the “surface area” of the problem.\nRecognize when the family dynamic shifts from a one-person interaction with the therapist\, to a dyadic encounter between two family members\, e.g. direct interaction\nExplain the 11 common mistakes therapists make when working with families.\nIdentify and utilize the five techniques of working with a family from start (initial phone call) to finish (termination).\n\n  \nJudye Hess graduated from the University of Rhode Island with a PhD in clinical psychology in 1975 and have been licensed in the state of California since 1978\, and has a private therapy practice in Berkeley since 1980 where she sees couples\, families and facilitates groups. \nShe has been teaching experiential classes in Family Dynamics\, Couple counseling and Group Dynamics at the California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco over the last 27 years\, where she is a Professor and Core Faculty member. She has also taught these courses at John F. Kennedy University\, the Institute for Transpersonal Psychology\, and California State East Bay University. \nJudye is an active member of the Northern California Group Psychotherapy Society (NCGPS) and the American Group Psychotherapy Association (AGPA) where she has facilitated groups (Interpersonal Gestalt\, Interpersonal Growth\, and Group Process in the NOW) at both local and national conferences and Institute. She is active in the Association for Family Therapy of Northern California (AFTNC)\, the American Family Therapy Association (AFTA)\, and the International Family Therapy Association (IFTA).  \nShe has written many articles and has presented at national and international conferences in the Netherlands\, Turkey and Vancouver\, Canada\, on her method of family therapy as presented in her book Core-Focused Family Therapy: Moving From Chaos to Clarity\, which she wrote with Ross Cohen\, LPC. (Idyll Arbor\, 2008) \n  \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Members: \n$75 early registration 10 days prior to seminar; $90 after \nNon-Members: \n$100 early registration up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $115 after \nCEs: 4 CEs for LMFTs\, \nLCSWs\, and Psychologists. \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for this program and its content.  \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nGrievance Procedure: CIP will respond to complaints in a reasonable\, ethical and timely manner\, when submitted by program attendees in writing to the Chair of CIP’s Professional Development Committee. \nAnti-Discrimination Policy: CIP shall not discriminate against any individual or group with respect to any service\, program or activity based on gender\, race\, creed\, national origin\, sexual orientation\, religion\, age or other prohibited basis. CIP does not require attendees to adhere to any particular religion or creed in order to participate in training. CIP will not promote or advocate for a single modality of treatment that is discriminatory or likely to harm clients based on current accepted standards or practice. \n*There is no conflict of interest or commercial support related to this CE program.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/moving-from-chaos-to-clarity-core-focused-family-therapy-presented-by-judye-hess-phd-seminar/
LOCATION:Zoom\, Virtual\, CA\, United States
CATEGORIES:Classes,Professional Development,Seminars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Hess-Photo-e1624386058781.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220129T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220130T180000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20210709T192209Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220128T202527Z
UID:10000535-1643446800-1643565600@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Healing at the Edge: Conscious Living\, Conscious Dying [Two Day Workshop - January] – Presented by Dale Borglum\, PhD  [CO-SPONSORED]
DESCRIPTION:Why do some people experience wholeness as they approach death\, while others lose themselves in denial\, depression\, distraction? Why is it that some of the most alive and awake Westerners I’ve known have been\, almost without exception\, people near death? Is there some powerful truth about life and about healing that you and I can receive from these few who\, as they went through the process of dying\, deeply realized their own wholeness? \nBringing emotional/spiritual support to someone with a life-threatening illness is a twofold task. First\, help the client realize they are more than that which will die – the finite self – the body and personality. At the same time\, honor this finite self\, healing its woundedness\, its identification with separateness. Rumi said\, “Grief is the garden of compassion.” This transmuting separateness of grief into the connectedness of compassion is the heart of the work. Confusion\, anxiety\, depression\, anger are typical responses arising as the end of a life approaches\, both for patients and their families. \nThis presentation will explore possibilities for realizing wholeness at the edge of life where illness\, grief\, and loss arise. Both psychological and spiritual tools will be used in the investigation of these profound and challenging issues. We will offer participants the opportunity to explore the deeper questions surrounding death\, healing\, and the sacred so that each of us can better embody an enlivened sense of being in the world in each moment rather than a sense of isolation and denial. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDale Borglum\, PhD\, founded and directed the Hanuman Foundation Dying Center in Santa Fe\, New Mexico\, the first residential facility in the United States to support conscious dying. He has been the Executive Director of the Living/Dying Project in Santa Fe and\, since 1986\, in the San Francisco Bay Area. He is the co-author with Ram Dass\, Daniel Goleman and Dwarka Bonner of Journey of Awakening: A Meditator’s Guidebook. Dale gives workshops on the topics of meditation\, healing\, and spiritual support for those with life-threatening illness\, and on caregiving as spiritual practice. He has a doctorate degree from Stanford University. \n  \n\n\n\n\nOption 1: Two Day Workshop \nJanuary 29 and 30\, 2022 | 9:00 am – 6:00 pm \nLocation:   \nZoom \nCost: \n$290 registration \nCEs: 15 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of both sessions. \nOption 2: Two Day Workshop \nFebruary 26 and 27\, 2022 | 9:00 am – 6:00 pm \nLocation:   \nZoom \nCost:  \n$290 registration \nCEs: 15 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of both sessions. \nOption 3: One Day Workshop \nFebruary 12\, 2022 | 9:00 am – 6:00 pm \nLocation:  \nZoom \nCost:  \n$175 registration           \nCEs: 8 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of full session. \n  \n\nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for this program and its content.  \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/healing-at-the-edge-conscious-living-conscious-dying-two-day-workshop-january-presented-by-dale-borglum-phd-co-sponsored-2/
LOCATION:Zoom\, Virtual\, CA\, United States
CATEGORIES:Co-Sponsored
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Dale-Borglum-e1536950115907.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220115T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220115T130000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20210623T043638Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211216T172834Z
UID:10000457-1642237200-1642251600@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Hooked on a Feeling: Using Attachment Theory and Object Relations to Inform Work with Substance Misusing Patients  – Presented by Benjamin Fife\, PsyD [SEMINAR]
DESCRIPTION:The COVID-19 pandemic has confronted psychoanalytic psychotherapists with the need to respond to an increase in substance use and misuse in our patients and their family members.  According to multiple studies\, since March 2020 substance use has increased by as much as twenty percent for people with existing substance use disorders (NIDA. 2020)\, and it is widely understood that social isolation and stress related to illness and medical trauma can increase susceptibility to substance misuse\, addiction\, relapse and overdose.  Psychoanalytic and psychodynamic clinicians\, including Gabor Mate\, Alistair Sweet\, and Mary Brady have made important contributions to understanding the complex relationships between attachment patterns\, internal object relationships and patterns of substance use and misuse. \nThis presentation will review the relevant contemporary thinking connecting attachment patterns\, internal object relations\, and substance use and abuse patterns and will offer participants the opportunity to think through clinical dilemmas surrounding substance use that come up in both private practice and community mental health outpatient settings. Participants will be aided in thinking through the meanings that substance use can take on for patients within family relationships and as a relationship in itself.  Participants will also learn ways of addressing risk and safety issues that come up when the substance user and abuser enters treatment. \nLEARNING OBJECTIVES:   \nParticipants in this program will be able to: \n\nIdentify (number of) clinical\, legal and ethical issues related to addressing substance use and misuse in the context of outpatient psychotherapy.\nList three ways in which attachment and trauma research can be relevant in the outpatient psychotherapeutic treatment of people who use substances.\nIncrease their repertoire of available psychotherapeutic interventions when working with patients who use substances.\nIdentify four harm reduction strategies they can introduce in psychotherapeutic work with substance using patients who do not have sobriety as a goal.\nIdentify three fears and biases they bring to work with substance using and abusing clients.\n\nBenjamin Fife\, PsyD is a clinical psychologist working in San Francisco where he sees children\, adults\, couples and families in his private practice.  Dr\, Fife has worked as a clinical supervisor at the UCSF Infant-Parent Program and has provided training and supervision to groups and individuals in a number of hospital and non-profit training settings in the Bay Area. Dr. Fife has a strong interest in infant and child development within family and social contexts. \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Members:  \n$75 early registration 10 days prior to seminar; $90 after \nNon-Members:  \n$100 early registration up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $115 after \nCEs: 4 CEs for LMFTs\, \nLCSWs\, and Psychologists. \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for this program and its content.  \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nGrievance Procedure: CIP will respond to complaints in a reasonable\, ethical and timely manner\, when submitted by program attendees in writing to the Chair of CIP’s Professional Development Committee. \nAnti-Discrimination Policy: CIP shall not discriminate against any individual or group with respect to any service\, program or activity based on gender\, race\, creed\, national origin\, sexual orientation\, religion\, age or other prohibited basis. CIP does not require attendees to adhere to any particular religion or creed in order to participate in training. CIP will not promote or advocate for a single modality of treatment that is discriminatory or likely to harm clients based on current accepted standards or practice. \n*There is no conflict of interest or commercial support related to this CE program.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/hooked-on-a-feeling-using-attachment-theory-and-object-relations-to-inform-work-with-substance-misusing-patients-presented-by-benjamin-fife-psyd-seminar/
LOCATION:Zoom\, Virtual\, CA\, United States
CATEGORIES:Classes,Professional Development,Seminars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Fife-Photo.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20211016T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20211016T160000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20210623T043638Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210709T190423Z
UID:10000454-1634374800-1634400000@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Essentials of Suicide Risk Assessment & Intervention  – Presented by Joe Obegi\, PhD [SEMINAR]
