SPRING 2015 w w w. gpala.org P RE S I D E N T ’S M E S S A GE GPALA 2014 BOARD MEMBERS Dear Friends, PRESIDENT John Chebultz PAST PRESIDENT Ryan Spencer TREASURER Eddie Hunt SECRETARY Saralyn Masselink ANNUAL CONFERENCE CHAIR Vanessa Pawlowski CURRICULUM Bonnie Katz EVENTS CHAIR Rena Pollak HISTORIAN Marvin Kaphan MEMBERSHIP COMMITTEE Liz Selzer-Lang NEWSLETTER William Whitney OUTREACH COMMITTEE Maria Gray PARLIAMENTARIAN Michael Frank PR/MARKETING Annie Babin SOCIAL CHAIR Sheila Traviss TECHNICAL MEDIA CHAIR Jan Marc Stolpe John Chebultz Imagine this scenario: There you are, at the end of a session, a little spent, a little wired and a little anxious. Your group didn’t go the way you would have liked it to go. Worse, you think it might have been your fault that there was an injury or a breakdown in attunement. You look around the room that just a few minutes ago was full of dynamic energy, and you wonder, “What have I done? What did I miss? How am I going to get this group back on track?” What m o s t e x c i t e s m e a b o u t G PA L A’s u p c o m i n g A n n u a l 2 - d a y C o n f e re n c e , Connection, Not Perfection: The Power of Authenticity and the Group Therapist, which will be presented by Haim Weinberg, is that it is not just about group therapy but the group therapist in particular. It is about recognizing the power that comes in owning our imperfections and the power that comes in repairs. The balance between being authentic while also maintaining boundaries is not easy. Nor is it easy to be relational and containing. And, it is even more difficult to understand one’s own imperfections and be able to stay connected. However, it is a task that all group therapists must address. At a GPALA 2-day conference, attendees not only learn from our guest presenter’s lecture but also by watching him work with a group. Additionally, each attendee gets to participate in a small group that will meet over two days. If that sounds intimidating, I can only tell you that it is the part of our conferences that brings attendees back year after year. I hope to see you all there, old friends and new ones! Thanks, John AUTHENTICITY AND CONNECTION IN GROUP THERAPY: AN INTERVIEW WITH HAIM WEINBERG Assistant Editor, Andrew Sears, interviewed Haim Weinberg about his experience with Group Therapy, his theoretical orientation, and his interest in Internet Groups. Weinberg will be our keynote speaker at GPALA’s Annual Conference on April 24-25. Register today at: www.gpala.org Andrew Sears (AS): How did you get involved in group therapy, and what advice would you give to group therapists? Haim Weinberg, Ph.D. CGP, FAGPA Haim Weinberg (HW): Oh, not an easy question. I got involved in group therapy after experiencing a process group. It was in 1978 or 1979, and I was starting on my Masters degree in Israel. I went to an institute Andrew Sears group and it was a very powerful experience. I was very enthusiastic about groups because of that. I thought to myself that one day when I grow up, I will lead a group like the one that I experienced, so I started studying group therapy. In Israel there are specific programs in group therapy and I became more involved in those. It is such a wonderful feeling when people can connect (continued on page 2) Newsletter Editor William Whitney | Assistant Editors Andrew Sears and Stephen Burton | Graphic Designer Margaret Miyuki AUTHENTICITY AND CONNECTION IN GROUP THERAPY: AN INTERVIEW WITH HAIM WEINBERG (continued from page 1) Think about the most outstanding example that demonstrates how individual therapy is different from group therapy— scapegoating. Scapegoating does not exist in individual therapy. You can hear about scapegoating, but you cannot experience it because there are two people, and this is a group phenomenon. and go through some transformation through group therapy. I read a lot, participated in conferences and started writing. I also started leading groups, and became more involved in the conferences myself and in their associations. One of the important moments for me was organizing a conference where Yalom, the famous Yalom, was a keynote speaker. This was a turning point because my identity as a group therapist was crystallized, and I was identified in Israel as a group therapy person. My advice for group therapists is to adopt group therapy as part of their identity. Many times we say: “I am a psychotherapist,” or “I am a psychologist,” or “I am a licensed social worker.” But, it’s not easy to say: “I am a group therapist,” meaning that this is part of my identity. I advise colleagues who want to become group therapists, to combine both experiencing groups and learning about groups didactically – do not neglect the experiential part. As individual therapists, it is usually recommended that you go to therapy