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  • Webinar Recording
  • Beginning/Introductory
  • Free to Members
  • Webinar
Mentalizing is the process by which we make sense of the contents of our own minds and that of others. Requiring an optimal level of arousal as well as a nurturing and safe attachment relationship to develop, mentalizing is conspicuously impaired and even frightening for patients who have suffered attachment trauma. Mentalizing requires the capacity to be present, to accurately read relational cues, and to be mindful and tolerant of one’s own inner experiences.
0
  • 1.50 ISSTD Certificate Program
  • Enduring
  • Package
  • Recorded Audio/Video Conference
  • Beginning/Introductory
  • Conference
  • Intermediate
As therapists continue to see a need for increased trauma-informed services and approaches to mental health, becoming attuned to the differences between simple trauma, complex trauma, and dissociat
0
  • 11.50 APA
  • 11.50 ASWB ACE
  • 11.50 ISSTD Certificate Program
  • Enduring
  • Recorded Audio/Video Conference
  • Beginning/Introductory
  • Conference
Abstract
0
  • 4.00 APA
  • 4.00 ASWB ACE
  • 4.00 ISSTD Certificate Program
  • Enduring
  • Recorded Audio/Video Conference
  • Beginning/Introductory
  • Conference
Abstract
0
  • 3.00 APA
  • 3.00 ASWB ACE
  • 3.00 ISSTD Certificate Program
  • Enduring
  • Webinar Recording
  • Advanced
  • Beginning/Introductory
  • Webinar
This pair of webinars features expert presentations from Alison Miller, PhD and Michael Salter, PhD on the topic of organized and extreme abuse. 
4.5
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  • Beginning/Introductory
  • Webinar
Abstract
0
  • 1.50 APA
  • 1.50 ASWB ACE
  • 1.50 ISSTD Certificate Program
  • Webinar Recording
  • Beginning/Introductory
  • Free to Members
  • Webinar
This webinar will explore the emerging empirical literature on shame and dissociation in complex trauma disorders. Clinical and theoretical accounts have long noted the challenges in working with shame in individuals exposed to interpersonal violence, and more recent work espouses the importance of working with shame (e.g, Chefetz, 2015; Herman, 2011; Kluft, 2007).
0
  • 1.50 ISSTD Certificate Program
  • Enduring
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  • Webinar Recording
  • Advanced
  • Beginning/Introductory
  • Intermediate
  • Webinar
Participate in full-year of webinars for a discounted price with the ISSTD Webinar Pass.
3.5
  • Enduring
  • Webinar Recording
  • Advanced
  • Beginning/Introductory
  • Intermediate
  • Webinar
Abstract
0
  • 6.00 APA
  • 6.00 ASWB ACE
  • 6.00 ISSTD Certificate Program
  • Webinar Recording
  • Beginning/Introductory
  • Free to Members
  • Intermediate
  • Webinar
​​​​​​​An important goal in dissociative disorders treatment has always been the achievement of co-consciousness. An antidote to amnestic barriers that prevent information exchange and often contribute to high-risk behaviors “behind the back” of the client, co-consciousness has many clinical benefits. By facilitating the client’s ability to recognize the parts’ voices, points of view, and belief systems as differentiated from their own, it increases the degree to which clients can maintain continuity of self over time.
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  • 1.50 ISSTD Certificate Program

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