
In Person
Adolescent & Young Adult Symposium
Healing Relationally: The Power of Corrective Experiences
|
Healing Relationally: The Power of Corrective Experiences
1.0 CE Hours
Information
Date & Time
-
-
Learning Objectives
Participants will be able to:
-
Describe at least two specific interventions to utilize in practice that create corrective experiences relationally.
-
List at least two ways that 12-step philosophies are aligned with attunement and attachment.
-
Explain how to assess relational timelines for a client to identify themes, patterns, and opportunities for corrective experiences.
Educational Goal
The educational goal of this workshop is to create understanding of the importance of addressing relational dynamics in treatment and the ways the clinicians can offer a corrective experience.
Description
This presentation will cover how relationships act as a healing power inside and outside of treatment settings. We will discuss the importance of understanding a person's relational timeline and how this can lead to adjustment of longstanding patterns by creating opportunities for corrective experiences and improving overall connection and safety.
The presentation will highlight how attunement and attachment align with the 12-step philosophy. We will also discuss the importance of guiding a client through these experiences while in treatment in hopes of changing the trajectory of their life. to improve overall connection and safety when someone is in treatment.
Target Audience
- Counselor
- Marriage & Family Therapist
- Psychologist
- Social Worker
- Substance Use Disorder Professionals
Presenters

Lizzy Lopez, LPC is the Director of Clinical Operations at Synergy. She helps manage, direct, and develop the clinical program to align with Synergy’s values and clinical philosophy. Due to her deep belief in the profound healing impact of relational repair, if she was able to choose a title it would be ‘Director of Weaving Connections.’ Lizzy found her passion for helping others through her own personal experience with healing and recovery. Her compassionate, direct style was inspired by a clinician that met her in her early recovery experience who reminded her that she is accountable to doing her own work to heal. The inspiration this person provided led to her receiving her Master’s in Professional Clinical Counseling. She started her career working with adolescents struggling with substance abuse and mental health issues. She then continued her career path working with young adults who had several treatment experiences and recovery attempts. She became skilled at helping clients identify “the why” underneath their desire to self-medicate and self-sabotage. She strives to empower people through accountability, connection, and insight-oriented action to cultivate meaning in life. Her career includes the development of Intensive Outpatient Programs (IOP) for specific populations, which in the past has included an adolescent dual-diagnosis program and a women’s trauma-informed substance abuse program.
Lizzy is a licensed professional counselor (LPC) in the state of Pennsylvania. She is currently being trained in psychodrama to further explore how experiential methods can allow for a deeper connection to authenticity. She focuses on implementing creative methods to treatment to help clients embody their strengths and connect to the resources available. She believes in the importance of education within the community and is a speaker on topics such as boundaries, adolescent and young adult challenges, addiction, and navigating treatment. Lizzy utilizes her experience and training as the foundation for the clinical programming at Synergy that focuses on the values of creativity, collaboration, transparency, and authenticity. Her goal is to drive a culture of wellness for the employees and the clients at Synergy.
In her free time, Lizzy spends time with her husband and children enjoying the life they have built as a family. She is a skilled fort maker and loves connecting with her two younger children’s imaginations to play. She also likes to adventure in the outdoors, travel, exercise, and be spontaneous. She says “yes” to life and has gratitude for the ability her recovery has given her to be a part of the world rather than apart from it.