yourself, to learn what it means to be a patient. We forget that when we become group therapists, we should go to group therapy, and be a member of a group, or to at least come to conferences and institutes and experience it. Also, I think it is important to not neglect the more theoretical part. I noticed that in the U.S. people are much more practical, and they put a lot of emphasis on practical issues, and I am concerned that they neglect the deep understanding of the dynamics of the group, so people do good groups, but they miss something if they don’t study theory. AS: Can you give an example of something that someone might miss? HW: Think about the most outstanding example that demonstrates how individual therapy is different from group therapy—scapegoating. Scapegoating does not exist in individual therapy. You can hear about scapegoating, but you cannot experience it because there are two people, and this is a group phenomenon. However, in a group it can happen. When a scapegoating process begins, the scapegoat earns his position. They’re doing something, so the group therapist focuses on them. This is a mistake, practically and theoretically, because if we understand that scapegoating is a result of projection by the group, a depositing of something in the scapegoat, then we need to work with the group as a whole first. So this is an example of a practical mistake that might occur when you don’t know the phenomenon enough, don’t read enough, and don’t understand the dynamic. I also feel that people should know about more than one theory. Many times it’s easier for the beginner to stick to one theory. But I think that if you want to enrich your repertoire and your skills, you need to know more. Some examples: we all need to know about sub-grouping, stemming from (Yvonne) Agazarian and Systems Centered Therapy (SCT). She put a lot of focus on what she calls functional sub-grouping. Or you might be a Yalom-type person doing groups, but still can use the bridging technique from the Ormont modern group analysis method. It’s important to know more than one theory. AS: How has your view of groups developed as you’ve become more experienced? HW: I used to hold more to Bion’s version of group, which in Israel was the main way to lead groups until 2000. This means that the group therapist is more detached and aloof, and gives “group-as-awhole” interpretations. As I developed, there were two milestones that I experienced. One was training as a group analyst, which (in the group arena) is parallel to being a psychoanalyst (in the individual field). The other was moving to the U.S. and being influenced by the relational, or intersubjective, approaches. This led me to be more relational, less detached—creating moments of meeting in the group—between members, and between members and me. This is not to say that I have thrown out Bion’s approach, because it’s important to also see the “group-as-a-whole”. Unfortunately, many therapists in the U.S. occasionally forget to look at “group-as-a-whole” dynamics. AS: What do you see as the most important tasks and characteristics of the group leader? HW: (laughing) Again, it’s easier to talk about the tasks than about the characteristics. I think Yalom wrote it very well, but let me add to Yalom. I think that one task of the group leader is to create a safe environment – actually a secure base if we’re talking attachment language – a place where people feel safe enough to talk about things that usually are difficult to be discussed. This can be a little bit tricky because sometimes groups can be too safe, and put too much emphasis on safety, and consequently, they don’t take risks. The moment that you take risks, you’re not as safe as you would like to be. The therapist should balance creating safety, especially at the beginning of the group, with encouraging members to take risks once they feel safe. Another task is creating a helpful atmosphere in the group, and to know what will be helpful. For example, to encourage interaction—I use modeling in order that members can see how they (continued on page 5) 2 AGPA 2015 This year GPALA had the largest group that has ever attended the American Group Psychotherapy Association’s Annual Meeting from our city in San Francisco, February 23-28, 2015. Here is a list of GPALA members that reported attending the AGPA conference (in no particular order). If you are a GPALA member and attended but aren’t included on this list, please let us know! Bonnie Katz Elaine Leader Annie Babin Cara Gardenswartz John Chebultz Rena Pollak Ryan Spencer Stacy Spencer Nancy Fawcett Lisa Powell Marvin Kaphan Revel Miller Elana Clark-Faler Vanessa Pawlowski Keith Rand William Whitney Andrew Susskind Annabel Raymond Blair Smith Saralyn Masselink Schuyler Ha Eddie Hunt Shoshana Garisek Carmit Zur