小蝌蚪视频

Full Course Description


2-Day Experiential Internal Family Systems Therapy Workshop

This unique training by expert clinician, lead IFS trainer, and author Frank Anderson, MD, will give you a deep dive into the theory, principles and practical applications of one of the most cutting-edge models in psychotherapy.

Learn and practice the steps of IFS therapy and begin treating anxiety, depression, addiction, trauma and childhood attachment wounds in ways you didn’t think possible.

You’ll be able to leave this intensive workshop with theory, skills, and practice allowing you to begin to use IFS therapy immediately with clients.

This immersive workshop will allow you to get to know yourself and your internal system better. It will help you better understand your triggers and begin to clear the blockages that get in the way with your most challenging clients.

After completing this workshop, you will be able to help your clients:

  • Minimize their symptom, overwhelming feelings, and challenging behaviours.
  • Have less inner conflict and develop a better relationship with their internal system.
  • Have a greater More understanding of the origins of trauma, anxiety and other issues.
  • Be more self-accepting and emotionally aware.
  • Better able to build healthy relationships in their lives.

As a clinician, you’ll feel:

  • More comfortable in your ability to treat a wider range of clinical diagnoses.
  • Less overwhelmed in your clinical practice even with your more challenging clients.
  • More hopeful for your clients and their clinical outcomes.
  • More relaxed, comfortable, and confident at work.

This product is not endorsed by, sponsored by, or affiliated with the IFS Institute and does not qualify for IFS Institute credits or certification.

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Formulate why Internal Family Systems is a nonpathologizing treatment model and the clinical benefits derived from that approach.
  2. Practice the steps of the Internal Family Systems model to incorporate into treatment planning.
  3. Teach clients how to embrace their symptomology to improve self-awareness and emotion regulation.
  4. Perform an IFS-informed clinical assessment to better reveal the root origin on anxiety and depression symptoms.
  5. Demonstrate the steps of IFS method that can help clients avoid being “hijacked” by intense emotions and trauma symptomology.
  6. Support the clinical benefit of shifting away from cognitive intellectual interpretation to be more emotional connection and physical embodiment.
  7. Differentiate the three steps of treating the traumatic wound and practice guiding client in the process.
  8. Appraise the nature of the research and evidence-base for IFS and evaluate risks and limitations.
  9. Differentiate the value of empathy and compassion in the therapeutic process for improved treatment outcomes.
  10. Propose an IFS focused view of countertransference that is more accessible for clinicians to manage in the therapeutic process.
  11. Integrate Internal Family Systems with other forms of therapy such as EMDR, Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, CPT, and DBT to create more targeted treatment plans.
  12. Investigate how clinicians can have their own “parts” step back during the therapy process to create greater perspective and remove blockages in therapy.

Outline

INTERNAL FAMILY SYSTEMS (IFS)
The Essentials of the Model

  • Comprehensive, compassionate, nonpathologizing treatment approach
  • Paradigm-shifting perspective on “psychopathology”
  • Easily integrated into other therapeutic modalities
  • Teach clients to access inner wisdom and selfcompassion to heal anxiety, depression, addictions, and traumatic wound
  • The range of different parts
  • Self Energy
The IFS Technique
Step 1: Identifying Diagnoses & Symptoms as Parts
  • Assess the diagnoses: PTSD, anxiety, depression, substance abuse and eating disorders
  • Apply Meditation practices
  • Working with protective parts the 6 F’s
    • Finding the symptom
    • Focusing on its fear
    • Separating the person (self) from the symptom
    • Becoming curious about it
    • Find the real story behind the symptom
PRACTICE AND GUIDED EXPERIENTIAL ACTIVITY
Step 2: Gain Access to Internal Strengths & Resources for Healing
  • Moving from defensiveness to curiosity
  • The difference between empathy and compassion
  • Foster “internal attachment” work
  • The “Self” of the therapist-countertransference redefined
GUIDED EXPERIENTIAL ACTIVITY
Step 3: Dealing with Conflicts and Polarizations
  • Identifying parts that conflict with each other
  • Validate both perspectives
  • Resolve polarities with Self energy
GUIDED EXPERIENTIAL ACTIVITY
Step 4: Treating the Traumatic Wound
  • Three phases of healing:
    • Witness the pain
    • Remove the wounded part out of the past
    • Let go of the feelings, thoughts, and beliefs
IFS IN ACTION: DEMONSTRATION OF THE HEALING PROCESS
Integrate IFS into your Treatment Approach
  • EMDR, DBT, Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, 小蝌蚪视频 Therapy
  • Integrate IFS with other treatment modalities your current clinical approach
Therapist Parts
  • Countertransference through the IFS lens
  • Identifying parts that get activated and get in the way
GUIDED EXPERIENTIAL ACTIVITY