DESCRIPTION:This 6-hour course covers the essential aspects of suicide risk assessment and intervention. Part 1 teaches participants how to complete a high-quality suicide risk assessment\, an essential first step in protecting the suicidal patient. Participants will learn a structured approach to (a) inquiring about suicidal thinking and behavior and (b) integrating this information with warning signs and risk factors for suicide. Guidelines for estimating suicide risk will be reviewed as well as how to create a treatment plan that reduces risk. \nIn Part 2\, participants will learn about treatment options that can safely and effectively reduce suicide risk. Two interventions—safety planning and means safety—address the near-term safety of patients\, while outpatient treatments that prioritize suicidality can mitigate factors that drive suicide risk. Participants will be introduced to these interventions and their research basis. Finally\, participants will learn the legal complexities involved in treating suicidal patients. \nThis updated course has the latest national statistics on suicide\, new research findings on suicidal ideation and the relationship between inequality and suicide. \nLEARNING OBJECTIVES:   \nUpon completion of this workshop\, participants should be able to: \n\nDescribe the populations most vulnerable to suicide\nDefine three theories of suicide\nDescribe the phenomenology of suicidality\nApply a structured approach to evaluating suicide risk\nApply interventions to counsel patients and their families about the benefits of reducing access to lethal means\nCo-create a safety plan with suicidal patients\nList the four components of professional negligence\n\n  \nDr. Obegi completed his education at the California School of Professional Psychology and his postdoctoral training in the Department of Psychiatry\, UC San Diego. He is a Senior Psychologist with the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation where he coordinates suicide prevention efforts in a large psychiatric hospital at the California Medical Facility. In the community\, he provides training and consultation in topics related to suicide and has part-time practice working with adults. He writes about suicide risk assessment\, the standard of care\, and suicidality as a diagnostic candidate. He is the co-editor of Attachment Theory and Research in Clinical Work with Adults. \n  \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Members:  \n$100 early registration 10 days prior to seminar; $120 after \nNon-Members:  \n$130 early registration up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $150 after \nCEs: 6 CEs for LMFTs\, \nLCSWs\, and Psychologists. \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for this program and its content.  \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nGrievance Procedure: CIP will respond to complaints in a reasonable\, ethical and timely manner\, when submitted by program attendees in writing to the Chair of CIP’s Professional Development Committee. \nAnti-Discrimination Policy: CIP shall not discriminate against any individual or group with respect to any service\, program or activity based on gender\, race\, creed\, national origin\, sexual orientation\, religion\, age or other prohibited basis. CIP does not require attendees to adhere to any particular religion or creed in order to participate in training. CIP will not promote or advocate for a single modality of treatment that is discriminatory or likely to harm clients based on current accepted standards or practice. \n*There is no conflict of interest or commercial support related to this CE program.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/essentials-of-suicide-risk-assessment-intervention-presented-by-joe-obegi-phd-seminar/
LOCATION:Zoom Only\, CA\, United States
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Seminars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Obegi-head-shot-high-res-e1565022911461.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20211015T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20211015T143000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20210623T043639Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210709T185416Z
UID:10000530-1634301000-1634308200@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Finding Hope in Hard Times: Working Intersubjectively in Times of Crisis – Presented by Jane Rubin\, PhD\, PhD\, PsyD [SEMINAR] Third Friday of the Month Oct 2021 thru May 2022
DESCRIPTION:The events of the past year—the global pandemic\, the continuing battles against racism and white supremacy\, the California wildfires—have left many people feeling increasingly hopeless about their lives.  Many of these people are our patients.  How do we help them to regain a sense of possibility in these difficult times?  This issue is complicated by the fact that many of the things that are contributing to our patients’ sense of hopelessness are contributing to ours\, as well.  How can we help our patients if we share their sense of hopelessness? Or\, alternatively\, how can we help them if we don’t—if our patients feel that we don’t share their sense of hopelessness and therefore can’t understand them? \nIntersubjectivity theory is uniquely positioned to help us understand how the interaction of a patient’s subjectivity with our own can either help or hinder our patients’ ability to develop and sustain a sense of hope and possibility.  This seminar will combine case presentations with the study of relevant articles to strengthen participants’ confidence in their ability to help their patients find hope in a time of crisis. \nLearning Objectives: \nUpon completion of this workshop\, participants should be able to: \n\nDefine intersubjective conjunctions and identify them in their work.\nDefine intersubjective disjunctions and identify them in their work.\nExplain the process of working productively with intersubjective conjunctions.\nExplain the process or working productively with intersubjective disjunctions.\nExplain how the selfobject dimension of the transference contributes to emotional regulation in times of crisis.\nExplain how to work with the repetitive dimension of the transference to help patients cope more successfully in times of crisis.\nIdentify sequences of disruption and repair in clinical case material.\nDemonstrate ways of successfully repairing disruptions of the selfobject transference.\n\n  \nJane Rubin received her PhD in Philosophy from UC Berkeley\, her PhD in Clinical Psychology from the Wright Institute\, and her PsyD in Contemporary Psychoanalysis at the Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis in Los Angeles. She is in private practice in Berkeley. \n  \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Members:  \n$260 early registration 10 days prior to seminar; $280 after  \nNon-Members: \n$340 early registration up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $360 after \nCEs: 16 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for this program and its content.  \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nGrievance Procedure: CIP will respond to complaints in a reasonable\, ethical and timely manner\, when submitted by program attendees in writing to the Chair of CIP’s Professional Development Committee. \nAnti-Discrimination Policy: CIP shall not discriminate against any individual or group with respect to any service\, program or activity based on gender\, race\, creed\, national origin\, sexual orientation\, religion\, age or other prohibited basis. CIP does not require attendees to adhere to any particular religion or creed in order to participate in training. CIP will not promote or advocate for a single modality of treatment that is discriminatory or likely to harm clients based on current accepted standards or practice. \n*There is no conflict of interest or commercial support related to this CE program.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/finding-hope-in-hard-times-working-intersubjectively-in-times-of-crisis-presented-by-jane-rubin-phd-phd-psyd-seminar/
LOCATION:https://cipmarin.org/event/finding-hope-in-hard-times-working-intersubjectively-in-times-of-crisis-presented-by-jane-rubin-phd-phd-psyd-seminar/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Seminars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/jane-rubin-headshot-e1565910319743.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210612T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210612T160000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20200622T220245Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210604T203449Z
UID:10000521-1623488400-1623513600@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Jungian Work and the Apocalypse: Working with Boys and Men to Address Alienation – Robert Tyminski\, PhD [SEMINAR]
DESCRIPTION:Narrative: \nMany patients now state that they spend hours each day paying attention to screens rather than to real people around them. We’ll explore how cyberspace becomes an alternate container for many clients in distress. We will examine what this means for the psyche in terms of relationships and fantasies\, especially apocalyptic fantasies of destruction. \nThis seminar would address clinical work with boys\, male adolescents\, and young men\, and include some anecdotal information regarding the same for girls and women. It would look at motivational aspects of what brings them into therapy\, for example\, how willing are they to engage with us. \nWe would examine the role of alienation\, in particular\, how it can shut down access to the inner world. Part of this difficulty leads to clinical encounters when boys and men feel unable to describe what happens inside them. The function of language will be considered in these discussions\, because often there can be reports of not finding or having adequate feeling words to describe internal states. Ideas about containment will foreground the theoretical positioning of these discussions. \nDr. Tyminski will use a combination of case material and readings\, a resource would be his 2018 book “Male Alienation at the Crossroads of Identity\, Culture & Cyberspace.” Dr. Tyminski and CIP  are requesting and  encouraging participants to present their case material as well. \nRobert Tyminski is an adult and child analyst member of the C. G. Jung Institute of San Francisco and a past President; he teaches in the Institute’s analytic training program. He is a Clinical Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of California at San Francisco. His new book is Male Alienation at the Crossroads of Identity\, Culture and Cyberspace. His previous book The Psychology of Theft and Loss: Stolen and Fleeced was published in 2014 by Routledge. He is a 2016 winner of the Michael Fordham Prize from the Journal of Analytical Psychology. \n  \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $120 after \nNon-Members:\n \nNon-member Rate: $130 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $150 after \nCEs: \n6 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/jungian-work-apocalypse-robert-tyminski-phd/
LOCATION:Zoom\, Virtual\, CA\, United States
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Seminars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Robert-Tyminski.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210501T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210501T130000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20200624T131908Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210216T212237Z
UID:10000524-1619859600-1619874000@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:White Privilege and Racism: How to Address It in the Therapy Room – Lane Arye\, PhD & Annie Chen\, LMFT [CLASS]
DESCRIPTION:The legacy of colonialism and white supremacy manifests in the therapeutic relationship as unconscious bias\, microaggressions\, white fragility\, and internalized oppression within our work with clients. These dynamics can show up in the therapeutic relationship whether we are aware of them or not. They can lead to disconnection\, conflict\, and empathic failure\, and can prolong the pain our clients feel as a result of racial oppression. They can also contribute to racism and exclusion within our profession. In this training we will: \nThe presenters will reflect on how we each came to understand our race or racialized identities within the context of US society and culture. Recognize how patterns of colonialism and whiteness permeate our lives and profession. Examine how the legacy of white supremacy centers whiteness and assigns more value to the experiences of White People and less value to those of Black\, Indigenous\, and People of Color (BIPOC). Explore the attitudes and patterns of white supremacy and how this may show up in the therapy room between therapists of different racialized identities and clients of different racialized identities. Unpack how white fragility and internalized anti-black\, anti-indigenous\, anti-Asian\, and anti-Latinx sentiments can stop conversations and inhibit curiosity and awareness about our racial impact. Articulate the potential social impact and ethical consequences of remaining unconscious about race in the therapy room. Begin to develop resilience so we can sit in the fire of conversations about race without retreating into defensiveness or fragility. Brainstorm ways to support anti-racism in our profession and institutions. \nThey will also discuss and brainstorm about cases and scenarios in which white privilege and racism (whether it is our own or our clients’) arise in the therapy room. \nLane Arye\, Ph.D. is a senior trainer of Processwork (developed by Arnold Mindell) and a founding faculty member of the Process Work Institute in Portland. He works with individuals and couples\, and also facilitates organizations and communities locally and around the world. He co-led a six-year UN funded project in the Balkans that brought together Serbs\, Croats\, and Muslims after the war to work on ethnic tension and post-war trauma. He’s been deeply researching whiteness\, and leading groups for white folks about race\, resilience and repair. He lives with his wife and two teens\, who grow his heart every day. \nAnnie Chen\, LMFT \n \nis a 1.5 generation Chinese immigrant who is settled on Chochenyo Ohlone (East Bay) lands. She is a marriage and familytherapist who has been helping people have better relationships for over ten years. She authored a book on attachment theory and uses tools that are informed by neuroscience\, trauma\, and somatic psychology. \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$75 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $90 after \nNon-Members:\n \nNon-member Rate: $100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $110 after \nCEs: \n4 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/white-privilege-and-racism-how-to-address-it-in-the-therapy-room-lane-arye-phd-annie-chen-lmft-class/