Michael Frank Joel McLafferty Alicia Murray Truett Wright Karen Shore Liz Rosenblatt Maria Gray Suzanne Ferris Michal Scharlin Alyson Dearborn Coley Williams Stephen Burton Shayne Vitemb 3 BOOK REVIEW van der Kolk, B. (2014). The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind and Body in the Healing of Trauma. New York: Viking Penguin. Reviewed By: Stephen W. Burton, MD, MA, IMF #80575 I heartily recommend this book for therapists who work with people affected by trauma, most likely, all of you. The book is a comprehensive review of ideas concerning the nature of post-traumatic stress disorder, and, more controversially, childhood developmental trauma. The author’s long psychiatric and psychotherapy experience is interwoven with three decades of trauma research. Starting with his own experience with war veterans in the 1970s, he moves on to work with rape and incest victims, and the even larger number of people whose severe childhood adversity has led to chronic symptomatology. It is the combination of the author’s clinical experience, exemplified in vignettes, close involvement in research, and occasional transparency concerning his own personal experience of trauma that made this book such a compelling read for me. The book triggered memories of my own childhood trauma, but helped me better understand many aspects of it. Dr. van der Kolk explains the complex developments in relevant brain research very well. To give but one example, trauma can render people literally speechless and I found it reassuring, somehow, to discover that the speech area of the brain may be rendered ‘offline’ in some trauma victims. Other critical brain areas such as the limbic system and medial prefrontal cortex play crucial roles, and the author provides a steady hand on the steering wheel on a drive through the developing neuroscience. He draws attention to the likely mechanisms underlying hypervigilance, flashbacks and nightmares, but also the adverse effects of under-activity of the brain in symptoms such as dissociation, numbing and depersonalization. Dr. van der Kolk held my attention completely, with many interesting and relevant clinical vignettes. For example, he decided to adopt one healing technique after meeting a patient called Lisa. As a child, she suffered appalling abuse and neglect by her psychotic and isolated mother. In adolescence, she was often triggered into dissociative states, becoming self-destructive and aggressive, but later having no memory of what she had done. By the age of 18, her new therapist, Sebern Fisher, noted Lisa’s ‘vacant stare,’ that ‘she carried a pumpkin wherever she went,’ and ‘there just wasn’t a there there’. She could not even recognize herself in a mirror and could not talk about anything stressful, without shutting down, or going into a panic. Sebern Fisher, decided to try neurofeedback, a technique developed in the late 60s, and adapted to treat the brainwave discoordination seen in people with severe developmental trauma. During twice weekly sessions, Lisa was rewarded with pleasing visual feedback whenever more coordinated EEG patterns emerged in her right temporal lobe, the seat of her severe fear. Over weeks, Lisa lost ‘the hum of conversations’ she could hear constantly, and which made her fear she had schizophrenia. She became less uptight around people, and became able to tolerate talking about childhood experiences, saying, when she met Dr. van der Kolk nearly 10 years later, “for the first time I started being able to do therapy.” She had become an engaging, curious and obviously intelligent nursing student. Dr. van der Kolk moves on from the giant trauma of war to the effects of abuse and neglect on the minds of growing children. To this reviewer he made an unassailable case for the creation of a new diagnostic category ‘Developmental Trauma Disorder’ for the DSM-V. The relevant committees have twice rejected similar proposals, and, it seems, prefer the status quo, which is a handful of different diagnoses solely addressing common presentations, rather than addressing the causative underlying trauma. I hope his view ultimately prevails, because it will facilitate more research, where the author’s experience has been highly relevant. In the final third of the book, Dr. van der Kolk addresses the various successful treatment approaches to trauma healing. He takes the reader through many treatment modalities: psychological, psychopharmacological, EMDR, body-work, mindfulness, yoga and neurofeedback, even the benefits of performance. This is all very well done, but despite learning a great deal from the author’s review of current treatment methods, I was disappointed, as a group therapist, by the absence of evidence regarding the benefits of group approaches. The preponderance of the evidence presented