Healing Cultural Trauma with Internal Family Systems (IFS)
Salepage : Healing Cultural Trauma with Internal Family Systems (IFS)
Archive : Healing Cultural Trauma with Internal Family Systems (IFS) Digital Download
Delivery : Digital Download Immediately
Faculty:
Deran Young | Richard Schwartz, Ph.D.
Duration:
14 minutes and 42 seconds
Copyright:
May 01, 2020
Product Number:
IRS035232
Type of Media:
Online Training
Dr. Schwartz and Deran Young, Module 1
As client parts arrive in session, structure and prioritize interventions.
Examine and address the safety implications of content offered by people who have had violent experiences.
Use the reactions of therapist components to inform therapeutic strategies.
Determine the influence of the four major types of collective legacy burdens on symptom manifestation.
Reduce the impact of cultural preconceptions on therapeutic partnerships.
Use therapy methods that correspond to the client’s learning styles and level of relationship participation.
Dr. Schwartz and Deran Young, Module 2
To develop awareness and commitment to learning, discuss communal legacy obligations.
Examine culture and IFS components to have a better grasp of how they interact.
Consider how infusing more self-energy into our parts might help us connect and be compassionate across cultures.
Investigate how Intersectionality influences therapy in order to enhance treatment outcomes for clients from varied backgrounds.
Dr. Schwartz and Deran Young, Module 3
The importance of legacy burdens as crucial components in healing cultural trauma is examined.
Investigates and expands on America’s four major legacy burdens: individualism, racism, sexism, and consumerism.
Provides materials to enhance self-awareness, cultural identification, and connection and compassion with individuals who have had different experiences than ours.
Examines the importance of legacy burdens and shows how to unburden a legacy burden via a case study.
4th Module Deran Young and Dr. Schwartz
Examine how individualism’s historical burden impacts culture and manifests in therapy, as well as how inquiry and self-compassion lead to connecting with others.
What Legacy Burdens Look Like in the Therapy Room
Topics of Diversity in Therapy
Dr. Richard Schwartz
IFS Institute courses and goods
Richard Schwartz began his career as a systemic family therapist and academic, and he is currently on the faculty of Harvard Medical School’s Department of Psychiatry. He is also a Senior Fellow at Arizona’s Meadows rehab clinic. Dr. Schwartz created the Internal Family Systems (IFS) model, which is based on systems thinking, in response to clients’ descriptions of various sections within themselves. In 2000, he launched the Center for Self Leadership (now IFS Institute – www.ifs-institute.com), which provides three levels of IFS training and seminars to professionals and the general public in the United States and worldwide. Dr. Schwartz has produced many books and over fifty papers on IFS and has been a prominent speaker for national professional groups.
Seminars and goods related to Deran Young
Growing up with an incarcerated father and a mother who battled mental illness and substance misuse, Deran was exposed to bigotry, poverty, and social services at a young age. It was no surprise that she eventually opted to become a helpful professional.
Deran moved on from her Bachelor’s degree in Social Psychology to earn Masters degrees in Public Administration and Social Work. As her Masters of Social Work studies at the University of Texas, she was given the incredible chance to visit Ghana, West Africa, twice, once as a graduate assistant and once during a final field placement/internship.
During her six-month stay in Ghana, Deran established a Guidance & Counseling Center at a High School in a community that has historically been classified as having a lower socioeconomic level population. During her time there, she also established the “Choices” scholarship program and led a cultural identity field trip for kids to learn about African and African American history firsthand. Although Ghana has substantial origins in the Transatlantic Slave Trade, most residents are unable to visit these historical places owing to financial challenges and hardships. This excursion allowed fifteen pupils to tour the Cape Coast Slave Castle and the One African History Museum. Her interest in culture and diversity compelled her to delve deeper into themes of social justice and social psychology. Her current professional interests include international social work, gender issues, and traumatic/anxiety disorders.
Deran founded Black Therapists Rock after noticing a lack of mentoring, information sharing, and solidarity among helpers. She viewed this as an opportunity to unite counseling professionals in taking ACTION to reduce stigma and other barriers to psychological and social well-being among African Americans and other vulnerable populations.
Deran presently lives and works in Washington, DC, with her five-year-old kid. She has now traveled to over 32 countries (including recent trips to Vietnam, China, Japan, Singapore, Dubai and Oman with her little Nomad Jr.).
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