LOCATION:Zoom\, Virtual\, CA\, United States
CATEGORIES:Classes,Professional Development
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Lane-Arye-Ph.D.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210403T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210403T130000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20200622T221309Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210215T153603Z
UID:10000522-1617440400-1617454800@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Creating Triangular Space and Promoting Symbolic Thinking in Psychdynamic Therapy – Helen Schoenhals Hart\, PsyD [CLASS]
DESCRIPTION:Narrative: \n  \nIn this workshop we will be examining how we can help our clients to feel understood\, while simultaneously promoting their ability to think symbolically – a necessary prerequisite for being able to handle the emotional dilemmas they present.  We will first learn about Ronald Britton’s concept of triangular space and what this looks like in the clinical setting. \nHelen Schoenhals Hart will then show us how she applies this concept in order to develop what she calls the analytic triangle in the clinical setting.  Clinical examples will be presented that show what it looks like when this analytic triangle is not established.  We will then turn to Hanna Segal’s triangular conception of symbol formation and the difference between a symbol and what she calls a symbolic equation.  Examples of what a symbolic equation looks like in the clinical situation will be presented and discussed.  Finally\, we will study how the analytic triangle\, the Depressive Position\, the Oedipal triangle and the triangular conception of symbolic thinking all hang together.  Clinical examples and vignettes from the participants will be encouraged for our discussion. \nDr. Helen Schoenhals Hart\, originally from Michigan\, studied medicine and trained to be a psychoanalyst in Frankfurt\, Germany.  She worked for many years as a training analyst of the German Psychoanalytic Assoc. (DPV) and worked intensively with the London Kleinians.  Since moving to California in 2008 she has a psychoanalytic practice in San Rafael and is a training and supervising analyst at SFCP. \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$75 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $90 after \nNon-Members:\n \nNon-member Rate: $100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $110 after \nCEs: \n4 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/creating-triangular-space-and-promoting-symbolic-thinking-in-psychdynamic-therapy/
LOCATION:Zoom\, Virtual\, CA\, United States
CATEGORIES:Classes,Professional Development
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Dr.-Helen-Schoenhals-Hart.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210306T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210306T160000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20200624T134738Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210215T152951Z
UID:10000525-1615021200-1615046400@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Surprise and Delight: How Family Play Therapy Can Create Positive Family Engagement– by Eliana Gil\, PhD [SEMINAR]
DESCRIPTION:Narrative: \nThis workshop will highlight the various ways that play therapy can decrease the family’s ambivalence about participating in therapy\, as well as the ways that play therapy can engage families in positive and energetic interactions that can shift perspectives and increase connection so that family members can see each other as resources. \nFamily play therapy is a useful approach when working with families who come to therapy due to overt conflicts and problems\, or parental concern regarding children’s behaviors. Typically\, families can have disruptions in communication\, affection\, and safety. Children’s behaviors may be externalizing or internalizing and can draw family interest in how to help. In addition\, many families can be court-mandated or referred by outside agencies because of a disruptive or concerning parental or child behavior. There are ample family dynamics that can cause family members to feel distrustful\, isolated\, frustrated\, frightened\, or concerned. Play therapy can surprise and delight family members and provide a less challenging way to approach problems. The outcomes include improved communication\, confidence in identifying and responding to children’s problem behaviors\, and the development of safety and secure attachments. \nDr. Eliana Gil is a Founding Partner of Gil Institute for Trauma Recovery & Education\, LLC\, a group private practice in Fairfax\, Va\, where she currently works as a Senior Clinical and Research Consultant.  She is an Approved MFT Supervisor as well as a Registered Play Therapist/Supervisor and a Registered Art Therapist.  She is also a Circle of Security Certified Parent Educator\, a Level II Theraplay provider\, and participated and completed a two-year Individual Certification process with Dr. Bruce Perry.  Dr. Gil provides specialized\, small group trainings that highlight experiential learning at Starbright Training Institute for Child and Family Play Therapy in Fairfax\, VA. \n  \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $120 after \nNon-Members:\n \nNon-member Rate: $130 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $150 after \nCEs: \n6 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/surprise-and-delight-how-family-play-therapy-can-create-positive-family-engagement-by-eliana-gil-phd-seminar/
LOCATION:Zoom\, Virtual\, CA\, United States
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Seminars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Eliana-Gil.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210227T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210228T173000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20201029T170043Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210215T153707Z
UID:10000452-1614416400-1614533400@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Healing at the Edge: Conscious Living\, Conscious Dying [Two Day Workshop - February] – Presented by Dale Borglum\, PhD  [CO-SPONSORED]
DESCRIPTION:Why do some people experience wholeness as they approach death\, while others lose themselves in denial\, depression\, distraction? Why is it that some of the most alive and awake Westerners I’ve known have been\, almost without exception\, people near death? Is there some powerful truth about life and about healing that you and I can receive from these few who\, as they went through the process of dying\, deeply realized their own wholeness? \nBringing emotional/spiritual support to someone with a life-threatening illness is a twofold task. First\, help the client realize they are more than that which will die – the finite self – the body and personality. At the same time\, honor this finite self\, healing its woundedness\, its identification with separateness. Rumi said\, “Grief is the garden of compassion.” This transmuting separateness of grief into the connectedness of compassion is the heart of the work. Confusion\, anxiety\, depression\, anger are typical responses arising as the end of a life approaches\, both for patients and their families. \nThis presentation will explore possibilities for realizing wholeness at the edge of life where illness\, grief\, and loss arise. Both psychological and spiritual tools will be used in the investigation of these profound and challenging issues. We will offer participants the opportunity to explore the deeper questions surrounding death\, healing\, and the sacred so that each of us can better embody an enlivened sense of being in the world in each moment rather than a sense of isolation and denial. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDale Borglum\, PhD\, founded and directed the Hanuman Foundation Dying Center in Santa Fe\, New Mexico\, the first residential facility in the United States to support conscious dying. He has been the Executive Director of the Living/Dying Project in Santa Fe and\, since 1986\, in the San Francisco Bay Area. He is the co-author with Ram Dass\, Daniel Goleman and Dwarka Bonner of Journey of Awakening: A Meditator’s Guidebook. Dale gives workshops on the topics of meditation\, healing\, and spiritual support for those with life-threatening illness\, and on caregiving as spiritual practice. He has a doctorate degree from Stanford University. \n\n\n\n\nOption 1: Two Day Workshop \nJanuary 30 and 31\, 2021 | 9:00 am – 5:30 pm \nLocation:   \nZoom \nCost: \n$290 early registration\, $310 on day of event \nCEs: 16 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of both sessions. \nOption 2: Two Day Workshop \nFebruary 27 and 28\, 2021 | 9:00 am – 5:30 pm \nLocation:   \nZoom      \nCost:  \n$290 early registration\, $310 on day of event \nCEs: 16 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of both sessions. \nOption 3: One Day Workshop \nFebruary 13\, 2021 | 9:00 am – 6:00 pm \nLocation:  \nZoom \nCost:  \n$175 early registration\, $195 on day of event            \nCEs: 8 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of full session. \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for this program and its content.  \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/healing-at-the-edge-conscious-living-conscious-dying-two-day-workshop-february-presented-by-dale-borglum-phd-co-sponsored-2/
LOCATION:Zoom\, Virtual\, CA\, United States
CATEGORIES:Co-Sponsored
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Dale-Borglum-e1536950115907.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210220T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210220T160000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20200720T112204Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210215T153720Z
UID:10000449-1613811600-1613836800@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Deeper Impact\, Wider Reach: Re-Imagining Kleinian Psychoanalysis – by Jennifer Kunst\, PhD [SEMINAR]
DESCRIPTION:Narrative: \nIn the 21st century\, clinicians have many tools available to help their clients change for the better. Despite this abundance of therapeutic models\, clinicians face a lot of pressure to utilize theories and techniques that offer the possibility of alleviating symptoms and improving client functioning in a short time frame. Training programs\, clinics\, insurance companies\, and clients themselves often prefer short-term\, more cost-effective models. Despite significant research showing their deep and lasting effects\, psychoanalytic models are often relegated to the backseat and judged as too lengthy and too costly. This workshop will offer a perspective on re-imagining the psychoanalytic model to make it more relevant to today’s mental health care culture and more useful for the 21st century clinician. The psychoanalytic theory and technique of Melanie Klein will be explored in detail and with an emphasis on a user-friendly approach. Through the use of didactic presentations\, live demonstration\, and case presentations\, the following topics will be covered: Klein’s model of psychopathology\, normal development\, and technique; Klein’s model of mental health; and clinical application of the Kleinian model in non-traditional settings and with a wide variety of patients. \nDr. Jennifer Kunst is a clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst in private practice in Pasadena\, CA where she works with adults\, adolescents\, couples\, and families. She trained at the Psychoanalytic Center of California\, where she is a Training and Supervising Analyst and teaches courses on Kleinian theory and technique.  She is passionate about distilling the complexity of psychoanalysis into ideas that can be applied to everyday life. Her outreach projects include her Psychology Today blog\, “A Headshrinker’s Guide to the Galaxy”\, and her book\, “Wisdom from the Couch: Knowing and Growing Yourself from the Inside Out” (Central Recovery Press\, 2014). \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $120 after \nNon-Members:\n \nNon-member Rate: $130 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $150 after \nCEs: \n6 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \nThis event will take place on Zoom. Please register for the event to receive the link. 