involved one-on-one interventions. I wondered if the author’s early experience of group therapy in two, rather stuck, groups of war veterans in the 1970s dissuaded him from pursuing this modality. However, group felt conspicuous by its absence. Surely there is a role for group work focusing on helping people, coming out of the speechlessness of trauma, relating to others with similar problems, as well as the wider community. Nevertheless, and putting my disappointment about group methods aside, this book remains a must read. Stephen Burton, MD, MA, IMF # 80575, is in private practice in Larchmont and is currently recruiting members to join a process group for people facing midlife issues. Stephen is a retired MD, who practiced psychiatry for 30 years in the UK. He also trained and practiced as a group analyst in London. He has recently joined the faculty at Antioch University Los Angeles, teaching psychopharmacology. Stephen currently serves as an Assistant Editor for the GPALA newsletter. Stephen Burton Tel: (323) 332-6735 Email: [email protected] Web: www.psych2c.com 4 AUTHENTICITY AND CONNECTION IN GROUP THERAPY: AN INTERVIEW WITH HAIM WEINBERG (continued from page 2) can interact relationally and to encourage immediacy, the here and now. These are just some of the roles of the group leader. Now the characteristics of a group leader, this is more difficult. Of course the group leader should be a sensitive person – to the dynamics happening in the group and to each of the group members. This is very difficult because you cannot do it perfectly and you will always miss something. You can expect that you will fail. You cannot attend to each of the eight group members, because you’re human and your attention span is limited. While I say that the group leader should be sensitive, psychologically oriented, and focused more on the process than the content, I also say that the group leader should be ready to acknowledge mistakes, and work well with his or her flaws. This is something that is not so easy, but we cannot be too narcissistic. I would say that although the position of the group leader puts us in a very narcissistically satisfying position, we must be able to be humble, and admit that sometimes we make mistakes. You should be empathic to what is happening, and when I say “be empathic,” I mean that when there’s an empathic failure, to be aware of that, acknowledge and do something with it. or she really did something to attract the fire) it’s not the right thing to do at the beginning. AS: Tell us a little about how conceptualizing group from an intersubjective approach is unique. HW: For me it is unique because I started from a very different perspective. For someone who came from a traditional, classical, psychodynamic, psychoanalytical approach, it’s a revolution, because I held in my mind a one-person psychology. If you have problems, difficulties, symptoms, it comes from your inner world, your unconscious, and your old patterns. But with the intersubjective, or relational, approach it’s always about the interaction, and we cannot see the person as separate from that interaction, the group, community or society. With intersubjectivity and individual therapy, it’s never that the person only projects on me and creates transference. I am always part of the matrix of transference/countertransference. In the group, we might see In the group, we might see what is called “the difficult patient.” But sometimes the difficult patient is a co-creation of the group and the leader of the group. We all bring our emotions to the group… A short example: in the last group meeting, I said something quite harsh to a group member; I said, “You’re quite oblivious to what your wife is trying to tell you.” So he half-jokingly said, “Can you say that in a stronger way with stronger words?” The group laughed, and I laughed, and we continued talking and then I realized he was trying to tell me something. So I stopped and turned to him and said, “Look, maybe you wanted to say that I was too harsh, and that you need me to give you feedback in a different way, so I want to tell you that I heard you.” The laughter of the group had indicated that there was some tension that had to be released, but what he said echoed. I couldn’t let it go as I thought, well, although he’s joking, he’s saying, “I’m hurt” or “It’s not good for me” and that’s what I had to take into consideration. These become important mistakes as long as we acknowledge them and work with them. AS: What’s the most difficult situation you’ve encountered in group therapy, how did you handle it, and what would you do differently? HW: I think that the most difficult situation was with a man who insisted on scapegoating himself again and again, and was a very aggressive person using aggressive words. He always