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Digital Recording

The Siegel-Gottman Summit: Neuroscience Meets Family Science


Average Rating:
   1
Speakers:
Daniel J. Siegel, MD |  John M. Gottman, PhD |  Julie Schwartz Gottman, PhD
Duration:
12 Hours 47 Minutes
Format:
Audio and Video
Copyright:
Jul 25, 2014
Product Code:
POS047740
Media Type:
Digital Recording
Access:
Never expires.


Description

A Clinical Training with Dr. Dan Siegel & Drs. John & Julie Gottman

Don’t miss this exciting opportunity to immerse yourself in a conversation of mindfulness and couples therapy. This groundbreaking training offers you the chance of a lifetime to watch three of the greatest thinkers in their fields as they weave together independent approaches that will empower and transform your work with individuals and couples. Learn how to move couples from rigid and chaotic states to a state of empathy, compassion, and flexibility through mindfulness.

Dr. Dan Siegel has made one of the most exciting scientific discoveries of the last twenty years: how we focus our attention shapes the structure of our brain.  He will masterfully provide an entertaining and clear framework for understanding the human mind and its connection to relationships.

In response, the Gottmans will skillfully demonstrate-through live video taped sessions with couples, clinical vignettes, and experiential audience participation-how to interweave mindfulness into your couples work using evidenced-based interventions from Gottman Method Couples Therapy.

This workshop provides a synthesis of Interpersonal Neurobiology woven together with key Gottman Method Interventions.  You will learn how to identify chaotic and rigid states of mind and help move individuals and couples toward states of flexibility, compassion, openness, empathy and attunement.  As a result, they will experience deeper connection, renewed intimacy, greater self-compassion, and healing from relationship wounds.

CPD


CPD

This online program is worth 12.25 hours CPD.



Handouts

Speaker

Daniel J. Siegel, MD's Profile

Daniel J. Siegel, MD Related seminars and products

Mindsight Institute


Daniel J. Siegel, MD, is a graduate of Harvard Medical School and completed his postgraduate medical education at UCLA with training in pediatrics and child, adolescent, and adult psychiatry. He is currently a clinical professor of psychiatry at the UCLA School of Medicine, founding co-director of UCLA's Mindful Awareness Research Center, founding co-investigator at the UCLA Center for Culture, Brain and Development, and executive director of the Mindsight Institute, an educational center devoted to promoting insight, compassion, and empathy in individuals, families, institutions, and communities.

Dr. Siegel's psychotherapy practice spans thirty years, and he has published extensively for the professional audience. He serves as the Founding Editor for the Norton Professional Series on Interpersonal Neurobiology which includes over 70 textbooks. Dr. Siegel's books include his five New York Times bestsellers: Aware: The Science and Practice of Presence; Brainstorm: The Power and Purpose of the Teenage Brain, Mind: A Journey to the Heart of Being Human, and two books with Tina Payne Bryson, Ph.D, The Whole-Brain Child and No-Drama Discipline. His other books include:The Power of Showing Up also with Tina Payne Bryson, Ph.D., The Developing Mind, The Pocket Guide to Interpersonal Neurobiology, Mindsight, The Mindful Brain, The Mindful Therapist, Parenting from the Inside Out (with Mary Hartzell, M.Ed.), and The Yes Brain (also with Tina Payne Bryson, Ph.D). He has been invited to lecture for the King of Thailand, Pope John Paul II, His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Google University, and TEDx.


Speaker Disclosures:
Financial: Dr. Daniel Siegel is the clinical professor at the UCLA School of Medicine, the medical director of Lifespan Learning Institute, the executive director of Center for Human Development and Mindsight Institute, and the founding editor of Norton Series on Interpersonal Neurobiology. He receives royalties as a published author. Dr. Daniel Siegel receives a speaking honorarium, recording royalties, and book royalties from PESI, Inc. He has no relevant financial relationships with ineligible organizations.
Non-financial: Dr. Daniel Siegel serves on the advisory board for Gloo and Convergence in Washington, D.C.


