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Click here to watch videos by Mark Sehl "What Makes for a Good Therapy Session" on "therapyfortheheart"
At the top of the page you can subscribe and also click videos and see all the talks. You can also enter mark sehl at youtube.com
Join Dr. Mark Sehl in a private confidential setting where effective interventions working with "difficult" clients can be discussed, and where the therapist-patient dynamics that can expand or constrict therapeutic progress can be explored.
Trainings will take place every other Tuesday from 7 to 9 PM starting Sept. 13. Fee: $25 ($20 if both groups are taken). - Total monthly cost for both groups is $80.00/month
Educational Training group $25/session
1st Semester Sept. 13, 27, Oct. 11, 25 Nov. 8, 22, Dec. 6, Jan. 3, 17, 31
2nd Semester Feb. 14, 28, March 6, April 3, 17, May 1, 15, 29, June 12, 26
Transference/Resistance Training group $25/session
1st Semester Sept. 13, 27, Oct. 11, 25 Nov. 8, 22, Dec. 6, Jan. 3, 17, 31
2nd Semester Feb. 14, 28, March 13, April 3, 17 May 1, 15, 29, June 12, 26
Taking both groups is recommended but not required. Total cost $80 per month.
"For the things we have to learn before we can do them,
we learn by doing them" Aristotle
You can join the training groups at any time, space permitting. Call 212-228-3467 or email me at marksehl@gmail.com if you are interested in attending. It may be possible to attend through teleconference. Click Dr. Sehl's bio to view details about his training and experience.
Educational Training group $25/session
- Working with the * “difficult” client. Interventions that help clients stay in treatment.
- Which interventions help patients feel connected to the therapist? Which ones can disturb this connection?
- How can we respond to personal questions and have the best therapeutic outcome?
- Harm reduction and modern analytic approaches for people with drug & alcohol problems will be discussed. We address such questions as: If opioids serve an anti-rage function, what interventions help a client deal with rage as they cut down on their use?
- What interventions work in couple therapy and why?
- Video tapes of Dr. Spotnitz will be viewed to study his technique.
Transference/Resistance Group (meets every other Tuesday following the Supervisory/Educational Group)
To understand our patient's hesitancy to talk freely we need to understand our own motives behind a resistance to speak openly. When working with the "difficult client" therapists often get stuck, resulting in a treatment stalemate. Taking risks in a supportive accepting environment is how we grow as therapists, and how we develop courage to help clients take risks.
Time and place: Every other Tuesday. Groups resume Tuesday, Sept. 13, 2011
59 West 9th St., Bell #2
One-time fee waiver for first-time attendance of Dr. Sehl's workshops!
(212) 228-3467 or marksehl@gmail.com to register and reserve a place.
for workshop details.
To read a review by Robert Marchesani of Dr. Sehl's workshop "Problematic Substance Use and Patient Retention: The Role Transference and Countertransference Play in Forming Effective Interventions" presented at the NAAP 37th Annual Conference click this link NAAP
Dr. Mark Sehl is a practicing psychoanalyst in NYC. He is a graduate of The Institute for Psychoanalytic Training and Research (IPTAR) and has close to two decades of training as a modern analyst. He also is on the faculty of NYU. Dr. Sehl has integrated the best aspects of classical and modern psychoanalytic approaches. Both the classical and modern psychoanalytic model focus on resistance and transference, but modern analysis offers specific interventions to work with the preoedipal problems that many of our patients experience. Dr. Sehl has taught psychoanalytic psychotherapy and psychoanalytic technique at various institutes. His practice consists of individual, couple and group therapy with a specialty in substance use disorders.
Dr. Sehl has a long standing interest in the patient therapist relationship and his publications reflect this interest. His publications include: Sehl, M. (1994). Stalemates in therapy and the notion of gratification, Psychoanalytic Review, 81 (2), 301-321; Sehl, M. (1998); Erotic countertransference and clinical social work practice: A national survey of psychotherapists’ sexual feelings, attitudes, and responses, Journal of Analytic Social Work, 5 (4), 39-55; Sehl, M. (2002) One Woman's Struggle for Dignity. In A. Tatarsky (ed.), Harm Reduction Psychotherapy: A New Treatment for Drug and Alcohol Problems. New York: Aronson, 2002. Click Bio for access to papers.
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