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Therapists
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Physicians
  • Marriage and Family Therapists
  • Other Mental Health Professionals

Copyright : 12/02/2021

The Integrative Internal Family Systems (IFS) Therapist Training: A Start-to-Finish Expansion Program with Frank Anderson

Take your IFS Therapy skills to the next level through this exclusive online course. Join world-renowned IFS lead trainer Dr. Frank Anderson as he connects with some of the greatest thought leaders in the field to discover how to combine insights from today’s premier treatment approaches, so you can further intensify IFS Therapy's healing potential. You’ll get a front-row seat for these once-in-a-lifetime, in-depth clinical conversations with Sue Johnson, Deb Dana, and more. Then, you’ll find out exactly how Frank is pulling these powerful insights together into a new, expanded model you can incorporate into your practice.

Program Information

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Psychotherapists
  • Therapists
  • Marriage & Family Therapists
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Case Managers
  • Physicians
  • Nurses
  • Other Mental Health Professionals

Objectives

  1. Analyze the potential benefits of increasing vagal tone during the IFS therapy process.
  2. Explain the nervous system’s trauma response through a polyvagal theory lens.
  3. Utilize polyvagal theory to formulate hypotheses about the relationship between vagal states and IFS concepts of parts and Self.
  4. Analyze the potential benefits of increased access to Self-Energy in mitigating race-related stress.
  5. Outline three actionable steps for IFS therapists to establish a secure environment for clients of color to work through racial trauma. S
  6. Hyothesize how somatic body awareness can be used to support a client’s exploration of internal parts of Self.
  7. Demonstrate two somatic interventions aimed at enhancing clinical work with internal parts of Self.
  8. Demonstrate two examples of physical movement that can be utilized to support the IFS unburdening process.
  9. Analyze the role of yoga in trauma treatment, emphasizing its impact on the autonomic nervous system.
  10. Demonstrate two breathing exercises that can be used during emotional processing to regulate the autonomic nervous system.
  11. Articulate the potential positive impact of reprocessing past trauma memories on internal parts of Self.
  12. Explain the therapist’s role in facilitating new corrective experiences during the processing of painful memories.
  13. Utilize the concept of memory reconsolidation to illustrate how reparative work between parts and Self can lead to symptom reduction and improved mental health.
  14. Describe how utilizing co-regulation between therapist and client can support the trauma healing process.
  15. Examine the relationship between attachment style and the development of dissociative parts of Self.
  16. Describe how the therapist, acting as a surrogate attachment figure, can support the trauma healing process.

