21st Summer Bioenergetic Retreat on PEI on the East Coast of Canada
June 26-July 3, 2009 or July 5-12, 2009
Deep work
Beautiful place near sandy beaches
"Down to Earth" people
Amazing price (as low as $675 US)
Includes private room and meals, individual and group therapy

Your Therapists
Bethany Doyle MTS, CCC, CBT, is an IIBA Local Trainer in bioenergetics and has a private practice in Charlottetown. She is a professional mediator and is certified in NLP. She brings to her work a passionate concern for the healing of our connections with ourselves, with each other, and with Earth.
Rosalind McVicar, BScN, CCC, CBT has a background in nursing and is an IIBA Local Trainer in bioenergetics. Her training includes certification in NLP. She is keenly interested in the life of the body, and in the process of freeing one's spirit to be truly present to the self and the other. She believes that body/spirit work is the best way to resolve emotional issues.
Safe, Supportive Place
As a participant in this summer retreat, you will have a unique opportunity for therapeutic, spiritual, and interpersonal growth. We value and promote a safe, supportive atmosphere.
Our time together includes:
Daily: Bioenergetic exercise, Bioenergetic group process, Tai Chi
As well as: Spirituality sessions, Individual therapy, Massage, Journalin, Dance And A free afternoon to rest and explore PEI
Register Early and Save
A $100. deposit must accompany your application. All fees in Canadian Funds.
Deposit
(*with post-dated check) |
Total Fee |
By April 30th $100
(Post-dated May 31st ) $725 |
$825
|
After April 30th |
$850 |
This investment includes tuition and individual therapy as well as private room and meals.
Refund Policy
Full refund less a $75. processing fee will be offered if all places for the week are filled.
Application Form
July 5 to12 ?
June 26 to July 3 - Filled!
Enclosed: $100 deposit____________
+ post-dated check: ______________
Name___________________________
Address_________________________________________________________
City____________________________
Province/State___________________
Postal Code/ Zip_____ _____
Country ________________________
Tel: _________________________
email: _________________________
Check payable to:
Bioenergetics
in Canadian Funds Only
Send to:
Rosalind McVicar
30 Wellesley Ave
Saint John NB E2K 2V2
CANADA
From Participants
“A healing, welcoming, nurturing place with clean air and water, and hospitality that overflows.” M.H.C., Chicago, IL
“The best workshop I’ve ever attended for an integrated and creative experience of bioenergetics, spirituality, community-building, and mindful living. It’s even fun!” Bioenergetic Trainee, Baltimore, MD
“An intimate, challenging, strong, compassionate place.” B.N., Halifax, NS
For Further Info
http://www.bioenergetictherapy.ca
Email: bio@eastlink.ca
Tel: 506/657-5172 or 902/894-3244
Through the body sensations that arise from full and deep breathing, we become conscious of the pulsating aliveness of our bodies, and sense that we are one with all pulsating creatures in a pulsating universe.
--
Alexander Lowen
Belcourt is situated in picturesque rural Prince Edward Island, close to the beautiful beaches of the North Shore. See you by the dunes!
New York Society for Bioenergetic Analysis
Finding the Father in the Body
Saturday, May 2nd · 10am-5pm & Sunday, May 3rd · 9:30am-2pm
The Influence of the Father on Character Formation
Continuing investigation into the effects fathers have on us reveals the difficulty many of us have identifying those effects in our bodies. Culture, character, unfamiliarity, all act to reduce our contact with the body of the father in our bodies. This workshop will explore the use of knowledge available in body process to enter, expand, and illuminate our understanding of the impact fathers have on ourselves, our patients, our children, and the world.
This workshop will provide a supportive learning environment in which mental health professionals can observe, understand and experience principles for body-oriented psychotherapeutic interventions.
Saturday, May 2nd · 10am-5pm & Sunday, May 3rd · 9:30am-2pm
160 West 73 Street, Suite 6-i
Fee: $145 - $120 for Students
Checks payable to NYSBA, c/o Dr. Scott Baum, 711 West End Avenue, 1AN, New York, NY 10025
(212) 665-3908
www.bioenergetics-nyc.org
New York Society for Bioenergetic Analysis
Saturday, March 28th, 2009 - 10am to 5pm
Focusing on the Body in Psychotherapy
This one-day intensive workshop is for people in psychotherapy seeking an experiential understanding of body-oriented therapy, and for professionals interested in learning about working with the body in psychotherapy. Conducted by members of the faculty of the New York Society for Bioenergetic Analysis, the main focus of the day will be devoted to experiential, in-depth personal work.
Bioenergetic Bodywork • Group/Individual Process
In-Depth Emotional Work
Wear comfortable clothing. Bring a bag lunch.
Saturday, March 28th, 2009 - 10am to 5pm
160 West 73rd Street, Suite 6-i
Fee: $120.00
Checks payable to NYSBA, c/o Danita Hall, LCSW, 111 W. 94th St., 5F, New York, NY 10025.
Please include name, address, phone and email on a separate sheet along with payment.
For information about workshops or professional training please contact Scott Baum, Ph.D.