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/deeper-impact-wider-reach-re-imagining-kleinian-psychoanalysis/
LOCATION:Zoom\, Virtual\, CA\, United States
CATEGORIES:Seminars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/jennier-kunst.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210213T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210213T180000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20201029T164719Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201029T165138Z
UID:10000450-1613206800-1613239200@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Healing at the Edge: Conscious Living\, Conscious Dying [One Day Workshop] – Presented by Dale Borglum\, PhD  [CO-SPONSORED]
DESCRIPTION:Why do some people experience wholeness as they approach death\, while others lose themselves in denial\, depression\, distraction? Why is it that some of the most alive and awake Westerners I’ve known have been\, almost without exception\, people near death? Is there some powerful truth about life and about healing that you and I can receive from these few who\, as they went through the process of dying\, deeply realized their own wholeness? \nBringing emotional/spiritual support to someone with a life-threatening illness is a twofold task. First\, help the client realize they are more than that which will die – the finite self – the body and personality. At the same time\, honor this finite self\, healing its woundedness\, its identification with separateness. Rumi said\, “Grief is the garden of compassion.” This transmuting separateness of grief into the connectedness of compassion is the heart of the work. Confusion\, anxiety\, depression\, anger are typical responses arising as the end of a life approaches\, both for patients and their families. \nThis presentation will explore possibilities for realizing wholeness at the edge of life where illness\, grief\, and loss arise. Both psychological and spiritual tools will be used in the investigation of these profound and challenging issues. We will offer participants the opportunity to explore the deeper questions surrounding death\, healing\, and the sacred so that each of us can better embody an enlivened sense of being in the world in each moment rather than a sense of isolation and denial. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDale Borglum\, PhD\, founded and directed the Hanuman Foundation Dying Center in Santa Fe\, New Mexico\, the first residential facility in the United States to support conscious dying. He has been the Executive Director of the Living/Dying Project in Santa Fe and\, since 1986\, in the San Francisco Bay Area. He is the co-author with Ram Dass\, Daniel Goleman and Dwarka Bonner of Journey of Awakening: A Meditator’s Guidebook. Dale gives workshops on the topics of meditation\, healing\, and spiritual support for those with life-threatening illness\, and on caregiving as spiritual practice. He has a doctorate degree from Stanford University. \n\n\n\n\nOption 1: Two Day Workshop \nJanuary 30 and 31\, 2021 | 9:00 am – 5:30 pm \nLocation:   \nZoom \nCost: \n$290 early registration\, $310 on day of event \nCEs: 16 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of both sessions. \nOption 2: Two Day Workshop \nFebruary 27 and 28\, 2021 | 9:00 am – 5:30 pm \nLocation:   \nZoom      \nCost:  \n$290 early registration\, $310 on day of event \nCEs: 16 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of both sessions. \nOption 3: One Day Workshop \nFebruary 13\, 2021 | 9:00 am – 6:00 pm \nLocation:  \nZoom \nCost:  \n$175 early registration\, $195 on day of event            \nCEs: 8 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of full session. \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for this program and its content.  \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/healing-at-the-edge-conscious-living-conscious-dying-one-day-workshop-presented-by-dale-borglum-phd-co-sponsored/
LOCATION:https://cipmarin.org/event/healing-at-the-edge-conscious-living-conscious-dying-one-day-workshop-presented-by-dale-borglum-phd-co-sponsored/
CATEGORIES:Co-Sponsored
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Dale-Borglum-e1536950115907.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210130T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210131T173000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20201029T165553Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201101T003344Z
UID:10000451-1611997200-1612114200@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Healing at the Edge: Conscious Living\, Conscious Dying [Two Day Workshop - January] – Presented by Dale Borglum\, PhD  [CO-SPONSORED]
DESCRIPTION:Why do some people experience wholeness as they approach death\, while others lose themselves in denial\, depression\, distraction? Why is it that some of the most alive and awake Westerners I’ve known have been\, almost without exception\, people near death? Is there some powerful truth about life and about healing that you and I can receive from these few who\, as they went through the process of dying\, deeply realized their own wholeness? \nBringing emotional/spiritual support to someone with a life-threatening illness is a twofold task. First\, help the client realize they are more than that which will die – the finite self – the body and personality. At the same time\, honor this finite self\, healing its woundedness\, its identification with separateness. Rumi said\, “Grief is the garden of compassion.” This transmuting separateness of grief into the connectedness of compassion is the heart of the work. Confusion\, anxiety\, depression\, anger are typical responses arising as the end of a life approaches\, both for patients and their families. \nThis presentation will explore possibilities for realizing wholeness at the edge of life where illness\, grief\, and loss arise. Both psychological and spiritual tools will be used in the investigation of these profound and challenging issues. We will offer participants the opportunity to explore the deeper questions surrounding death\, healing\, and the sacred so that each of us can better embody an enlivened sense of being in the world in each moment rather than a sense of isolation and denial. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDale Borglum\, PhD\, founded and directed the Hanuman Foundation Dying Center in Santa Fe\, New Mexico\, the first residential facility in the United States to support conscious dying. He has been the Executive Director of the Living/Dying Project in Santa Fe and\, since 1986\, in the San Francisco Bay Area. He is the co-author with Ram Dass\, Daniel Goleman and Dwarka Bonner of Journey of Awakening: A Meditator’s Guidebook. Dale gives workshops on the topics of meditation\, healing\, and spiritual support for those with life-threatening illness\, and on caregiving as spiritual practice. He has a doctorate degree from Stanford University. \n\n\n\n\nOption 1: Two Day Workshop \nJanuary 30 and 31\, 2021 | 9:00 am – 5:30 pm \nLocation:   \nZoom \nCost: \n$290 early registration\, $310 on day of event \nCEs: 16 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of both sessions. \nOption 2: Two Day Workshop \nFebruary 27 and 28\, 2021 | 9:00 am – 5:30 pm \nLocation:   \nZoom      \nCost:  \n$290 early registration\, $310 on day of event \nCEs: 16 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of both sessions. \nOption 3: One Day Workshop \nFebruary 13\, 2021 | 9:00 am – 6:00 pm \nLocation:  \nZoom \nCost:  \n$175 early registration\, $195 on day of event            \nCEs: 8 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of full session. \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for this program and its content.  \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/healing-at-the-edge-conscious-living-conscious-dying-two-day-workshop-january-presented-by-dale-borglum-phd-co-sponsored/
LOCATION:https://cipmarin.org/event/healing-at-the-edge-conscious-living-conscious-dying-two-day-workshop-january-presented-by-dale-borglum-phd-co-sponsored/
CATEGORIES:Co-Sponsored
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Dale-Borglum-e1536950115907.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210123T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210123T130000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20200622T141131Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201008T103817Z
UID:10000520-1611392400-1611406800@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:What Every Psychotherapist Needs to Know About Divorce: Know the Factors that Create Good Break Ups – Stephen H. Sulmeyer\, JD\, PhD [CLASS]
DESCRIPTION:Narrative: \nDivorce has traditionally been viewed as a battle\, fought by vicious litigators who specialize in scorched-earth tactics\, that leaves both of the parties\, and especially their children\, as the losers in the process.  A great deal of excellent research has been done on the effects of such battles on the parties and the children\, with which clinicians need to be conversant.  At the same time\, the ways in which couples divorce has been changing continually since the advent of divorce mediation in the 1970s\, which in turn has generated further research.  Given the fact that in California over 50% of first marriages end in divorce\, clinicians need to understand what factors tend to be correlated with good and poor outcomes during and after divorce\, as well as be familiar with the various modalities available to assist divorcing couples to get through the dissolution process in an optimal way.  Such information\, when coupled with particular clinical skills including empathy and attention to psychodynamic details\, can help clinicians to work optimally with individual patients who are coping with the process and aftermath of divorce. \nIn this training\, the instructor will familiarize psychologists and other therapists with the basic research on litigated and non-litigated divorces\, including the emotional and developmental effects on parents and children\, as well as introduce participants to the various alternatives that now exist to traditional adversarial litigation.  Participants will learn the risk\, resilience and stabilizing factors that are associated with various divorce and post-divorce scenarios.  Attention will also be given to high-conflict couples\, including the effect of conflict on children\, and the various options available to help such individuals co-parent and resolve disputes post-separation.  This information will be synthesized to help clinicians work optimally with divorcing patients\, both in terms of maximizing resilience of parent and children\, and in terms of parenting post-divorce. \nStephen H. Sulmeyer\, JD\, PhD is a mediator with JAMS in San Francisco.  He specializes in complex and high-conflict disputes in a wide range of subject areas\, including family and divorce\, probate and elder\, family businesses\, business/commercial\, intellectual property\, employment\, discrimination\, partnerships\, and community matters.   In addition to his work as a lawyer and mediator\, Steve has a clinical psychology practice in Marin County\, California\, and works as a collaborative family specialist (coach).  He received his undergraduate and law degrees from Stanford University\, and his Ph.D. from the Institute of Transpersonal Psychology (now Sophia University)\, in Palo Alto\, California\, where he taught as a member of the adjunct faculty.  He is the co-founder (with Judge Verna Adams) of the Marin Superior Court’s interdisciplinary settlement conference program\, in which mental health professionals and lawyers team up to assist judges in settling custody and other cases.  He is also the founder and past president of Integrative Mediation Bay Area\, a group that teams up mental health professionals and attorneys in a conjoint mediation model in family law and other cases. \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$75 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $90 after \nNon-Members:\n \nNon-member Rate: $100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $110 after \nCEs: \n4 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \nThis event will take place on Zoom. Please register for the event to receive the link. 