Outline

Part 1: Introduction to the Course
with Frank Anderson, MD

  • Why Integrate?
  • What to expect from the course

Part 2: Internal Family Systems Therapy and Polyvagal Theory: Recruiting the Nervous System to Enhance Work with Parts
with Deb Dana, LCSW, LICSW

  • The key principles of Polyvagal Theory
  • The connection between vagal states, parts and Self
  • The Vagal Break and Vagal Tone
  • Bringing the nervous system into IFS therapy
  • Supporting the unblending process with the therapist's ventral state
  • Using anchors to access Self-Energy
  • The Social Engagement System and Self
  • Creating new neural pathways with IFS

Part 3: IFS Therapy and Working with Different Cultures: Adapting our Practices to Better Fit the Needs of Clients of Color
with Crystal Jones, LCSW

  • Expanding the IFS model for People of Color
  • Legacy Burdens, Cultural Burdens and Personal Burdens
  • Evolving our understanding of Self
  • The potential dangers of releasing burdens
  • Creating safe spaces to heal parts
  • The Cultural Unburdening process
  • Therapists of the dominant culture: Privilege, fragility and accountability

Part 4: IFS Therapy and Somatic Psychotherapy: Using the Language of the Nervous System to Unblend and Unburden
with Abi Blakeslee, SEP, CMT, MFT, PHD

  • Body-oriented practices
  • The language of the nervous system
  • From incomplete action to corrective experiences for parts
  • The survival physiology and implicit memory of protective parts
  • Managing traumatic affect
  • Somatic processes for Unburdening
  • Helping parts make flexible choices
  • Expanding capacity and “being with”
  • Letting Go and Filling In

Part 5: IFS Therapy and Trauma-Informed Yoga: Movement and Breath for Engaging with Parts and Accessing Self-Energy
with Arielle Schwartz, PhD, CCTP-II, E-RYT

  • The science of yoga
  • Parts taking shape
  • Discovering parts and centering Self-Energy
  • Expanding capacity with yoga
  • Breathing exercises for accessing Self- Energy
  • Poses for embodying parts
  • Unblending through movement
  • Mobilization and stillness for deep healing

Part 6: IFS Therapy and EMDR: Relational Work and Memory Reprocessing for Deep, Sustained Healing
with Deany Laliotis, LCSW

  • The memory of blended parts: When the past is in the present
  • Co-creating new experience
  • Self-Energy and the Competent Capable Adult
  • Supporting exiles with EMDR techniques
  • Therapists as a resource
  • Reprocessing, unburdening and laying down new learning

Part 7: IFS Therapy and EFT: Incorporating Emotion and Attachment to Strengthen Healing
with Sue Johnson, EdD

  • Attachment Theory and the social aspect of Self
  • The therapist in the IFS Process
  • Working with the emotions of Parts
  • Completing action tendencies to help parts heal
  • Corrective emotional experiences for Protectors and Exiles
  • Connecting with a secure sense of Self

Part 8: The Expanded IFS Model: Putting the Pieces Together
with Frank Anderson, MD

  • Integrating to Expand
  • Critical Concepts from Polyvagal Theory
    • Using the Polyvagal Ladder to enhance work with parts
    • Increasing access to Self-Energy with Vagal Efficiency
    • Utilizing the therapists Vagal Efficiency for co-regulation
  • Adaptations for People of Color
    • Moving Beyond the 8 C’s with flexible and inclusive language
    • Incorporating (not integrating) parts
    • Legacy Burdens: Release the burden, incorporating the wisdom
    • Being an accountable therapist
  • Somatic Psychotherapy
    • Interpreting the Internal System with sensation
    • Embodying parts through sensation, movement and posture
    • Physical Experiment to support unblending and building vagal efficiency
    • Expands the capacity of the system to expand the capacity for Self-Energy
  • Yoga and IFS
    • Engaging with parts with posture and poses
    • Helping part experience completed action
    • Breath work for integrating parts and accessing Self-Energy
    • Postures for recruiting Self-Energy during times of overwhelm
  • EMDR and IFS
    • Rewiring the brain through co-creation of new memories
    • Using the Self of the therapist for co-regulation
    • A flexible timeline for working with exiles and protectors
  • EFT and IFS
    • Clarifying and processing the emotions of parts
    • Reimagining the therapist role with attachment theory
    • Singing to the amygdala to co-regulate
    • Creating corrective emotional experiences

Copyright : 08/02/2024