GXC Discovery Intensive – How IFS Understands and Works with Shame
Information
Date & Time
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Location
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Northern Hemisphere E3/4
1500 Epcot Resorts Boulevard
Lake Buena Vista, FL 32830
Learning Objectives
Participants will be able to:
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1. Demonstrate at least 2 ways clients are able to expel negative beliefs and emotions.
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2. Apply at least 2 techniques for working with shame with clients.
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3. Identify at least 3 components of a process for helping a client alleviate shame-based symptoms.
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4. Identify at least 2 IFS concepts that outline ways of understanding shame.
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5. Identify at least 2 ways shame acts as a burden and describe how parts can carry and unburden feelings of shame.
Description
Shame underlies everything from depression to addictions, and its tenacity can be frustrating for client and therapist alike. IFS offers a non-pathologizing way of understanding shame as a burden that parts carry and can unburden. All those negative beliefs and emotions can be expelled from the client’s system, releasing their natural self-acceptance and love. Not only do clients feel better about themselves but their shame-based symptoms remit.
Target Audience
- Counselor
- Marriage & Family Therapist
- Medical Doctor
- Psychologist
- Registered Nurse
- Social Worker
- Substance Use Disorder Professionals
Presenters
Richard Schwartz began his career as a family therapist and an academic at the University of Illinois at Chicago. There he discovered that family therapy alone did not achieve full symptom relief and in asking patients why, he learned that they were plagued by what they called “parts”. These patients became his teachers as they described how their parts formed networks of inner relationship that resembled the families he had been working with. He also found that as they focused on and, thereby, separated from their parts, they would shift into a state characterized by qualities like curiosity, calm, confidence and compassion. He called that inner essence the Self and was amazed to find it even in severely diagnosed and traumatized patients. From these explorations the Internal Family Systems (IFS) model was born in the early 1980s. IFS is now evidence-based and has become a widely-used form of psychotherapy, particularly with trauma. It provides a non-pathologizing, optimistic, and empowering perspective and a practical and effective set of techniques for working with individuals, couples, families, and more recently, corporations and classrooms. In 2013 Schwartz left the Chicago area to live in Brookline, MA where he is on the faculty of the Department of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. He recently moved back to Illinois to be closer to his family, and continues to spread his vision of IFS becoming healing modality beyond clinical settings.
Financially Sponsored By
- The Global Exchange Conference - Exchange Events