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/what-every-psychotherapist-needs-to-know-about-divorce-know-the-factors-that-create-good-break-ups-stephen-h-sulmeyer-jd-phd-class/
LOCATION:https://cipmarin.org/event/what-every-psychotherapist-needs-to-know-about-divorce-know-the-factors-that-create-good-break-ups-stephen-h-sulmeyer-jd-phd-class/
CATEGORIES:Classes
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Picture1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201024T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201024T130000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20200511T082532Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201008T103647Z
UID:10000519-1603530000-1603544400@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:When Self-Hate is Self-Protection: Understanding Eating Disorders– Lisa Bograd\, MA\, MFT [CLASS]
DESCRIPTION:Narrative: Eating disorders are very complex disorders that can be very difficult for clinicians to treat both because of the life threatening nature of these disorders as well as the tendency of those afflicted with them to cling desperately to them despite the grave risk they pose to their physical health and emotional wellbeing. But if we really understand what is at stake for these patients in giving up their disorder\, if we can appreciate the profound way in which these afflictions have protected our patients from the pain of abuse\, neglect\, and from myriad parental failures and privations\, we may have a much better chance of helping to loosen their grip. \nIn my class we will delve into some of the writings of Freud\, particularly his paper\, “On Mourning and Melancholia\,” and we also explore some of the seminal contributions of Melanie Klein and Heinz Kohut as we seek to understand the deeper underpinnings of eating disorder symptomology. I will also incorporate examples from my own case material and do a mock session to elucidate some of the concepts I will be exploring as a means to give clinicians a better understanding of how to work psychodynamically with eating disorder sufferers\, and\, in so doing\, to begin to engage in the kind of work that can be far more rewarding and can lead to deep and lasting change. Lastly\, I will discuss eating disorders against the backdrop of race\, gender\, and sexual orientation with a focus on how eating disorders affect different minority groups. \nLisa Bograd\, MA\, MFT\, has been working with people with eating disorders and their partners and parents for close two decades. She has trained for 4 years with the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Institute in their East Bay Year Long programs and for 3 years with the Northern California chapter of the Institute for Contemporary Psychanalysis. Lisa gives lectures to professionals and to interns and trainees on eating disorder treatment and assessment\, and she runs workshops for parents and for people with eating disorders and their loved ones. She has a private practice in San Francisco and Berkeley where she specializes in working with adults\, preteens and teens with eating disorders\, addictions\, depression and anxiety and codependency. \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$75 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to class\, $90 after \nNon-Members:\n \n$100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to class\, $110 after \nCEs: 4 CEs for LMFT & LCSWs and 4 CEs for Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \nThis event will take place on Zoom. Please register for the event to receive the link. 
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/when-self-hate-is-self-protection-understanding-eating-disorders-october/
LOCATION:https://cipmarin.org/event/when-self-hate-is-self-protection-understanding-eating-disorders-october/
CATEGORIES:Classes
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/lisa-bograd-headshot-e1565910758908.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201016T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201016T143000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20200624T130626Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201008T103604Z
UID:10000523-1602851400-1602858600@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Healing the Self Through Affect Integration:  An Intersubjective Approach – by Jane Rubin\, PhD [SEMINAR]
DESCRIPTION:Narrative: \nWhat is the source of our patients’ suffering? How can we most effectively address it? There are as many psychoanalytic answers to these questions as there are psychoanalytic theories. From the perspective of intersubjectivity theory\, many of the issues our patients struggle with—poor decision-making\, difficulties establishing trusting relationships\, addictions and other self-destructive behaviors\, and more— are best understood as the consequence of their inability to experience a full range of affects. Intersubjectivity theory helps us understand why our patients have difficulty experiencing both negative and positive affects; the impact this has on their lives; and how the therapists can help patients to experience greater affect integration. \nIn this seminar\, we’ll study contemporary intersubjectivity theory\, as well as relevant articles from infant research\, to understand how to work effectively with patients who suffer from significant affective constriction. In each class meeting\, we’ll discuss a foundational paper in intersubjectivity theory. Topics will include how affects organize self-experience\, the forms and importance of non-verbal communication\, and working in the transference to increase the patient’s affective range. Each class session will include a discussion of a foundational article in intersubjectivity theory. This will be followed by a discussion of a case in which participants will learn to effectively translate these ideas from theory to practice. Participants should develop greater confidence in using the clinical relationship to facilitate meaningful psychological change. \nJane Rubin\, PhD received her PhD in Philosophy from UC Berkeley\, her PhD in Clinical Psychology from the Wright Institute\, and her PsyD in Contemporary Psychoanalysis at the Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis in Los Angeles. She is in private practice in Berkeley. \n\nSeven sessions\, the third Friday of the month:  \nOct 16\, Nov 20\, 2020; Jan 15\, Feb 19\, Mar 19\,  \nApr 16 & May 21\, 2021 | 12:30 pm – 2:30 pm \nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$230 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $245 after \nNon-Members:\n \nNon-member Rate: $300 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $320 after \nCEs: \n14 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \n  \nThis event will take place on Zoom. Please register for the event to receive the link. 
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/healing-the-self-through-affect-integration-an-intersubjective-approach-nov/
LOCATION:https://cipmarin.org/event/healing-the-self-through-affect-integration-an-intersubjective-approach-nov/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Seminars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/jane-rubin.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201010T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201010T160000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20200422T104804Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201008T103515Z
UID:10000517-1602320400-1602345600@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:The Rough Patch in Marriage: Working with Couples Psychoanalytically – Daphne de Marneffe\, PhD [SEMINAR]
DESCRIPTION:Narrative: Empirical and clinical research on couple processes and couple therapy has expanded in the last thirty years.  Simultaneously\, psychoanalytic views of development and therapeutic action have incorporated findings from research on attachment\, mentalization\, and emotion.  This seminar provides a grounding in current theories of mentalization\, couple therapy\, and adult development as a vehicle for considering the crises and challenges of long-term intimate relationships and how to best work with them psychoanalytically. As therapists\, we need to hold in tension the needs of the individuals and the needs of the couple. How do marriage and individual development enhance or constrain each other?  How does our therapeutic perspective change by virtue of treating the individual or the couple?  Through the use of didactic presentation\, clinical examples\, and interactive discussion\, the following topics will be covered: the roles of attachment\, mentalization\, and emotion regulation in couple dynamics; enhancing the “couple state of mind”; a clinical approach for enlivening “dead” couples; and clinical dilemmas surrounding specific issues in long-term relationships (affairs\, drug/alcohol use\, money\, children\, health\, and the empty nest). Together we will think about the values—psychoanalytic\, ethical\, existential—that shape our understanding of these issues and inform our clinical choices. \nDaphne de Marneffe\, PhD is a psychologist and author of The Rough Patch: Marriage and the Art of Living Together and Maternal Desire: On Children\, Love\, and the Inner Life.   She has published scholarly papers on gender identity development\, maternal subjectivity\, and psychoanalytic history\, and she teaches and lectures on couple therapy\, adult development\, and parenthood. She is also a contributing editor to Parents Magazine\, where she writes a monthly column on couple relationships.  Her work has been featured in the New York Times\, O Magazine\, NPR\, Greater Good\, Psychotherapy Networker\, and Talks at Google.  She is in private practice in Corte Madera\, CA \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $120 after \nNon-Members:\n \nNon-member Rate: $130 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $150 after \nCEs: 6 CEs for LMFTs & LCSWs and 6 CEs for Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/rough-patch-in-marriage-working-with-couples-psychoanalytically-2/
LOCATION:https://cipmarin.org/event/rough-patch-in-marriage-working-with-couples-psychoanalytically-2/
CATEGORIES:Seminars
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200620T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200620T130000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20200330T153945Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200609T185926Z
UID:10000516-1592643600-1592658000@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Lust\, Rage\, Chaos and Love: Erotic Transference in Psychotherapy– Felicia Matto-Shepard\, LMFT [CLASS] [CANCELED]
DESCRIPTION:Narrative: While all psychotherapists are trained to understand that “therapy never includes sex\,” few feel adequately train in how to navigate sexual content that might emerge in the course of treatment.  And when the sexual content is directed toward the therapist\, many feel unprepared to respond. Merely setting boundaries with the patient without exploring the meaning of the erotic transference risks the loss of a vital archetypal energy that could be critical to the patient’s development.  At the same time\, eros has the potential to create chaos and destruction.  When we don’t address eros in the room\, it is relegated to the shadow of the unconscious where it can cause more harm. \nThis workshop will provide a framework for understanding the archetypal nature of erotic transference and its potential to function as a defense or as a healing force.  Based in Jungian psychology\, the presentation will include a theoretical framework of mythology and archetype\, case examples of both the healing and destructive nature of eros\, and experiential exercises to apply the material.  We will consider variations of gender and sexual orientation\, lust and rage as defenses against connection and the place of love in psychotherapy. \nFelicia Matto-Shepard\, MFT is a certified Jungian Analyst in private practice in Petaluma.  She works at the intersection of psychology\, embodiment and imagination.  She has a long time interest in sexuality\, power and gender.  In addition to psychotherapy\, Felicia teaches classes in active imagination through process art.  Felicia is an Analyst Member of the CG Jung Institute of San Francisco. \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$75 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to class\, $90 after \nNon-Members:\n \n$100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to class\, $110 after \nCEs: 4 CEs for LMFT & LCSWs and 4 CEs for Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/lust-rage-chaos-love-erotic-transference-psychotherapy-june/
LOCATION:Zoom\, Virtual\, CA\, United States
CATEGORIES:Classes
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200509T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200509T130000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20190626T192125Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200511T083445Z
