Trauma, Neuroscience and Internal Family Systems (IFS)
Salepage : Trauma, Neuroscience and Internal Family Systems (IFS)
Archive : Trauma, Neuroscience and Internal Family Systems (IFS) Digital Download
Delivery : Digital Download Immediately
Faculty:
Frank Anderson, MD | Richard Schwartz, PhD
Duration:
12 hours and 35 minutes
Copyright:
May 01, 2017
Product Number:
IRS035001
Type of Media:
Online Training
This course provides 15 IFS hours toward the IFS Continuing Education requirement if you have completed an IFS Institute Level 1 Training and are applying for IFS certification.
Module 1: Discover, Focus, and flesh it out.
We’ll look at the distinctions between phase-oriented therapy and IFS.
We’ll look at the neurobiology of parts and speak about what’s unique and important to IFS in terms of trauma therapy.
Module 2: Self-energy and Trauma and Dissociation Neurobiology.
We’ll be investigating self-energy.
We’ll be discussing the significance of therapist sections.
We’ll look at the distinction between empathy and compassion.
As a physician, I believe it is critical to understand the fundamentals so that we can build on that knowledge and discover where IFS and neurology intersect and interact.
Module Three: Making Friends, Recognizing Fear, and Working with Extreme Parts.
It’s one of the things I’ve seen after doing trauma treatment for many years: extreme aspects are really difficult.
It makes the trauma work extremely hard, clients become irritated, and they then fail to follow through.
None of the effort results in unburdening, therefore they become irritated and return to their previous modalities and ways of functioning since they only become frustrated around severe aspects.
Learn how to work with extreme portions in order to get over those humps.
The Unburdening Process is the fourth module.
“Why don’t people unburden themselves enough?”
“What’s the big deal about that?”
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.
Dr. Frank Anderson
Seminars and goods that are related
Dr. Anderson finished his residency at Harvard Medical School and worked as a clinical teacher in Psychiatry. He is the executive director of the Foundation for Self Leadership, and he and Dick Schwartz co-teach the five-day Level 2 intense course on IFS, Trauma, and Neuroscience. He has a lengthy history of working with the Trauma Center at the Justice Resource Institute in Boston, and he has a private practice in Concord, MA.
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