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• Archive: Faculty:Lisa FerentzDuration:5 Hours 13 MinutesFormat:Audio and VideoCopyright:Mar 20, 2019 Description It’s important to honor all of your client’s inner parts in therapy.
• But accessing them to fully engage in healing work isn’t always easy.In this workshop recording, we’ll consider key concepts from Internal Family Systems and inner-child work, and explore expressive modalities that vividly bring out parts holding onto influential thoughts, feelings, memories, and somatic experiences.
• Handouts Manual - Getting Creative with Parts (384.4 KB) 18 Pages Available after Purchase Outline Value of Expressive ModalitiesDifficulties of Expressing Traumatic ExperiencesVarious Mediums of Expressive ModalitiesArt TherapyMusic TherapySand TrayIntegration of Parts Work with Expressive ModalitiesThe Concept of PartsLanguage of PartsAmbivalenceDenialInternal ConflictBuddhist Notion of PartsStates of MindLiving RoomInternal Family SystemsRole of PartsBad PartsFinding PartsParts & ResistanceTypes of PartsExilesFirefightersManagersRole of the Inner CriticExercise: Working with the Inner CriticCore SelfUnderstanding the Core Self8 C’s of SelfExercise: Illustrate Core SelfWorking with PartsPolarization & BlendingMapping PartsExercise: Two-Handed WritingSomatic Awareness & FocusingReframing the Function of PartsHonoring Parts' Protective RoleWorking with Destructive FirefightersSafe Places for PartsTemporary Containment Faculty Lisa Ferentz, LCSW-C, DAPA Related seminars and products: 7 Lisa Ferentz, LCSW-C, DAPA, is a recognized expert in the strengths-based, de-pathologized treatment of trauma and has been in private practice for over 35 years.
• She presents workshops and keynote addresses nationally and internationally, and is a clinical consultant to practitioners and mental health agencies in the United States, Canada, the UK and Ireland.She has been an adjunct faculty member at several Universities, and is the Founder of “The Ferentz Institute,” now in its 11th year of providing continuing education to mental health professionals and graduating over 1,200 clinicians from her two certificate programs in Advanced Trauma Treatment.In 2009 she was voted the “Social Worker of Year” by the Maryland Society for Clinical Social Work.
• Lisa is the author of Treating Self-Destructive Behaviors in Trauma Survivors: A Clinician’s Guide, 2nd Edition (Routledge, 2014), Letting Go of Self-Destructive Behaviors: A Workbook of Hope and Healing (Routledge, 2014), and Finding Your Ruby Slippers: Transformative Life Lessons From the Therapist’s Couch (PESI, 2017).