UID:10000506-1589014800-1589029200@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:When Self-Hate is Self-Protection: Understanding Eating Disorders– Lisa Bograd\, MA\, MFT [CLASS] [CANCELED]
DESCRIPTION:This class has been canceled. It has been rescheduled to October 24\, 2020 at 9AM.  \nNarrative: Eating disorders are very complex disorders that can be very difficult for clinicians to treat both because of the life threatening nature of these disorders as well as the tendency of those afflicted with them to cling desperately to them despite the grave risk they pose to their physical health and emotional wellbeing. But if we really understand what is at stake for these patients in giving up their disorder\, if we can appreciate the profound way in which these afflictions have protected our patients from the pain of abuse\, neglect\, and from myriad parental failures and privations\, we may have a much better chance of helping to loosen their grip. \nIn my class we will delve into some of the writings of Freud\, particularly his paper\, “On Mourning and Melancholia\,” and we also explore some of the seminal contributions of Melanie Klein and Heinz Kohut as we seek to understand the deeper underpinnings of eating disorder symptomology. I will also incorporate examples from my own case material and do a mock session to elucidate some of the concepts I will be exploring as a means to give clinicians a better understanding of how to work psychodynamically with eating disorder sufferers\, and\, in so doing\, to begin to engage in the kind of work that can be far more rewarding and can lead to deep and lasting change. Lastly\, I will discuss eating disorders against the backdrop of race\, gender\, and sexual orientation with a focus on how eating disorders affect different minority groups. \nLisa Bograd\, MA\, MFT\, has been working with people with eating disorders and their partners and parents for close two decades. She has trained for 4 years with the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Institute in their East Bay Year Long programs and for 3 years with the Northern California chapter of the Institute for Contemporary Psychanalysis. Lisa gives lectures to professionals and to interns and trainees on eating disorder treatment and assessment\, and she runs workshops for parents and for people with eating disorders and their loved ones. She has a private practice in San Francisco and Berkeley where she specializes in working with adults\, preteens and teens with eating disorders\, addictions\, depression and anxiety and codependency. \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$75 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to class\, $90 after \nNon-Members:\n \n$100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to class\, $110 after \nCEs: 4 CEs for LMFT & LCSWs and 4 CEs for Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/when-self-hate-is-self-protection-understanding-eating-disorders-2/
LOCATION:Zoom Only\, CA\, United States
CATEGORIES:Classes
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/lisa-bograd-headshot-e1565910758908.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200404T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200404T160000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20190626T150626Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200416T123531Z
UID:10000502-1585990800-1586016000@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:The Rough Patch in Marriage: Working with Couples Psychoanalytically – Daphne de Marneffe\, PhD [SEMINAR] [CANCELED]
DESCRIPTION:This class has been canceled. It has been rescheduled to Saturday\, October 3\, 2020. \nNarrative: Empirical and clinical research on couple processes and couple therapy has expanded in the last thirty years.  Simultaneously\, psychoanalytic views of development and therapeutic action have incorporated findings from research on attachment\, mentalization\, and emotion.  This seminar provides a grounding in current theories of mentalization\, couple therapy\, and adult development as a vehicle for considering the crises and challenges of long-term intimate relationships and how to best work with them psychoanalytically. As therapists\, we need to hold in tension the needs of the individuals and the needs of the couple. How do marriage and individual development enhance or constrain each other?  How does our therapeutic perspective change by virtue of treating the individual or the couple?  Through the use of didactic presentation\, clinical examples\, and interactive discussion\, the following topics will be covered: the roles of attachment\, mentalization\, and emotion regulation in couple dynamics; enhancing the “couple state of mind”; a clinical approach for enlivening “dead” couples; and clinical dilemmas surrounding specific issues in long-term relationships (affairs\, drug/alcohol use\, money\, children\, health\, and the empty nest). Together we will think about the values—psychoanalytic\, ethical\, existential—that shape our understanding of these issues and inform our clinical choices. \nDaphne de Marneffe\, PhD is a psychologist and author of The Rough Patch: Marriage and the Art of Living Together and Maternal Desire: On Children\, Love\, and the Inner Life.   She has published scholarly papers on gender identity development\, maternal subjectivity\, and psychoanalytic history\, and she teaches and lectures on couple therapy\, adult development\, and parenthood. She is also a contributing editor to Parents Magazine\, where she writes a monthly column on couple relationships.  Her work has been featured in the New York Times\, O Magazine\, NPR\, Greater Good\, Psychotherapy Networker\, and Talks at Google.  She is in private practice in Corte Madera\, CA \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $120 after \nNon-Members:\n \nNon-member Rate: $130 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $150 after \nCEs: 6 CEs for LMFTs & LCSWs and 6 CEs for Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/rough-patch-in-marriage-working-with-couples-psychoanalytically/
LOCATION:Zoom Only\, CA\, United States
CATEGORIES:Seminars
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200314T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200314T130000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20190626T185904Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200313T180035Z
UID:10000505-1584176400-1584190800@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Lust\, Rage\, Chaos and Love: Erotic Transference in Psychotherapy– Felicia Matto-Shepard\, LMFT [CLASS] [CANCELED]
DESCRIPTION:This class has been canceled. It has been rescheduled to June 20\, 2020. \nNarrative: While all psychotherapists are trained to understand that “therapy never includes sex\,” few feel adequately train in how to navigate sexual content that might emerge in the course of treatment.  And when the sexual content is directed toward the therapist\, many feel unprepared to respond. Merely setting boundaries with the patient without exploring the meaning of the erotic transference risks the loss of a vital archetypal energy that could be critical to the patient’s development.  At the same time\, eros has the potential to create chaos and destruction.  When we don’t address eros in the room\, it is relegated to the shadow of the unconscious where it can cause more harm. \nThis workshop will provide a framework for understanding the archetypal nature of erotic transference and its potential to function as a defense or as a healing force.  Based in Jungian psychology\, the presentation will include a theoretical framework of mythology and archetype\, case examples of both the healing and destructive nature of eros\, and experiential exercises to apply the material.  We will consider variations of gender and sexual orientation\, lust and rage as defenses against connection and the place of love in psychotherapy. \nFelicia Matto-Shepard\, MFT is a certified Jungian Analyst in private practice in Petaluma.  She works at the intersection of psychology\, embodiment and imagination.  She has a long time interest in sexuality\, power and gender.  In addition to psychotherapy\, Felicia teaches classes in active imagination through process art.  Felicia is an Analyst Member of the CG Jung Institute of San Francisco. \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$75 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to class\, $90 after \nNon-Members:\n \n$100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to class\, $110 after \nCEs: 4 CEs for LMFT & LCSWs and 4 CEs for Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \n\nThis class has been canceled. It has been rescheduled to June 20\, 2020.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/lust-rage-chaos-love-erotic-transference-psychotherapy/
LOCATION:Zoom Only\, CA\, United States
CATEGORIES:Classes
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200313T121500
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200313T141500
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20200115T215634Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200131T002703Z
UID:10000515-1584101700-1584108900@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:A Field Guide to Dreams and Dreaming [Four Day Seminar] – Presented by Meredith Sabini\, PhD [SEMINAR]
DESCRIPTION:Friday\, March 13\, March 27\, & April 10\, April 24\, 2020 | 12:15 pm – 2:15 pm \nNarrative: Dreams have fallen off our professions map and we no longer turn to them for diagnostic and prognostic information\, as healing traditions previously have. Since clinical training programs provide no education on empirical findings or creative dreamwork methods\, therapists are left falling back on outdated and unsubstantiated notions such as that dreams are wish- fulfillment or pertain only to the dreamer; or therapists tell clients they don’t know how to work with dreams. This lamentable situation is easily rectified: “not-knowingness” can become the starting point for a dream dialogue with a client by acknowledging that a dream’s meaning and purpose do not exist ahead of time but will emerge with exploration. \nThis program\, offered by a dream specialist with four decades’ experience in dream research and education\, draws on the analogy of a botanical foray where the shape of foliage\, texture of bark\, root structure\, and type of seed pod are noted. Likewise with dream examples\, we will look at the narrative\, actors\, dreamer’s stance\, and resources. The long-evolved dreaming mind has already done the hard work of creating a storyline to depict the dreamer’s intrapsychic and interpersonal issues with spot-on precision. By carefully observing and exploring what the dream offers\, we will come upon the essential metaphors that are salient to a client’s past history and present issues. Participants will discover that dreams can contain both subjective and objective information about the dreamer and others that can be of great value in helping them navigate challenging life situations. Open to clinicians of any orientation and experience level. Bring client and/or your own dreams for exploration. Examples also provided by instructor. \nMeredith Sabini\, PhD is founder/director of The Dream Institute of Northern California\, in Berkeley\, and a state CE Provider since 1997. She is widely published in the field of dream studies and has specialized in dream education and consultation for 30 years. She is CIP’s director of Dream Training \n\nCOST:  \nNon Members:\n$160 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to first session\, $180 after \nCIP Members:\n$130 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to first session\, $150 after \nCEs: 8 CEs for LMFTs and LCSWs and 8 CEs for Psychologists (Certificates issued after completion of the 8 sessions.) \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/a-field-guide-to-dreams-and-dreaming-presented-by-meredith-sabini-phd/
LOCATION:CIP Group Room\, 1330 Lincoln Ave # 201\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94901\, United States
CATEGORIES:Seminars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/MS-headshot-e1565910302135.jpg
GEO:37.9762699;-122.5225763
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=CIP Group Room 1330 Lincoln Ave # 201 San Rafael CA 94901 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1330 Lincoln Ave # 201:geo:-122.5225763,37.9762699
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200222T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200223T173000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20190731T232020Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190731T232116Z
UID:10000513-1582362000-1582479000@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Healing at the Edge: Conscious Living\, Conscious Dying [Two Day Workshop - February] – Presented by Dale Borglum\, PhD  [CO-SPONSORED]