(212) 665-3908
www.bioenergetics-nyc.org
New York Society for Bioenergetic Analysis
Power & Autonomy as Expressed in Somatic Character Organization
Autonomy—self realization--is the aim of most psychotherapies. Autonomy cannot exist without power. Power is a somatic process that takes many forms including: force, receptivity, contactfulness, tolerance of emotional experience, and more. This workshop will examine power in its somatopsychic manifestations, with a special focus on the influence of gender identity on character organization, and the emergence of the dynamics of power in the therapeutic relationship.
This workshop will provide a supportive learning environment in which mental health professionals can observe, understand and experience principles for body-oriented psychotherapeutic interventions.
Saturday, Feb. 21st · 10am-5pm & Sunday, Feb. 22nd · 9:30am-2pm
160 West 73 Street, Suite 6-i
Fee: $145 by Feb. 14th ? $165 after Feb. 14th ? $100 for Students
Checks payable to NYSBA, c/o Danita Hall, LCSW, 111 West 94th St., 5F, New York, NY 10025
(212) 665-3908
www.bioenergetics-nyc.org
21st Annual Bioenergetic Summer Retreats
June 26-July 3, 2009
or
July 5-12, 2009
Belcourt Center
South Rustico PEI Canada
Your Therapists
Bethany Doyle MTS, CCC, CBT, is an IIBA Local Trainer in bioenergetics and has a private practice in Charlottetown. She is a professional mediator and is certified in EMDR and NLP. She brings to her work a passionate concern for the healing of our connections with ourselves, with each other, and with Earth.
Rosalind McVicar, BScN, CCC, CBT has a background in nursing and is an IIBA Local Trainer in bioenergetics. Her training includes certification in EMDR and NLP. She is keenly interested in the life of the body, and in the process of freeing one's spirit to be truly present to the self and the other. She believes that body/spirit work is the best way to resolve emotional issues. |
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Safe, Supportive Place
As a participant in this summer retreat, you will have a unique opportunity for therapeutic, spiritual, and interpersonal growth. We value and promote a safe, supportive atmosphere. >>click here to read more
2009 TRUSTING THE WISDOM OF THE BODY WORKSHOP CLICK HERE
Hello all,
Please open the attachment to read about the upcoming workshop with Bob and Virginia
Hilton. What a great opportunity to spend the day with two
of our most knowledgeable colleagues. This workshop is for
members only. Register today as space is limited.
Thanks, Diana Guest
"When you have no words for your feelings, for what happened
to you, for what is missing in you, we listen to the inner resonance
- of your inchoate secrets - as it lives in your body. We help you
to sense and amplify this inner resonance until its movement comes
close enough to the surface of your being to enter your consciousness.
But we also listen carefully to your words and are touched by them
when they come from a depth of your being that no one can put a
hand on. We invite you to surrender to the spirit of your body and
the body of your spirit - and in so doing, to embrace your true
self."
- (Robert Lewis, M.D, CBT, IIBA faculty).
Massachusetts Society for Bioenergetic Analysis
Exercise classes taught weekly in Somerville and nearby areas:
Monday evenings, Monday mornings, Tuesday evenings, etc.
Ongoing Introductory Workshops
Phone number: 617-876-3652
email address: msba@massbioenergetics.org
www.massbioenergetics.org
Atlantic Canada Society for
Bioenergetic Analysis
Thursday's at 5pm
Wellesley Ave
Saint John, NB, Canada
Rosalind McVicar CBT
506/657-5172
Psychotherapists Virginia
and Bob Hilton of Costa Mesa CA are doing a preconference workshop
at USABP in Philadelpia July 22nd, 2008. The conference theme is
Getting to the Heart of the Matter and our workshop title is Recovering
the Root of our Identity: Embodying our Love
For more information go to: http://www.usabp.org/
The Embodied Mind:
Trauma, Attachment, and Psychotherapy
Friday, September 19 2008, 8:30am - 4:00pm
$130 (members) includes
lunch
$140 (non-members)
"No longer is the skull
a black box, its clockwork invisible as it was to Sigmund Freud,
Carl Jung, and I will add here, Reich and Lowen and the seminal
thinkers and clinicians who have shaped 20th-century psychotherapy.
For the past decade, in well-funded university neuroscience laboratories
from Boston to Madison to San Francisco, the black box of the skull
has been opening and spilling out diamonds" (Butler, 2005,
p.28). These studies have informed and shaped the theories and treatment
of traumatic events and attachment disorders.
