Facililtating a New Sense of Self in Eating Disordered Clients

Saturday, March 7, 2009: 11:00 AM-12:30 PM
Salon CD & Corr 2 (Westin Long Beach)
Eating disordered clients are often highly reactive to and needing to please others, and feel empty. The Internal Family Systems model allows them to separate from the externally-focused parts of them and release their Self: a core of clarity, calm and courage that exists just beneath the surface of those parts. With their Self in the lead, clients themselves can heal the traumas that drive their eating disorders. The presenters will illustrate this process with videotaped segments of therapy sessions.
Eating disordered clients are often highly reactive to and needing to please others, and feel empty. The Internal Family Systems model allows them to separate from the externally-focused parts of them and release their Self: a core of clarity, calm and courage that exists just beneath the surface of those parts. With their Self in the lead, clients themselves can heal the traumas that drive their eating disorders. The presenters will illustrate this process with videotaped segments of therapy sessions.
Eating disordered clients are often highly reactive to and needing to please others, and feel empty. The Internal Family Systems model allows them to separate from the externally-focused parts of them and release their Self: a core of clarity, calm and courage that exists just beneath the surface of those parts. With their Self in the lead, clients themselves can heal the traumas that drive their eating disorders. The presenters will illustrate this process with videotaped segments of therapy sessions.
Primary Presenter:
Richard Schwartz, Ph.D.

After earning his Ph.D. in Marriage and Family Therapy from Purdue University, Dr. Schwartz began a long association with the Institute for Juvenile Research at the University of Illinois at Chicago, and more recently at The Family Institute at Northwestern University, attaining the status of Associate Professor in both institutions. He is Fellow of the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy, author of the book, Internal Family Systems Therapy, and co-author of Family Therapy: Concepts and Methods, the most widely-read family therapy textbook. He has co-authored the books, The Mosaic Mind: Empowering the Tormented Selves of Child Abuse Survivors and Metaframeworks: Transcending the Models of Family Therapy. He has written more than forty articles on various psychotherapy-related topics and is on the editorial board of four professional journals. As a teacher, Dr. Schwartz is known for his warmth, sensitivity, and clarity, and has sought to embody the principles of the IFS Model and the spirit of Self-leadership. As developer of Internal Family Systems Therapy, Dr. Schwartz incorporated The Center for Self Leadership in Oak Park, Illinois in August 2000, where the Internal Family Systems Model will be further developed to address issues of violence, racism, abuse, and other forms of oppression



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