attacked group members or people attacked him, using words like “explosions, mines, guns,” and the group actually hated him and wanted him out. I considered asking him to leave the group and finally he did leave, but in retrospect, I think it was a mistake. It was at a time that I didn’t know how to handle scapegoating well enough. Nowadays, I wouldn’t let him leave the group. I’d work with the group on their aggression projected onto him, and only later, on him with his aggression. The temptation of a group leader is to work with the scapegoat about the patterns that lead to group rejection, and though it sounds reasonable (because he what is called “the difficult patient.” But sometimes the difficult patient is a co-creation of the group and the leader of the group. We all bring our emotions to the group, and I might say or do something that makes you feel either criticized or not validated. You might react strongly as a “difficult patient.” I might forget that my response increases your response. It’s always about interaction. The intersubjective approach says that each of us comes with our subjective world. There is no one truth, and we need to acknowledge the others’ subjectivity, the other person. This is a task in the group: to help people really understand that the other person has their own subjective experience. A woman in my group always felt that she was on the wrong side, that whatever she said or did was wrong. In the group, whenever people told her anything, she immediately felt that she’d done something wrong, even if it wasn’t a criticism. The main achievement was when this woman said, “Oh, now I understand that sometimes people criticize me not because I did something wrong, but because of their world and their inner reality.” This is understanding the subjectivity of the other. It was a great revelation for her and the group. AS: You have written on Internet groups. What were some of the primary things you learned from writing this book, and how have you changed because of it? HW: The Internet Groups book is one of my babies. I’ve led a free (continued on page 6) 5 AUTHENTICITY AND CONNECTION IN GROUP THERAPY: AN INTERVIEW WITH HAIM WEINBERG (continued from page 5) Internet forum for group therapists since 1995. For 20 years, 400 group therapists from all over the world interact and exchange ideas, and connect (see www.group-psychotherapy.com). It’s an amazing thing. I recommend everyone to subscribe. Learning from that experience, I grew to understand more about Internet dynamics and Internet groups and how similar or different they are from our process groups. When I wrote the book, I suddenly understood there was something beyond all these dynamics, and this is the kind of the paradox that we have about connection on the Internet. On the one hand, it allows us to connect more – more people, people that we’ve never met, that we never see, from around the world, in places that we’ve never been. And on the other hand, it leaves us more alone. The subtitle of the book is Alone in the Presence of the Virtual Other. Winnicott said something about being alone in the presence of others, and that in order to develop the ability to be alone, first you need to be alone in the presence of the other. So I took it for Internet Groups. The book is mostly about the dynamics that develop in Internet forums, and the psychology that influences the relationships that people create, either one-on-one, or in groups on the Internet. On the Internet, we have a different kind of intimacy, which I termed E-ntimacy (trademarked). People might feel very connected on the Internet, but it’s not the same connection that is created when we meet face-to-face, and we need to know that and to understand it. The book is not about therapy groups yet, but I plan to do therapy online, in a group, with video, and write about it. My dream is to do online therapy with video and to research that process. AS: After answering these questions, are there any additional thoughts you’d like to share? HW: I’m excited to come to LA, and anxious of course. I hope that people will be ready to volunteer for the demo group, and that we’ll all learn together from the experience. Reference: Weinberg, H. (2014). The Paradox of Internet Groups: Alone in the Presence of Virtual Others. London, UK: Karnac Books, New International Library of Group Analysis. Andrew Sears MA, MFT (MFC53020) practices in Atwater Village and at the California Institute of the Arts (Cal Arts). His focus is on the creative fields, identity, attachment, and motivation. He also serves as an Assistant Editor of the GPALA Newsletter. (213) 545-1675 Email: [email protected] Web: www. atsearstherapy.com April 24th and 25th ANNUAL 2-DAY CONFERENCE with Haim Weinberg May 30th and 31st GROUP INSTITUTE: Nancy Fawcett