Participants will learn to recognize the signs of growth alongside distress and understand the factors that support clients in moving toward personal development and empowerment.
This training equips psychotherapists with a trauma-informed understanding of anxious- avoidant dynamics and offers practical strategies for helping clients navigate these challenging relational patterns.
Participants will learn how COVID-19 has shaped coping patterns, resilience, and interpersonal dynamics, while considering ethical and culturally sensitive approaches to treatment.
This training introduces psychotherapists to the foundations of trauma-informed practice, exploring the key principles and their application across diverse clinical settings.
Participants will explore the psychological, cultural, and systemic dimensions of ancestral trauma while considering how to engage with it respectfully and ethically.
This course explores the embodied impact of systemic oppression, particularly within Black, immigrant, and other marginalized communities.
This workshop will describe how neurodivergent people experience religious trauma in unique ways. The neurodiversity paradigm and the concept of religious trauma will both be defined and described.
This presentation will discuss how oppression and colonization have influenced the way we view healing, and offer alternative and accessible ways to heal.
In this session, you will learn the underlying framework of Internal Family Systems, the art, and power of resonance, along with specific applications to people who experience substance use and mental health disorders (as defined by the DSM-VTR).
By understanding the biological adaptations of both trauma and physical exercise, participants will learn to identify movements and exercises that can facilitate healing in and out of therapy sessions.