John M. Gottman, PhD's Profile

John M. Gottman, PhD Related seminars and products

The Gottman Institute


John Gottman, Ph.D., is Professor Emeritus of Psychology at the University of Washington, where he established what the media called, "The Love Lab," and conducted much of his award-winning research on couple interaction and treatment. Dr. Gottman has studied marriage, couples and parent relationships for nearly four decades. He has authored or co-authored 119 published articles as well as 44 books, including: The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work, The Relationship Cure, Why Marriages Succeed or Fail, and How You Can Make Yours Last, Raising an Emotionally Intelligent Child: The Heart of Parenting, And Baby Makes Three and The Marriage Clinic.

World renown for his work on marital stability and divorce prediction, Dr. Gottman's research has earned him numerous national awards, including: Four five-year-long National Institute of Mental Health Research Scientist Awards; The American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy Distinguished Research Scientist Award; The American Psychological Association Division of Family Psychology Presidential Citation for Outstanding Lifetime Research Contribution; The National Council of Family Relations 1994 Burgess Award for Outstanding Career in Theory and Research.

Dr. Gottman, together with his wife, Dr. Julie Schwartz Gottman, is the co-founder of The Gottman Institute, which provides clinical training, workshops, services, and educational materials for mental health professionals, couples, and families. He is also the co-founder and Executive Director of the Relationship Research Institute which has created treatments for couples transitioning to parenthood and couples suffering from minor domestic violence.

Dr. Gottman has presented hundreds of invited keynote addresses, workshops, and scientific presentations, to avid audiences around the world including Switzerland, Italy, France, England, Israel, Turkey, South Korea, Australia, Canada, Sweden and Norway. A wonderful story-teller and expert, Dr. Gottman has also appeared on many TV shows, including Good Morning America, Today, CBS Morning News, and Oprah, and he has been written up in numerous print articles, including Newsweek, The New York Times, The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Ladies Home Journal, Redbook, Glamour, Woman's Day, Men's Health, People, Self, Reader's Digest, and Psychology Today.

Drs. John and Julie Gottman currently live on Orcas Island, near Seattle, Washington. They conduct weekly and intensive couples therapy sessions, provide small group retreats, teach workshops and clinical trainings and give presentations and training workshops around the world.

 

Speaker Disclosures:
Financial: Dr. John Gottman is the co-founder and chief scientist of Gottman Inc. and has an employment relationship with the Relationship Research Institute. He receives a grant from the Administration for Children and Family and the Kirlin Foundation. Dr. Gottman receives royalties as a published author. He receives a speaking honorarium, book royalties, and recording royalties from PESI, Inc.
Non-financial: Dr. John Gottman is a member of the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy, the American Psychological Association, and the American Psychological Society National.


Julie Schwartz Gottman, PhD's Profile

Julie Schwartz Gottman, PhD Related seminars and products

Co-Owner

The Gottman Institute


Julie Schwartz Gottman, Ph.D., is the co-founder and President of The Gottman Institute, and Clinical Supervisor for the Couples Together Against Violence study. A highly respected clinical psychologist, she is sought internationally by media and organizations as an expert advisor on marriage, sexual harassment and rape, domestic violence, gay and lesbian adoption, same-sex marriage, and parenting issues. Creator of the immensely popular The Art and Science of Love weekend workshops for couples, she also designed and leads the national certification program in Gottman Method Couples Therapy for clinicians. Her other achievements include: Washington State Psychologist of the Year; Author/co-author of five books, including, Ten Lessons to Transform Your Marriage, And Baby Makes Three, The Marriage Clinical Casebook, 10 Principles for Doing Effective Couples Therapy, and The Man’s Guide to Women; Wide recognition for her clinical psychotherapy treatment, with specialization in distressed couples, abuse and trauma survivors, substance abusers and their partners, and cancer patients and their families.

Inspiring, empowering, respectful, and kind, Julie’s leadership of The Gottman Institute has made it possible to identify and integrate the expertise of her staff, therapists, and the wider research and therapeutic community. Her commitment to excellence and integrity assures that as The Gottman Institute grows, it continues to maintain the highest ethical and scientific standards.

She is in private practice in the Seattle area, providing intensive marathon therapy sessions for couples. She specializes in working with distressed couples, abuse and trauma survivors, those with substance abuse problems and their partners, as well as cancer patients and their families.

Drs. John and Julie Gottman currently live on Orcas Island, near Seattle, Washington. They conduct weekly and intensive couples therapy sessions, provide small group retreats, teach workshops and clinical trainings, and give keynote presentations around the world.