July 11th GPALA Summer Party August 2nd GROUP INSTITUTE: Ryan Spencer and Matt Calkins September 20th WORKSHOP: Melissa Johnson: Building Grit: Group work to foster hardiness, happiness and mindfulness in children and teens October 17th and 18th GROUP INSTITUTE: Monica Farassat and John Chebultz November 8th ANNUAL 1-DAY CONFERENCE: Elisha Goldstein: Incorporating Mindfulness in Group Psychotherapy For more information about times and locations for all of our GPALA events please visit: www.gpala.org 6 OBITUARY In Septem ber o f 20 1 4 , ou r o rg anizatio n lo st an i n s pi r i n g leader and true adv o c a t e o f group psychotherap y. M o re recent members w i l l k n o w Carla Derhy-Snijders t h ro u g h the leadership she p ro v i d e d Carla Derhy-Snijders, Ph.D. as GPALA’s Preside n t f ro m (1957-2014) 2011-2013. Howeve r, b e f o re that, Carla was a d r i v i n g f o rce in GPALA’s g ro w th an d v i t a l i t y, serving in many other roles within G PA L A over the years, and providing valuable c o u n s el to our board members after her term as p re sid e n t ha d e nded. B o r n in the Netherlands on April 23rd 1957, s h e was known to be a bright student and a l w a y s an advocate for student groups and c a u s e s. She was fluent in five languages: E n g l i s h, Dutch, Hebrew, French, and German. C a r l a received her BA in Psychology in 1978, a n d h er MA in Clinical Psychology in 1983 f ro m Utrecht Univ ersity, the Netherlands. S h e was actively involved in the Jewish c o m m unity before she came to the USA. In t h e N etherlands, Carla was the leader of the H a b o nim group where she took groups of y o u n g children on trips to Israel. Her husband t e l l s t he story of how before the Soviet Union d i s s o l v e d , J e w s could not leave Russia, and Carla bravely m a d e a t r i p t o Russia to bring books to the Jewish peo p l e w h o w e re cra ving a n yt hing that rem inded them o f Isr ael . C a r l a moved to Los Angeles in 1983. She marri e d B e n j y De r h y in M a lib u in 1987. In Lo s Ang eles she becam e a c t i v e ly involved as a counseling and training su p e r v i s o r a t J e nny Craig. There she taught lifestyle clas s e s , l e d g ro u p d isc u ssion s a nd develo ped training m ater i al s from 1 9 8 5 to 1991. C a r l a and Benjy had two children, Natalie and G a b r i e l , w h o , in recent years, graduated from college. N o t h i n g m e a n t more to Carla than her family and children . H a v i n g re s i g n ed from a promising career at Jenny Cra i g t o b e a f u l l -time mother when they were very young, s h e w a s a n a c tive volunteer in her children’s school p ro g r a m s . S h e was an eager and vital member of the P TA a n d a s s i s t ed the school board in various ways throug h o u t h e r c h i l d rens’ years in s chool. She was also a board m e m b e r an d t our n a me n t d irecto r o f the Am erican Yo uth S occer O rg a n ization (AYSO) in Beverly Hills. C a r l a was also very active in Hadassah, the l a rg e s t w o m e n’s Zionist Organization in America, promotin g h e a l t h e d u c a tion, social action and advocacy, volun t e e r i s m , J e w i s h education, research and connections wit h I s r a e l . Within Hadassah, Carla was a Board Member and Co-President in 1996 and held various other positions within the organization. W h e n h e r c h i l d re n w e re g ro w n , C a r l a re t u r n e d t o s c h o o l t o e a r n h e r P h . D . i n C l i n i c a l P s y c h o l o g y f ro m C a l i f o r n i a G r a d u a t e I n s t i t u t e i n 2 0 0 7 . S h e t h e n c o m p l e t e d h e r p re and post-doctoral training hours at the Maple Counseling C en ter i n B ev er l y H i l l s . As a licensed psychologist, C a r l a b u i l t a t h r i v i n g p r i v a t e practice in Los Angeles that specialized in body d y s m o r p h i c d i s o rd e r, t r a u m a , a n d a n x i e t y d i s o rd e r s . S h e w o r k e d w i t h c h i l d re n , adolescents, families, couples, individual adults, and groups. Additionally, Carla was passionate about volunteering her time to the Soldiers Project, a nonprofit organization that provides free psychological counseling services to those involved in the conflicts in Iraq and A f g h a n i s t an s i n c e 2 0 0 1 . From 2007 to 2014, Carla was an esteemed Clinical Supervisor at the Maple Center, where she supervised pre- and post-doctoral interns. She was the Coordinator of the Group Psychotherapy and Intake and Assessment Programs. Carla was known to be a strong supervisor with a soft touch, where she guided, supported and inspired many interns. Carla’s own training at the Maple Center provided her with vast amounts of wisdom as she supervised others, since she knew intimately what it was like to be an intern there. B