"Recent findings from
observing caretaker-infant pairs have confirmed what therapists
working with the body have known for a long time; that is that early
attachment experiences are encoded in the right brain, they remain
there unsymbolized and are available through communicating with
the body in relationship. Recently, the psychoanalytic literature
has begun to focus on the empirical infant, the one who is known
from infant observation and derived from investigating a diverse
population of caretaker-child pairs. This research has led to the
same conclusion regarding preverbal states and the importance of
working with the body and touch in psychoanalysis." (Resneck-Sannes,
2002)
"The relentless privileging
of language . . . has in the past conveniently shielded clinicians
from the vast wealth of confusing and even "messy" nonverbal
data that is used consciously and more often, unconsciously, in
work with patients. In recent years, however, therapists have come
increasingly to understand the significance of nonverbal experience
in human development. The explosion of research on the human infant
has illuminated the astonishingly rich and complex nature of the
continuing social dialogue that takes place between the infant and
the mothering one, a dialogue that at least on the part of the infant,
is primarily nonverbal." (Toronto, 2001, p.40)
"Allan Schore has summarized
this work, focusing on the right brain-to-right brain communication
that occurs between the infant and her caretaker. Because of the
infant's undeveloped and restricted coping capacities, the primary
caregiver is the source of the infant's stress regulation, and therefore
sense of safety. Indeed, the regulatory systems that integrate mind
and body are a product of developing limbic-autonomic circuits (Rinaman,
Levitt, & Card, 2000), and since their maturation is experience-dependent,
during their critical period of organization they are vulnerable
to relational trauma. Schore has extended the findings from infants
relating to their caregivers to the therapeutic process. He asserts
that the communication between clients and their therapists is derived
from somatosensory cues that the therapist, like "a good enough
mother" interprets, then provides the correct intervention
required by the client at that time." (Resneck-Sannes- 2002,
p.111)
Also, in the last decade
an enormous amount has been learned about the differences between
memories of everyday experiences and those of overwhelming events.
These memories are different, depending on the age at which the
trauma occurs and the social support systems of the victims. Recent
neuroimaging studies suggest where in the brain these memories are
stored and what the mechanisms might be of the recovery of traumatic
memories. While ordinary memory is an active and constructive process,
traumatic memories are stored in ways that are different from the
memories of everyday experience, namely as dissociated sensory and
perceptual fragments of the experience. As Bessel van der Kolk states:
"Since traumatic memories often are dissociated and may be
inaccessible to verbal recall or processing, attention should be
paid to the somatic re-experiencing of trauma-related sensations
and affects which may serve as engines for continuing maladaptive
behaviors (Van der Kolk, b, 1996, p.281 )
Bibliography
Butler K (2005) September / October, Psychotherapy Networker: 28.
Resneck-Sannes H (2002) Psychobiology of Affects: Implications for
a somatic psychotherapy. Bioenergetic Analysis: 111-122.
Toronto, E. (2001) The human touch: An exploration of the role and
meaning of physical touch in psychoanalysis. Psychoanalytic Psychology,
8,1.
Van der Kolk, B., McFarlane, A., Weisaeth, L. (1996) Traumatic stress:
The effects of overwhelming experience on body, mind and society,
New York: The Guilford Press.
Objectives
1. Learn how the brain develops in relationship, which in turn informs
our interventions as therapists
2. Learn how traumatic memories are stored and processed
3. Learn which interventions are effective for treating strain trauma
vs. acute posttraumatic stress
4. Learn how to regulate your own body, so as to be the best possible
therapist for this particular client as this particular time
5. Learn how the current research on the brain determines the choice
of treatment for anxiety disorders vs. depression
Schedule
8:30-9:00 Registration
9:00-9:30 Into Our Bodies
9:30-10:30 The Brain (as an anatomical structure)
and the Mind (as an information processing system)
1. The Orbitalfrontal Cortex -- Regulation of the Autonomic Nervous
System
2. Limbic Brain and Attachment- - "What is that zing and is
it a good or bad thing?"
3. Optimal Stress
10:30-10:45 Break
10:45-11:15 Therapeutic Relationship
1. What Is Empathy and How Does One Embody Empathy as a Therapist?
2. Right Brain to Right Brain Communication
3. Mirror Neurons
11:15-12:00 Dyadic Exercise on Limbic Attachment
12:00-1:00 Lunch
1:00-2:00 Psychobiological Regulation in the Therapeutic
Relationship
2:00-2:15 Break
2:15-3:30 Depression, Anxiety, and The Brain
1. Depression -- Cognitive and somatic interventions
2. Anxiety and managing overarousal
3:30-4:00 Wrap-up and questions
Wear comfortable clothes, as the workshop will entail some exercises
and movement.
Workshop
Leader
Helen Resneck-Sannes, Ph.D.
216 Suburbia Ave., Santa Cruz, CA 95062
831 426-2768,
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need
JavaScript enabled to view it
Helen Resneck-Sannes, Ph.D.
is a licensed psychologist in private practice in Santa Cruz, California.
In addition to having taught in several university psychology departments,
she is a member of the faculty of the International Institute for
Bioenergetic Analysis, has assisted in trainings for Peter Levine
and Somatic Experiencing and has trained and lectured in Brazil,
Canada, France, Germany, New Zealand, and the United States. Her
articles have appeared in various psychological journals and books,
and she has served as coeditor of the Journal for the International
Institute of Bioenergetics Analysis. She has a chapter in the book,
Love is Ageless: Stories about Alzheimer's Disease (Jessica Bryant,
Ed.), and a book entitled: Father's Rooms about her own journey
with her father's Alzheimer's disease.
Location
University Inn and Conference Center, 611 Ocean Street, Santa Cruz
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