Speaker Disclosures:
Financial: Dr. Julie Schwartz Gottman is the co-founder of the Gottman Institute and Affective Software, Inc. She is the clinical director of The Relationship Research Institute, and she maintains a private practice. Dr. Schwartz Gottman is the owner of Gottman Couples' Retreat. She is a guest lecturer at the University of Puget Sound and Seattle Community Colleges, and she receives compensation as an international speaker. She is a published author and receives royalties, and she receives a speaking honorarium, recording royalties, and book royalties from PESI, Inc. She has no relevant financial relationships with ineligible organizations.
Non-financial: Dr. Julie Schwartz Gottman is a member of the American Psychological Association.


Objectives

  • Summarize the three domains of the Gottman Method Sound Relationship House.
  • Apply principles of Interpersonal Neurobiology to clinical assessment.
  • Describe several ways in which the Gottman Method can be integrated with principles of Interpersonal Neurobiology.
  • Define the self-organizing aspect of the mind and mental health.
  • Identify several Gottman Method interventions that promote self-integration.
  • List at least seven aspects of integrative prefrontal functions.
  • Discuss the ways in which attachment patterns and couple relationship dynamics intersect.
  • Identify the overlap between the social and regulatory circuits of the brain.
  • Discuss the four ways in which experience alters the function and structure of the brain.
  • Define integration and its functional outcomes.
  • Describe how attachment categories may be altered by psychotherapy.
  • Identify how Gottman method may induce neuroplastic changes in the brain.

Outline

DAY ONE

Self-Awareness and Self-Soothing

  • Integration of consciousness
  • Increasing self-awareness and self-compassion
  • Emotional regulation
  • The science of Diffuse Physiological Arousal
  • The clinical treatment of ‘Flooding’

Gottman Intervention: Self Soothing

Connecting Your Brain’s Hemispheres and Connecting with Your Partner

  • Integrating the verbal/logical left side and the nonverbal/sensual right side of the brain
  • Enabling the individual to translate sensations into words
  • Developing sensitivity to meta-emotional mismatches within a couple
  • Intimate connection in all six emotional command systems
  • Receptivity to the partner’s unique perspective

Gottman Intervention: Meta-Emotion Mismatch: Untruth vs. truth sensory experience

Moving Past Trauma to Receptivity

  • Understanding vertical integration: Gut, heart, lungs and brain
  • Increasing awareness with our bodies
  • Increasing emotional receptivity and attunement to others by listening to the body
  • Implications for working with trauma in couples
  • Strengthening the couple relationship by surfacing past trauma

Case example: Sexual abuse

Contextualizing Negativity in a Deeper Story

  • Memory integration
  • Moving traumatic memories into a greater state of consciousness
  • Constructing autobiographical memories
  • Identifying a partner’s Internal Working Model
  • Increasing the sensitivity of both partners to negative, reactive responses

Gottman Intervention: Internal Working Model

DAY TWO

Building Attachment, Understanding and Compassion

  • State integration: intrastate, interstate and interpersonal states
  • Build self-esteem by exploring insecure attachments
  • Explore the individual deep seeded dreams that lead to gridlocked conflict in a couple
  • Uncovering those dreams builds understanding between partners

Gottman Intervention: Stress reducing conversation

Creating a Partnership within Yourself and With Your Partner

  • Interpersonal integration: honoring and supporting differences in each other
  • Shame and self-loathing act to split a person into multiple selves
  • Helping clients establish an integrated self through self-acceptance and compassion
  • Deepening fondness and admiration between partners
  • Creating a unified partnership with mutual respect

Gottman Intervention: Fondness and admiration

Building Connections for a Lifetime

  • Temporal integration: making maps of time
  • Finite role of time in shaping the human life
  • Seeking certainty, but change is the only constant
  • Building rituals of connection for creating a meaningful life together

Gottman Intervention: Building rituals of connection

Increased Attunement and Implications for Working with Affairs

  • Mindsight and freedom
  • Being receptive and open with others encourages neuroplasticity and increases attuned communications
  • Clinical applications of openness to healing from an affair

Case study: Affair couple

Target Audience

Addiction Counselors, Counselors, Marriage & Family Therapists, Nurses, Psychologists, Social Workers, and Other Professions

Reviews

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Overall:      5

Total Reviews: 1

Comments

Jamie S

"I thought the presenters were effective and well-integrated :-) with each other. I would have liked to hear more from John Gottman."

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