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The Spiritual Connection: Values, Faith, and Psychotherapy
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AVAILABLE BY:
Home Study
Online Course
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CE CREDITS: 20
CE Broker# Home Study:10-240520 Online Class: 10-240522
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The Spiritual Connection:
Values, Faith, and Psychotherapy is about how we tap into and cooperate with the
natural life-affirming power “wired into” every human being. It creates an
awareness of how we all participate in the spiritual dimension of life. That
awareness enables us to model and teach what we understand experientially. The
book describes therapeutic theories and techniques used to facilitate emotional
and spiritual growth and how they are based on the fundamental values underlying
the healing power of all psychotherapy.
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To identify how a
psychotherapist can function with an awareness of the spiritual dimension of
reality.
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To identify three
understandings of spirituality which help to clarify beliefs.
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To describe the central
importance of a spiritual connection with a client for healing to occur in
psychotherapy.
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To identify how values
enhance or degrade an emotional/spiritual connection with clients.
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To describe a method
by which practitioners can model participation in the spiritual
dimension.
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To assess what
sanctifies or pollutes the spiritual dimension.
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To identify the fifteen
values that provide a nurturing, accepting, safe environment for a client’s
healing and growth to take place.
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To
discuss a perspective from which to see psychotherapy as encouraging
and nurturing emotional/spiritual development.
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To identify the three
fundamental values required to support holistic personal and community growth
and development.
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To describe ways
psychotherapists from varied theoretical frameworks embody and communicate
those three fundamental values within their theory systems.
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To
discuss ways psychotherapists from different theoretical frameworks
apply the three fundamental values through therapeutic techniques.
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To discuss how to influence
clients by affirming the three fundamental values in one’s own therapeutic
work.
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To identify ways the
developmental belief “I have value” can be negated, creating serious emotional
difficulties.
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To describe the importance of
believing the biological reality “I am a separate person.”
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To describe how “separate and independent” is the best position from which to
have an intimate relationship.
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To discuss how acceptance of
and affirmation of autonomy is essential to well being for both client and
therapist.
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To
describe the importance of affirming each
individual’s way of doing things as the best he or she can do at the time.
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To describe
how affirmation of each person’s way as “good enough for now” does not
endorse what is dysfunctional, negative or destructive.
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To describe how listening to
and understanding the client with empathy is the healing foundation on which
therapy is built.
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To discuss how affirmation of
the three fundamental values provides the foundation for practitioners to
genuinely communicate those same values to clients, both verbally and
nonverbally.
Total CE Credits: 20 CE Credits
Methods:
Pre-test, Study guide,
Posttest and Evaluation Q&A by phone or Email if needed
Benjamin B.
Conley, M.Div., LMFT, a seasoned psychotherapist and marriage and family
therapist, is also trained theologically (Vanderbilt Divinity School). He is
able to bring to the discussion a deeply human understanding of the meaning of
values in everyday living. Conley finished his initial clinical training as a
psychotherapist in 1965 in a three-year residency at the Blanton-Peale Graduate
Institute, a psychoanalytic and self-psychology oriented psychiatric clinic in
New York City. He has had additional extensive training in Transactional
Analysis, Gestalt Therapy, Bioenergetics, Hypnosis, Sex Therapy, Imago
Relationship Therapy, and trauma work including Eye Movement Desensitization and
Reprocessing. He now lives and practices therapy in Fort Lauderdale, FL. His
website is
http://www.anthospublishing.com.
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