e t w e e n h e r l e a d e r s h i p w i t h i n G PA L A , a n d p e r h a p s e v e n m o re i m p o r t a n t l y, a s t h e h e a d o f t h e g ro u p p s y c h o t h e r a p y p ro g r a m a t t h e M a p l e C e n t e r, C a r l a h a s n u r t u re d h u n d re d s o f g ro u p t h e r a p i s t s . S h e b e l i e v e d i n t h e v a l u e o f c o n n e c t i n g p e o p l e t o o n e a n o t h e r, a n d i n t h e p o s i t i v e c h a n g e s t h e s e c o n n e c t i o n s p ro d u c e . M a n y o f t h o s e i n v o l v e d i n G PA L A a n d A G PA t o d a y c a n a t t e s t t o th e i n s pi r ati on an d gu i dan ce th at C ar l a prov i d e d . Sh e h a d t h e e x t r a o rd i n a r y a b i l i t y t o s e e t a l e n t s i n o t h e r s , a n d t o en cou r age an d n u r tu re th os e gi fts --ev en w he n f o l ks d i d n ’t n eces s ar i l y recogn i z e th os e gi fts w i th i n th e m s e l v e s . F o r s o m a n y, C a r l a w a s t h e g a t e w a y t o t h e i r o w n p e r s o n a l a n d p ro f e s s i o n a l d e v e l o p m e n t . T h e re a re f e w f i g u re s t h a t stand as tall as Carla Derhy-Snijders when it comes to h a v i n g h a d a n i m p a c t , n o t j u s t w i t h i n G PA L A , b u t a l s o w i t h i n g ro u p t h e r a p y a s a d i s c i p l i n e i n L o s A n g e l e s . H e r warmth, guidance, leadership and love for others will not b e f o rg o t t e n . 7 ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT New Therapy Group Forming for Men and Women Wednesday afternoons, 1:30 to 3:00 Cindy Weathers Therapy Therapy Group for Young Adults Tuesday @ 6PM Join a co-ed group of young adults Beverly Center area $80.00 per session ABOUT Cindy Weathers, MA, LMFT: Cindy Weathers, MA, LMFT, is a Licensed Marriage and Keith Rand, LMFT, CGP (323) 655-4060 [email protected] www.keithrandmft.com Cindy specializes in working with adolescents and the CLASSIFIED ADS JAKE MYERS Specializing in addiction/recovery, group therapy, LGBT Room for a couple more sliding scale clients! Convenient mid-city location KEITH RAND Mixed Adults Therapy Group has current openings. Located between Beverly Hills and Hollywood. Late afternoon and evening options. Keith Rand, L M F T , CGP , 323-655-4060 JakeMyersTherapy.com Supervised by Keith Rand MFT 323-544-5253 www.keithrandmft.com OPEN PATHS Open Paths Counseling Center offers affordable groups; LGBTQI, Victims of incest and sexual abuse, Social anxiety, Parenting (Spanish and English), Domestic Violence (victims and perpetrators, Spanish and English) 310-258-9677 ANDREW SUSSKIND Westside psychotherapy groups with current openings: Co-ed group meets Mondays 6-7:30pm Men’s group meets Wednesdays 7-8:30pm Contact Andrew Susskind, LCSW, CGP at 310.281.8681 or [email protected] JOEL MCLAFFERTY Rewarding chance to give back. Open Paths Counseling Center is looking for a Supervisor, $25/session, 5-8hrs/week at the clinic. Flexible except Thursdays 1-3. Contact Joel McLafferty 310-967-6072 or [email protected] MARIA GRAY Maria Gray Somatic Psychotherapy Individual and Couples Psychotherapy West LA area Saturday Appointments Available 310-319-6500 www.mariagray.net KEN UNMACHT A GROWTH ORIENTED psychodynamic therapy group meets 4-5:30 PM in Brentwood. This is for men and women wanting to deal with life’s issues in a supportive environment. For more information call Ken Unmacht, Psy.D. (310) 207-1246 NICKIE GODFREY “PUTTING IT BACK TOGETHER” CRISIS AND TRAUMA CLINICIANS’ CONSULTATION/ SUPPORT GROUP EXPAND TRAUMA SKILLS; FOCUS ON SELF CARE; PREVENT “BURNOUT” MONTHLY EVERY 3RD WEDNESDAY, 9AM-11AM, ENCINO, $45 NICKIE GODFREY, L.M.F.T. 818/783-5470 [email protected] KEITH RAND Consultation group has openings to develop skill as a group leader and to move towards CGP certification. Lens is psychodynamic and interpersonal. Currently held Friday mornings. Keith Rand, L M F T, 323-655-4060 MICHAEL FRANK New psychodynamic/interpersonal process group starting on Wednesday evenings in Encino. This is an ongoing group for therapists and non-therapists. Contact: Michael Frank at [email protected] for information. CARA GARDENSWARTZ Interpersonal Process Groups (Mixed Gender) led by Dr. Cara Gardenswartz, CGP and lecturer in the Department of Psychology at UCLA. Dr. Gardenswartz trained at Columbia University/St Lukes in Group Therapy. [email protected] 800-306-2773 MAPLE CENTER Effective, low-fee group psychotherapy is available at The Maple Counseling Center in Beverly Hills. For information about groups please contact: Michael Frank at [email protected] Advertise with GPALA! see our special rate for GPALA Members GPA L A N E W S L E T T E R A D VE R T ISING R AT E S & INFOR MATI ON Member rates apply to current GPALA members only. 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