DESCRIPTION:Why do some people experience wholeness as they approach death\, while others lose themselves in denial\, depression\, distraction? Why is it that some of the most alive and awake Westerners I’ve known have been\, almost without exception\, people near death? Is there some powerful truth about life and about healing that you and I can receive from these few who\, as they went through the process of dying\, deeply realized their own wholeness? \nBringing emotional/spiritual support to someone with a life-threatening illness is a twofold task.  First\, help the client realize they are more than that which will die – the finite self – the body and personality. At the same time\, honor this finite self\, healing its woundedness\, its identification with separateness. Rumi said “Grief is the garden of compassion.” This transmuting separateness of grief into the connectedness of compassion is that the heart of the work. Confusion\, anxiety\, depression\, anger are typical responses arising as the end of a life approaches\, both for patients and their families. \nThis presentation will explore possibilities for realizing wholeness at the edge of life where illness\, grief\, and loss arise. Both psychological and spiritual tools will be used in the investigation of these profound and challenging issues. We will offer participants the opportunity to explore the deeper questions surrounding death\, healing\, and the sacred\, so that each of us can better embody an enlivened sense of being in the world in each moment rather than a sense of isolation and denial. \nDale Borglum\, PhD\, founded and directed the Hanuman Foundation Dying Center in Santa Fe\, New Mexico\, the first residential facility in the United States to support conscious dying. He has been the Executive Director of the Living/Dying Project in Santa Fe and\, since 1986\, in the San Francisco Bay Area. He is the co-author with Ram Dass\, Daniel Goleman and Dwarka Bonner of Journey of Awakening: A Meditator’s Guidebook. Dale gives workshops on the topics of meditation\, healing\, and spiritual support for those with life-threatening illness\, and on caregiving as spiritual practice. He has a doctorate degree from Stanford. \n\nOption 1: Two Day Workshop \nJanuary 25 and 26\, 2020 | 9:00 am – 5:30 pm \nLocation:   \nFinley Center \n2060 W. College Avenue \nSanta Rosa\, CA 95401 \nCost: \n$290 early registration\, $310 on day of event \nCEs: 16 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of both sessions. \nOption 2: Two Day Workshop \nFebruary 22 and 23\, 2020 | 9:00 am – 5:30 pm \nLocation:   \nThe Women’s Building \n3543 18th St #8 \nSan Francisco\, CA 94110         \nCost:  \n$290 early registration\, $310 on day of event \nCEs: 16 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after    completion of both sessions. \nOption 3: One Day Workshop \nFebruary 8\, 2020 | 9:00 am – 6:00 pm \nLocation:  \nSan Francisco Theological Seminary \n5 Richmond Road \nSan Anselmo\, CA 94960 \nCost:  \n$175 early registration\, $195 on day of event            \nCEs: 8 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of full session. \n  \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for this program and its content.  \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/healing-at-the-edge-conscious-living-conscious-dying-february/
LOCATION:The Women’s Building\, 3543 18th St #8\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94110\, United States
CATEGORIES:Co-Sponsored
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200208T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200208T180000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20190731T232818Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190731T232926Z
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SUMMARY:Healing at the Edge: Conscious Living\, Conscious Dying [One Day Workshop] – Presented by Dale Borglum\, PhD  [CO-SPONSORED]
DESCRIPTION:Why do some people experience wholeness as they approach death\, while others lose themselves in denial\, depression\, distraction? Why is it that some of the most alive and awake Westerners I’ve known have been\, almost without exception\, people near death? Is there some powerful truth about life and about healing that you and I can receive from these few who\, as they went through the process of dying\, deeply realized their own wholeness? \nBringing emotional/spiritual support to someone with a life-threatening illness is a twofold task.  First\, help the client realize they are more than that which will die – the finite self – the body and personality. At the same time\, honor this finite self\, healing its woundedness\, its identification with separateness. Rumi said “Grief is the garden of compassion.” This transmuting separateness of grief into the connectedness of compassion is that the heart of the work. Confusion\, anxiety\, depression\, anger are typical responses arising as the end of a life approaches\, both for patients and their families. \nThis presentation will explore possibilities for realizing wholeness at the edge of life where illness\, grief\, and loss arise. Both psychological and spiritual tools will be used in the investigation of these profound and challenging issues. We will offer participants the opportunity to explore the deeper questions surrounding death\, healing\, and the sacred\, so that each of us can better embody an enlivened sense of being in the world in each moment rather than a sense of isolation and denial. \nDale Borglum\, PhD\, founded and directed the Hanuman Foundation Dying Center in Santa Fe\, New Mexico\, the first residential facility in the United States to support conscious dying. He has been the Executive Director of the Living/Dying Project in Santa Fe and\, since 1986\, in the San Francisco Bay Area. He is the co-author with Ram Dass\, Daniel Goleman and Dwarka Bonner of Journey of Awakening: A Meditator’s Guidebook. Dale gives workshops on the topics of meditation\, healing\, and spiritual support for those with life-threatening illness\, and on caregiving as spiritual practice. He has a doctorate degree from Stanford. \n\nOption 1: Two Day Workshop \nJanuary 25 and 26\, 2020 | 9:00 am – 5:30 pm \nLocation:   \nFinley Center \n2060 W. College Avenue \nSanta Rosa\, CA 95401 \nCost: \n$290 early registration\, $310 on day of event \nCEs: 16 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of both sessions. \nOption 2: Two Day Workshop \nFebruary 22 and 23\, 2020 | 9:00 am – 5:30 pm \nLocation:   \nThe Women’s Building \n3543 18th St #8 \nSan Francisco\, CA 94110         \nCost:  \n$290 early registration\, $310 on day of event \nCEs: 16 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after    completion of both sessions. \nOption 3: One Day Workshop \nFebruary 8\, 2020 | 9:00 am – 6:00 pm \nLocation:  \nSan Francisco Theological Seminary \n5 Richmond Road \nSan Anselmo\, CA 94960 \nCost:  \n$175 early registration\, $195 on day of event            \nCEs: 8 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of full session. \n  \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for this program and its content.  \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/healing-at-the-edge-conscious-living-conscious-dying-one-day-workshop/
LOCATION:San Francisco Theological Seminary\, 5 Richmond Road\, San Anselmo\, CA\, 94960\, United States
CATEGORIES:Co-Sponsored
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200208T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200208T160000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20190626T150034Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200131T002831Z
UID:10000501-1581152400-1581177600@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Hand in Hand: Enlisting Parents as Partners in Child Trauma Therapy – Vilma Reyes\, PsyD [SEMINAR]
DESCRIPTION:Narrative: Through the use of didactic training\, group discussion and interactive question-and-answer sessions\, this seminar will teach therapists how to identify the ways that trauma impacts childhood development and learning\, and how it impacts caregivers and families as well. Participants will learn about the principles of trauma informed and family-based interventions\, like CPP\, and will be able to identify two ways to prevent vicarious trauma. \nDr. Vilma Reyes is a licensed clinical psychologist who provides Child-Parent Psychotherapy\, training and supervision and coordinates community-based mental health outreach services and evaluation funded by the Tipping Point Community\, at the University of California\, San Francisco\, Department of Psychiatry in the Child Trauma Research Program. She has over 11 years of clinical experience providing relationship-focused\, culturally-informed interventions for trauma-exposed young children and their families. Dr. Reyes is Latina and specializes in working with Spanish speaking immigrant families. \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $120 after \nNon-Members:\n \nNon-member Rate: $130 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $150 after \nCEs: 6 CEs for LMFTs & LCSWs and 6 CEs for Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/hand-in-hand-enlisting-parents-as-partners-child-trauma-therapy/
LOCATION:Dominican University-Creekside Room\, 50 Acacia Avenue\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94901\, United States
CATEGORIES:Seminars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Vilma-Reyes-Photo-e1565909650109.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200125T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200126T180000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20190731T231241Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190731T232815Z
UID:10000512-1579942800-1580061600@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Healing at the Edge: Conscious Living\, Conscious Dying [Two Day Workshop - January] – Presented by Dale Borglum\, PhD  [CO-SPONSORED]
DESCRIPTION:Why do some people experience wholeness as they approach death\, while others lose themselves in denial\, depression\, distraction? Why is it that some of the most alive and awake Westerners I’ve known have been\, almost without exception\, people near death? Is there some powerful truth about life and about healing that you and I can receive from these few who\, as they went through the process of dying\, deeply realized their own wholeness? \nBringing emotional/spiritual support to someone with a life-threatening illness is a twofold task.  First\, help the client realize they are more than that which will die – the finite self – the body and personality. At the same time\, honor this finite self\, healing its woundedness\, its identification with separateness. Rumi said “Grief is the garden of compassion.” This transmuting separateness of grief into the connectedness of compassion is that the heart of the work. Confusion\, anxiety\, depression\, anger are typical responses arising as the end of a life approaches\, both for patients and their families. \nThis presentation will explore possibilities for realizing wholeness at the edge of life where illness\, grief\, and loss arise. Both psychological and spiritual tools will be used in the investigation of these profound and challenging issues. We will offer participants the opportunity to explore the deeper questions surrounding death\, healing\, and the sacred\, so that each of us can better embody an enlivened sense of being in the world in each moment rather than a sense of isolation and denial. \nDale Borglum\, PhD\, founded and directed the Hanuman Foundation Dying Center in Santa Fe\, New Mexico\, the first residential facility in the United States to support conscious dying. He has been the Executive Director of the Living/Dying Project in Santa Fe and\, since 1986\, in the San Francisco Bay Area. He is the co-author with Ram Dass\, Daniel Goleman and Dwarka Bonner of Journey of Awakening: A Meditator’s Guidebook. Dale gives workshops on the topics of meditation\, healing\, and spiritual support for those with life-threatening illness\, and on caregiving as spiritual practice. He has a doctorate degree from Stanford. \n\nOption 1: Two Day Workshop \nJanuary 25 and 26\, 2020 | 9:00 am – 5:30 pm \nLocation:   \nFinley Center \n2060 W. College Avenue \nSanta Rosa\, CA 95401 \nCost: \n$290 early registration\, $310 on day of event \nCEs: 16 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of both sessions. \nOption 2: Two Day Workshop \nFebruary 22 and 23\, 2020 | 9:00 am – 5:30 pm \nLocation:   \nThe Women’s Building \n3543 18th St #8 \nSan Francisco\, CA 94110         \nCost:  \n$290 early registration\, $310 on day of event \nCEs: 16 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after    completion of both sessions. \nOption 3: One Day Workshop \nFebruary 8\, 2020 | 9:00 am – 6:00 pm \nLocation:  \nSan Francisco Theological Seminary \n5 Richmond Road \nSan Anselmo\, CA 94960 \nCost:  \n$175 early registration\, $195 on day of event            \nCEs: 8 CEs for LMFTs\, LCSWs\, and Psychologists. Certificates issued after completion of full session. \n  \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for this program and its content.  \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/healing-at-the-edge-conscious-living-conscious-dying-january/
LOCATION:Finley Center\, 2060 W. College Avenue\, Santa Rosa\, CA\, 95401\, United States
CATEGORIES:Co-Sponsored
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GEO:38.4441078;-122.7491001
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200118T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20200118T130000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20190626T185006Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191209T133801Z
UID:10000504-1579338000-1579352400@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Working in the Eye of the Storm: Helping Families through Separation and Divorce– Nancy Oleson\, PhD
DESCRIPTION:Narrative: The time around the decision to separate/divorce is one of intense distress and provides a common reason for people to consult a mental health professional.  Adults and children are often flooded with anger\, fear and guilt\, and it is very common for the confusion parents experience to lead to actions that harm themselves and their children. However\, these are also fertile period for growth and development in which the person’s underlying psychological structures are “softer” and more open to change.  The presenter will provide information about ways to work effectively with people in acute distress\, as well as current laws\, rules of court\, guidelines for ethical professional practice\, and best practices for participants to use to ground their work with divorcing clients. There will be a focus on balancing empathic joining and therapeutic neutrality. \nDr. Nancy Olesen is a graduate of the University of Wisconsin\, with a Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She works as a child psychologist and forensic expert in juvenile and family courts as well as training mental health and legal professionals who work with the families involved in divorce or other family disruptions. She is licensed in California and Hawaii. \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$75 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to class\, $90 after \nNon-Members:\n \n$100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to class\, $110 after \nCEs: 4 CEs for LMFT & LCSWs and 4 CEs for Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/working-eye-of-storm-helping-families-through-separation-divorce/
LOCATION:CIP Group Room\, 1330 Lincoln Ave # 201\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94901\, United States
CATEGORIES:Classes
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/nancy-oleson-headshot.jpg
GEO:37.9762699;-122.5225763
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=CIP Group Room 1330 Lincoln Ave # 201 San Rafael CA 94901 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1330 Lincoln Ave # 201:geo:-122.5225763,37.9762699
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20191102T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20191102T130000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20190626T152615Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191025T204934Z
UID:10000503-1572685200-1572699600@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Traversing the No Cry Zone: Psychotherapy with Men – Daniel S. Ellenberg\, PhD
DESCRIPTION:Narrative: Male clients often present challenges to psychotherapists. Men are socialized to feel threated by the very nature of the therapeutic process: the language of feelings\, the disclosure of vulnerability\, and the admission of dependency needs. Male clients’ discomfort with the developing intimacy of a therapy relationship can manifest as early termination\, anger at the therapist\, unproductive intellectualizing\, and other forms of resistance. Yet\, emerging theory and research suggests that men can benefit from psychotherapy approaches that incorporate empathy and sensitivity to a man’s unique personal and socialized experiences. \nMale pain is not always obvious. Many men do suffer from depression and anxiety-related disorders\, but often it is manifested in and reflected through addiction\, violence\, interpersonal conflict\, and general irritability. Many mental health professionals see men as reluctant visitors to the consulting room\, coerced by family or legal pressures to attend. Initial resistance to psychological intervention might lead to the conclusion that men are not good candidates for therapy. This course will help therapists understand the damaging impact of male socialization\, the problems men are likely to present in therapeutic environments\, and the special skills and treatment modalities most effective in making progress with male clients. It will also address the personal and countertransference issues that often emerge for both male and female clinicians in their clinical work with men. \nDaniel Ellenberg\, PhD\, is a leadership coach\, licensed therapist\, seminar leader\, and group facilitator. He is a principle in both Rewire Leadership Institute and Relationships That Work. He leads Strength with Heart men’s groups and workshops\, is a member of the APA division for the psychological study of men and masculinity\, is a founding member of the Men’s Counseling Guild\, and wrote his dissertation on psychological aspects of the male sex role. He is co-author (with his wife) of Lovers for Life: Creating Lasting Passion\, Trust\, and True Partnership.  He co-created and delivered a resilience training program for several NASA space centers. \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$75 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to class\, $90 after \nNon-Members:\n \n$100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to class\, $110 after \nCEs: 4 CEs for LMFT & LCSWs and 4 CEs for Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/traversing-no-cry-zone-psychotherapy-with-men/
LOCATION:CIP Group Room\, 1330 Lincoln Ave # 201\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94901\, United States
CATEGORIES:Classes
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Daniel-Ellenberg-Head-shot-2011-e1565910662294.jpg
GEO:37.9762699;-122.5225763
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20191026T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20191026T160000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20190626T014449Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190805T163611Z
UID:10000500-1572080400-1572105600@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Buried Above Ground Understanding\, Assessing\, and Treating Suicidal People – Presented by Joseph H. Obegi\, PsyD
DESCRIPTION:Narrative: This 6-hour course covers the essential aspects of suicide risk assessment and intervention. Part 1 teaches participants how to complete a high-quality suicide risk assessment\, an essential first step in protecting the suicidal patient. Participants will learn a structured approach to (a) inquiring about suicidal thinking and behavior and (b) integrating this information with warning signs and risk factors for suicide. Guidelines for estimating suicide risk will be reviewed as well as how to create a treatment plan that reduces risk. \nIn Part 2\, participants will learn about treatment options that can safely and effectively reduce suicide risk. Two interventions—safety planning and means safety—address the near-term safety of patients while outpatient treatments that prioritize suicidality can mitigate factors that drive suicide risk. Participants will be introduced to these interventions and their research basis. Finally\, participants will learn the legal complexities involved in treating suicidal patients. \nThis course fulfills the BOP-CA suicide requirement for psychologists. \n Dr. Joseph Obegi completed his education at the California School of Professional Psychology and his postdoctoral training in the Department of Psychiatry\, UC San Diego. He is a Senior Psychologist with the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation where he coordinates suicide prevention efforts in the inpatient psychiatric units at the California Medical Facility. In the community\, he provides training and consultation in topics related to suicide and has part-time practice working with adults. He writes about suicide risk assessment\, the standard of care\, and suicidality as a diagnostic candidate. He is the co-editor of Attachment Theory and Research in Clinical Work with Adults. \n\nCOST:  \nCIP Member:   \n$100 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $120 after \nNon-Members:\n \nNon-member Rate: $130 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to seminar\, $150 after \nCEs: 6 CEs for LMFTs & LCSWs and 6 CEs for Psychologists \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/buried-above-ground-understanding-assessing-treating-suicidal-people/
LOCATION:Zoom Only\, CA\, United States
CATEGORIES:Seminars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Obegi-head-shot-high-res-e1565022911461.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20191018T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20191018T143000
DTSTAMP:20260420T053734
CREATED:20190626T193321Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191122T201827Z
UID:10000507-1571401800-1571409000@cipmarin.org
SUMMARY:Working Intersubjectively: The Clinical Relationship as the Source of Meaningful Change – Presented by Jane Rubin\, PhD
DESCRIPTION:Eight sessions\, the third Fridays of the month: \nOctober 18\, November 15\, December 20\, 2019\, January 17\, February 21\, March 20\, April 17 & May 15\, 2020 | 12:30 – 2:30 pm \nNarrative: Intersubjectivity theory sees the relationship between patient and therapist as the primary source of psychological change. It provides a complex understanding of the clinical relationship that includes new ways of thinking about transference and countertransference\, and how therapists’ misunderstandings of the ways they affect their patients can exacerbate the very problems they’re trying to treat. \nIn this seminar\, we’ll study the basic concepts of intersubjectivity theory with the goal of translating theory into practice. In each class meeting\, we’ll discuss a foundational paper in intersubjectivity theory. Topics will include understanding and working with intersubjective conjunctions and disjunctions; understanding the repetitive and developmental dimensions of the transference; and how affects organize self-experience. This will be followed by a discussion of a case in which participants will learn to effectively translate these ideas from theory to practice. Participants should develop greater confidence in using the clinical relationship to facilitate meaningful psychological change. \nJane Rubin\, PhD\, received her PhD in Philosophy from UC Berkeley\, her PhD in Clinical Psychology from the Wright Institute\, and her PsyD in Contemporary Psychoanalysis at the Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis in Los Angeles. She is in private practice in Berkeley. \n\nCOST:  \nNon Members:\n$340 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to first session\, $360 after \nCIP Members:\n$260 early registration\, up to 10 days prior to first session\, $280 after \nCEs: 16 CEs for LMFTs and LCSWs and 16 CEs for Psychologists (Certificates issued after completion of the 16 sessions.) \nCommunity Institute for Psychotherapy is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Community Institute for Psychotherapy maintains responsibility for these programs and their contents. \nAccommodations will be made wherever possible to those with disabilities.  Please let us know of any disabilities upon registration\, to ensure proper accommodations are put in place prior to workshop/training. \nCancellations must be received in writing 10 business days prior to the seminar or class for a refund minus a $25 cancellation fee.
URL:https://cipmarin.org/event/working-intersubjectively-clinical-relationship-source-meaningful-change/
LOCATION:CIP Group Room\, 1330 Lincoln Ave # 201\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94901\, United States
CATEGORIES:Study Groups
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cipmarin.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/jane-rubin-headshot-e1565910319743.jpg
GEO:37.9762699;-122.5225763
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=CIP Group Room 1330 Lincoln Ave # 201 San Rafael CA 94901 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1330 Lincoln Ave # 201:geo:-122.5225763,37.9762699
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR