Explore every episode of the podcast The Family Express
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| E19. Working through Shame Blocks with Parents in Stage 1 with Dr James Hawkins | 10 Sep 2024 | 00:39:15 | |
Welcome back for the next journey of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans where our destination is resilient and connected families. Today’s guest is Dr. James Hawkins from Arkansas. Our episode focuses on shame as a parental block. All Aboard ! 1:00. James opens with what he likes about in EFFT. 5:20. We set our episode focus on parental shame and the impact on attachment when a parent is blocked by shame. 7:30. James locates when in a session we may see a parent get caught in their parental shame. Kathryn clarifies that as a child distills or opens up about their experience, then a parent may get hijacked by the shame as they metabolize what their child is saying and they lose their emotional balance. 9:40. The reframe: As the parent loses their emotional balance and is consumed by shame, the reframe is that this shows how much they care about their child and what their child goes through and experiences and thus shows the parental intent to caregive/to give care to their child when the child needs it. 10:30. James offers a demonstration of how to validate the good reason that shame is showing up at this moment for a parent (flipping the block intervention). 12:25. James talks about the importance of maintaining focus in EFFT sessions particularly when a child opens up to distill and share their experience. Focus: #1 stabilize/resource the child. #2 respond to parental shame by validating it and making sense of it showing up in that moment. 14:50. Kathryn and James relate to times when they have missed that focus and they missed reframing the parental shame and it has affected the kid. 17:35. Kathryn provides a demonstration of an enactment of validating the kid's response to the parental shame, and then re-focusing back to the parent to help them respond to their child. 18:40. We discuss the power of attachment in coming alongside a parent who gets caught in shame, or when families get stuck in negative patterns. 23:53. James provides a demonstration of how he intervenes when a parent is in emotional distress (ie, shame) and a child moves into an emotional caregiving role to the parent. 26:05. He honors and validates the good reasons for the existence of the child caregiving, and not only ask the child to "give up" that child caregiving of the parent. 28:00. James differentiates between experiential shame (that is an opening to parental accessibility) with appropriate time and place whereas "behavioral shame" as a defensive/protective strategy, and how behavioral shame in a pattern pulls for positive reinforcement/reassurance 29:45. James and Kathryn discuss the difference between guilt and shame. James describes that when a parent feels guilt in the moment, and then sees their child's position, and can convert this to caregiving action, this is an ideal moment and we the clinician want to put this into action with an engaged encounter (ie, enactment). 34:49. James describes one way to respond/intervene with a "behavioral shame" moment in a parent. He describes this is "a Sue intervention." His intervention focuses on making the process explicit, and some highlighting of the timing of the behavioral shame. Thank you for listening! Kathryn de Bruin is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, EFT supervisors and therapists, and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn de Bruin Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Evans You can follow Dr. James Hawkins Website: https://www.dochawklpc.com IG: doc_hawk_lpc FB: dochawklpc | |||
| E18. EFFT Assessment of the Family System with Norma Brito de la Cuesta, Part One | 27 Aug 2024 | 00:43:25 | |
Welcome back for the next journey of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans where our destination is resilient and connected families. Today’s guest Norma Brito de la Cuesta from Costa Rica. Norma has a masters degree, and she has a vast history of experience in the field of psychology, and she is a practicing family therapist. All Aboard ! 0:55. Norma talks about her vast experience in the field of psychology. 2:30. From all of her years of experience, Norma's #1 recommendation is to explore deeply with every family about the beliefs and values that guide a family. Norma cautions about implicit bias in the clinicians about what guides or organizes a family. 8:50. Norma describes how to validate what the parent/family brings up at the beginning of family therapy to then be able to ask relevant family-focused assessment questions. She describes that the clinician can say "I want to really understand you as a family, how you think, how you came to be the family that you are. I need to understand deeply who you are and this is coming from a respectful place in me. And so I have some specific questions to ask about." 10:35. Assessment subtopic #1: Parent/Caregiver Goals particularly around the spectrum of independence/autonomy to dependence. What are the hopes and dreams that parents have for their child(ren). Then partners have children and partners may bring the hopes and dreams of their parents/family of origin to their nuclear family. The question becomes "what is better?" 13:00. Norma explains how the parent/caregiver fears interfere with the respect that kids need to live their own lives and the way the kid wants to live their own life. 15:15. Norma and Kathryn address how there is a generational shift in the younger generations who are empowered with their voice, they ask questions, and they express their opinions, and parents/caregivers need to respect that. Norma cautions that by continuing to setting limits on the kid and discouraging kids from their natural way of asking questions and expressing their opinion then they won't grow in their autonomy and self-responsibility for their life. 16:30. Assessment subtopic #2: Discipline. Parenting with love, support and limits. Norma and Kathryn discuss the interrelatedness of discipline and the purpose/function of discipline. Discipline is to protect the kids; discipline is not just to limit/limitations on the child. Parenting with love, support and limits creates structure and security for the growing child and provides a model of guidance. 21:50. Assessment subtopic #3: Communication. Norma explains how the parent needs to lead with listening and understanding why their child is sharing about a certain topic, and needs to hold their personal reaction or opinion for later. Kathryn and Norma have a discussion about the spectrum of direct and indirect communication. 31:25. Assessment subtopic #4: Education. Clinicians need to ask and listen about the value on the continuum of academic/education/learning-focus versus socialization/extracurriculars/play/fun in a family. 34:55. Assessment subtopic #5: Family Structure (ie, Extended Family). Who is involved in this child's life and what are the values that those adults/extended family members emphasize with the child(ren)? Another aspect can be when parents see their own parents in the grandparent role be gentle with their children when the parent did not get that from their parent as a child. Stay tuned for Part Two of Norma's family assessment coming in mid-September. Thank you for listening! Kathryn de Bruin is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, EFT supervisors and therapists, and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn de Bruin Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Evans Facebook Facebook IG LinkedIn Website You can follow Norma Brito here IG: normabritodelacuesta FB: Norma Brito | |||
| E9. Honoring Sue Johnson, Creator of Emotionally Focused Therapy | 02 May 2024 | 00:34:52 | |
Welcome back to The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans. In today's episode we honor and remember Sue Johnson, creator and founder of EFT, and we share our grief and loss with each other, and with our listeners. Thank you for listening! Kathryn is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, EFT supervisors and therapists, and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn de Bruin Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Evans | |||
| E8. Fostering Empathy in Children and Pre-Teens with Dr. Yamilka Urquiza | 23 Apr 2024 | 00:36:46 | |
Welcome back for the next adventure of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans. Today’s guest is Dr. Yamilka Urquiza and she will speak about her research into fostering empathy in kids. All Aboard ! 1:41 Dr. Urquiza tells us about her upbringing in Cuba in a multi-generational households. 10:50 Her research findings included a reciprocity of caregiving between the generations. 13:00 Other findings included: for those now grown adults who had been a helper-caregiver as kids, they now had a positive attitude toward caregiving; also, increased empathy. 16:30 Dr. Urquiza shares her childhood experience of caregiving for her great grandpa in Cuba. 18:14 Through caregiving role/experiences, kids learn to think about others and the experiences of others and thus they grow their perspective-taking skill and empathy development. 19:48 The research participants who described having their own empathy and consideration of others expanded through the caregiving role/experience. 20:24 Kathryn describes the multi-generational context of her own kids are being raised in and how she helps them grow empathy and perspective-taking through conversations with them. 23:49 Kathryn expands their multi-perspective context to immigrant families. 25:10 Ronda describes her sadness about her kid being raised physically separated from his grandparents, and thus this opportunity for exposure to multiple perspectives is more limited. 27:09 Kathryn describes how attachment can be developed across time and space. 31:01. Dr. Yamilka describes how her son now, without prompting, goes to the nearby senior facility to pay saxophone for the elderly. 33:44 Dr. Yamilka describes her joy in finding this positive benefit of fostering empathy from caregiving when previous research had found negative impact and stigma. Thank you for listening! Kathryn is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, EFT supervisors and therapists, and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn de Bruin Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Evans Facebook Facebook IG LinkedIn Website You can follow Dr. Yamilka Urquiza Email: dr.urquiza@halcyonfh.com Tel: (619) 786-0052 Website: www.halcyonfh.com | |||
| E7. A Journey into Practicing EFFT with Allie Zangari, LMHC, LMFT | 09 Apr 2024 | 00:45:18 | |
Welcome back for the next journey of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans where our destination is resilient and connected families. Today’s guest is Allie Zangari, LMHC, LMFT from Florida. Allie shares about her journey into EFFT. All Aboard ! 1:05 Allie tells us how she applied EFT for couples to EFT for families. 3:00 Allie and Kathryn talk about how the flexibility in the EFFT session structure is helpful and at times can bring on overwhelm for the EFFT therapist. They begin to explore the duality of the in inherent EFFT map and structure with the freedom that EFFT offers. 8:00 Allie shares where she can get stuck: in helping parents become accessible, and identifying and accessing parental intent. 10:45 Kathryn validates Allie that when "mining for parental intent" is a struggle, one intervention we do have is to make that explicit in an empathic way, and this piece of work for parental intent may be done in individual sessions. 19:15. Allie and Kathryn discuss the importance of being transparent about emotional safety with a teen or adult child is critical in helping the teen or adult child in adjusting their expectations. 24:55. Allie explores how parents can continue to have influence on their children as they grow up be embracing two goals. 27:00. Kathryn describes the importance of parents reflecting on how they are perceived by others when the parent is in their protective strategy. 27:35 Ronda tells a story from her life about when her child reflected back to her about her protective strategy. 33:07 Kathryn tells a story from her life about when her protective strategy was reflected back to her. 36:10 Allie empathizes that secure attachment comes from the process of rupture and repair. All parents (and people) will have reactive moments and it is in the repair that holds so much attachment value. 37:10 Kathryn describes the depth and breadth of what can be included in a repair conversation such "what advice do you have for me as a parent? What could I be working on?" 38:09 We explore the complexity that an EFFT therapist needs to respond to when a reactive moment occurs in session in stage 1. We describe how we can keep (or regain :-) our emotional balance in these reactive moments by narrating the structure and safety priorities outloud. Thank you for listening! Kathryn is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, EFT supervisors and therapists, and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn de Bruin Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Evans Facebook Facebook IG LinkedIn Website You can follow Allie Zangari Email: allisonzangari@gmail.com Website: zangaricounseling.com | |||
| E6. High Conflict Divorce Cases: Setting Up a Family Systems Perspective with Berenice Leon-Fonseca | 26 Mar 2024 | 00:35:59 | |
Welcome back for the next journey of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans. Listen along today as our guest Berenice Leon-Fonseca from San Diego, California shares her experience in working with families going through high conflict divorce cases using a family systems perspective. Our conversation focuses on the process in the initial stage of assessment and alliance building. All Aboard ! 1:32 Berenice tells us the path she took to get to this destination. 5:19 Parental buy-in starts with a therapist who believes that the co-parenting relationship needs to be the focus. 6:14 Building a co-parenting relationship starts with the intake call. 7:20 The miracle question in the intake call 11:50 In the intake call, building alliance in these families means emphasizing to the parents that they have a voice with you as the family therapist 16:04 The first session is a parent-only session 20:00 To guide the treatment plan, Berenice will follow a court order including how much to involve a parent or whether or not to reach out to a parent 23:00 Getting access to the family system will be slower and the conceptualization will be slower, but it will get the family farther and faster. 23:50 Berenice tells us about a real life experience in which slowing down and leaning in to a parents’ experience can reveal so much about a family’s struggle including the negative cycle 32:35 Berenice talks about how therapists can equip themselves including facing our own fears and getting support and hope from leaning on others. Thank you for listening! Kathryn is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, EFT supervisors and therapists, and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn de Bruin Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Evans Facebook Facebook IG LinkedIn Website You can follow Berenice Email: berenice@heartandhometherapy.com Phone: 619-361-1168 Address: 3511 Camino del Rio, S, Ste. 500 San Diego, CA 92108 Website: heartandhometherapy.com | |||
| E5. Facing ADHD on the Home and Work Front with Kat Austin | 12 Mar 2024 | 00:39:55 | |
Welcome back for the next journey of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans where our destination is resilient and connected families. This episode’s adventure takes us to the diverse experience of neurodivergence. Our guest today is Kat Austin, LPC, LAC, LMFT from Boulder, Colorado, USA. All Aboard ! 2:40 Kat opens with the vulnerability that it is to be a parent, and that parental shame gets evoked. 4:14 Kat describes the anecdote for shame. 7:15 How shame can show up in a neurotypical parent and a neurodiverse parent. 9:58 Exploring the loss, the discovery of differences in brains, and psychoeducation and how making the implicit explicit for the whole family system (parents, siblings, grandparents, and more) can be helpful and organizing. 11:58 The family is learning together in real-time. Help the family adopt the reframe of discovery and experimentation 13:37 Families are getting stuck around difficulty with emotional regulation. Parents need to have their own strong emotional regulation skills. The goal is for the “most responsivity” to stay online. 14:46 Parents can get blocked by grief. 15:11 Families can struggle around organizational and structural needs such as sequencing, hyperfocus and time blindness. 19:00 Recommendations, resources and referrals for families. 22:50 How can we help families when they don’t know or recognize that neurodivergence is showing up in the family? 28:15 Kat discusses the philosophical question of labeling or diagnosing, or not. 29:40 Being diagnosed or treated for ADHD can lower risk of depression, anxiety, and substance use and can improve self-identity and self-worth. 32:20 Advocate for your family, especially in the school system. Thank you for listening! Kathryn is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, EFT supervisors and therapists, and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn de Bruin Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Evans Facebook Facebook IG LinkedIn Website You can follow Kat Austin | |||
| E4. The Changing Family Landscape in Egypt with Eman Onsy | 27 Feb 2024 | 00:34:29 | |
Welcome back for the next journey of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin, LMFT and Ronda Evans, LMFT where our destination is resilient and connected families. Join us for a conversation about the changes in families and family therapy in Egypt with our guest Eman Onsy. She is the current director and co-founder of the Egypt Emotionally Focused Therapy Community and is a Certified EFT therapist. All Aboard ! 2:15 ICEEFT will formally introduce EFFT to Egypt in January 2024. Our own Kathryn de Bruin will provide this training! 3:59 EFFT is culturally appropriate for Egyptian families. 8:15 Eman reframes parental buy-in to changes in stigma about therapy, and to improved accessibility to trained helping professionals 15:52 How has the parenting landscape changed in Egypt 18:28 “Raise your kids not for your generation, but for the coming generations” - an Islamic quote 20:12 Ronda and Kathryn summarize Eman’s perspective of how Egyptian counselors are helping families make these shifts: by tapping into the built-in magic of attachment and that every parent wants to feel like a successful parent Thank you for listening! Kathryn is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, Certified EFT Supervisors and and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. Thank you for listening! You can follow Kathryn Facebook, YouTube, IG, Yelp, Google +, Twitter, Website You can follow Ronda Facebook Facebook IG LinkedIn Website You can follow Eman | |||
| E3. Finding the Herd with Dr. Ryan Rana | 13 Feb 2024 | 00:32:22 | |
Welcome back for the next journey of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin, LMFT and Ronda Evans, LMFT. This episode adventure is all about finding the herd, and the safety that comes with being connected to one's herd. Our guest today is Dr. Ryan Rana, LMFT, LPC, Ph.D. of Arkansas. All Aboard ! Dr. Ryan Rana describes the significance of the felt sense of safety and connection for survival, and how losing one's herd is a threat to that safety. As Dr Ryan says, “outside of the herd, the body won’t down-regulate.” By contrast, when someone feels connected to their herd, “they can down-regulate stress and this leads to resilience.” This is exactly what The Family Express podcast is all about: destination connection and resilience. All Aboard ! 4:12 Human behavior, driven by survival instincts, seeks to define relationships for connection. 5:13 Addressing students' mental health means addressing social connections. 7:09 Cultural challenges make it difficult to recognize systemic factors affecting children's behavior which makes effective intervention difficult. 14:03 To establish trust, Ryan focuses on building a personal connection with parents before delving into parenting techniques. 20:48 Ryan encourages giving parents space to express frustrations without the child present. 25:19 Ryan points out that establishing trust with adults takes time, whereas kids, lacking strong protective barriers, often build trust more quickly. 27:14 As a foster parent with both biological and non-biological children, Ryan acknowledges inherent vulnerabilities and attachment needs. 28:31 Finding a supportive community impacts brain function, aiding stress regulation and fostering resilience in individuals. 30:27 Ryan adds that creating supportive connections is crucial for adults too; even small social interactions positively impact emotional health. Thank you for listening! Kathryn an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are licensed marriage and family therapists, Certified EFT Supervisors and Therapists, and they are both AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Facebook Facebook IG LinkedIn Website You can follow Dr. Ryan Rana | |||
| E2. Working with Immigrant Latinx Families with Liliana Baylon | 30 Jan 2024 | 00:31:51 | |
Welcome back to The Family Express podcast where we embark on a journey of resilience and connection. Tune in today for our very first guest, the incredible Liliana Baylon! Liliana is an immigrant from Mexico with over thirty years of experience working with Latino families in Colorado. We delve into her extensive work and research with immigrants, refugees, and undocumented children. All Aboard! Liliana offers an insightful glimpse into the challenges faced by Latino immigrants. She shares her personal experiences, and the misconceptions, and the harmful stereotypes surrounding Latino families. The breadth of her work emphasizes the importance of cultural understanding. She sheds light on the impact of social services on minority families and the socioeconomic challenges that are often experienced, and she addresses language barriers, immigration status, and the need for sensitivity in therapy sessions. We are so grateful for Liliana's dedication and passion. 0:27 We are so excited to welcome our very first guest, Liliana Baylon! 0:59 Liliana shares a little bit about herself and her work. 2:56 Immigrant children, arriving with parents, face challenges due to undocumented status. 8:06 Parents often fear their children adopting conflicting behaviors. 9:30 Liliana reflects on how parents express grief for what they left, and concern for cultural identity. 11:54 Liliana emphasizes the need for organized adjustments for kids, balancing survival and family values. 20:20 Social Services is frequently involved with racial minorities due to cultural misunderstandings and language barriers in mental health sessions. 22:22 Liliana addresses socioeconomic challenges, resource access, immigration status, and acculturation stress faced by minorities in therapy. 28:04 Liliana encourages cultural attunement by encouraging us to slow down, and and to embrace diversity in language, traditions, and backgrounds. 29:11 As an attachment therapist, Liliana emphasizes adapting models for diverse populations, and incorporating play therapy for children. Thank you for listening! Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists. Kathryn is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer, Supervisor and Therapist. Ronda is an ICEEFT Certified Supervisor and Therapist. They are both AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn Facebook, YouTube, IG, Yelp, Google +, Twitter, Website You can follow Ronda Facebook Facebook IG LinkedIn Website You can contact Liliana Baylon Website: www.lilianabaylon.com https://linktr.ee/lilianabaylon | |||
| E1. Who We Are | 30 Jan 2024 | 00:26:21 | |
Welcome aboard The Family Express podcast, where resilience and connection are our destination! Join your hosts Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans, on a journey through the landscape of emotionally focused family therapy (EFFT). Together with our guest speakers, we will explore EFFT including lessons learned, shared fears, and the passion that bonds our community. We are so thrilled to embark on this exciting project we've been brewing in the background. As therapists with diverse backgrounds, we'll be delving into the intricacies of family dynamics. In this our first episode, we introduce ourselves and share our unique paths to family therapy. Kathryn, a South African and American therapist, specializes in working with couples and families with young children. Meanwhile, Ronda, a transplant from California to Washington state, has come full circle in her career, rediscovering her passion for working with the whole family system. 0:27 Welcome and All Aboard ! 1:06 Kathryn tells us a little bit about herself. 1:31 We learn a little bit about Ronda. 2:26 How did Kathryn end up working with children even though it wasn’t her original plan? 3:41 EFT (emotionally focused family therapy) focuses on making parents accessible, responsive, and engaged by addressing emotional blocks through support 6:22 Kathryn describes that focusing on children's needs alone in therapy may overlook understanding and supporting caregivers effectively. 8:14 Transforming parents' emotional accessibility through therapy unlocks skills for broader relationships and multiple children. 9:51 Learn more about the EFT model. 12:01 Kathryn describes that buy-in for family therapy begins with the intake call. 14:25 Shifting focus to parental buy-in is important but difficult and we run the risk of losing families without it. 15:18 Some families may struggle to comprehend children's varied emotional responses, including withdrawal, anger, or anxiety. 24:30 Kathryn closes by encouraging therapists and parents to embrace the transformative power of family therapy, which can lead to effective and rapid change. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists. Kathryn is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer, Supervisor and Therapist. Ronda is an ICEEFT Certified Supervisor and Therapist. They are also both AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn on Facebook @Kathryn de Bruin Family Therapy and Training on YouTube @Kathryn de Bruin Family Therapy and Training on IG @Kathryndebruin_therapy on Yelp, Google +, Twitter, Website You can follow Ronda on Facebook @RevitalizingRelationships on Facebook @Emotionally Focused Family Therapy Group on IG @rondaevans_therapy on LinkedIn | |||
| E17. Getting Technical with EFFT Stage 1: 4 Goals to Achieve with Parents with Gail Palmer, MSW, RMFT | 13 Aug 2024 | 00:36:21 | |
Welcome back for the next journey of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans where our destination is resilient and connected families. Today’s guest is Gail Palmer, MSW, RMFT, one of the founders of EFFT. All Aboard ! 2:05. (Goal #2) Parental/Caregiver Intent. 4:30. (Goal #1) Parent/Caregiver Buy-In. Clinician advocates for family therapy with parent involvement. 6:40. Stage 1 is about helping the parent to become accessible, responsive and engaged. 10:10. (Goal #3) - Working with Parental/Caregiver Blocks). Gail and Kathryn talk about why we do the parent work in the order of parental intent first and then parental block(s). 13:00. In Stage 1, we keep the focus on the parent in the parent/caregiving role. 15:15. As Gail says, EFFT is family therapy and it is a child-centered therapy where everything we do with the parent is in service of the child. 19:06. Gail recalls when she approached Sue Johnson with what makes EFFT different from EFCT: there is a power imbalance in the parent-child dyad and children cannot and do not hold equal responsibility for a negative interaction cycle. 19:45. (Goal #4) Parent/Caregiver Accessibility (also called Openness). Once the parent block is processed, then parental accessibility can suddenly show up in session. Gail provides a concrete example of what parental accessibility and openness can sound like in the parent saying "I really want to do this different with you. I really want to listen more." 20:55. Parental accessibility can suddenly show up and can suddenly get blocked again, for example, when once a child shares what has hurt them in their caregiver-child relationship, -- the caregiver can experience shame, grief, emotional pain, their own childhood attachment wounds or negative model of self. 19:55. Ronda slows down the conversation here. Gail describes that when children risk and open up, then the parent can get blocked. 25:15. Gail describes that there is a skill set for catching when a kid risks and opens up and the parent gets blocked. Gail describes skills of making the moment explicit and making sense of how come the block came up at this moment, and co-regulate with the parent, and we differentiate that this parent block is not about the child, and the child needs the clinician to make this transparent. 29:53. Gail tells a story of her relationship with her daughter. 32:15. Family resiliency is about families working through stuff together and getting comfortable with how things dynamically shift and change all the time. Thank you for listening! Kathryn de Bruin is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, EFT supervisors and therapists, and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn de Bruin Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Evans Facebook Facebook IG LinkedIn Website You can follow Gail Palmer | |||
| E16. Gender Affirming Therapists and Therapy with Dr. Laura Castro | 30 Jul 2024 | 00:45:21 | |
Welcome back for the next journey of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans where our destination is resilient and connected families. Today’s guest is Laura Castro, LMFT, PhD. whose life passion and purpose is as a gender affirmative therapist who helps queer adolescents, adults, and families overcome trauma, complex PTSD and relational trauma, and live authentically. All Aboard ! 1:30. Laura begins with how she uncovered her life's purpose. 3:15. Laura provides the landscape of the trans community including the mental health statistics and risks for suicidal ideation, bullying, violence and victimization. 7:30. Youth/adolescent buy-in to therapy is critical. 8:40. What makes for Affirming therapy? 9:40. What makes for non-affirming therapy? 10:20. Laura underscores that systemic harm done by field of psychology and connects this to ongoing mistrust in the queer community. 13:13. Laura discusses the significance of a felt sense of emotional safety including the youth in the decision-making process of choosing a therapist. Laura explains that misgendering undermines emotional safety in the family and in the therapy room. 17:30. Laura discusses qualities of gender affirming therapists. 19:09. Laura describes how therapists can do harm now. 23:50. Laura addresses the role of transparency of the "team family" approach conveyed in individual sessions. 33:00. In EFFT, focusing on the parent in stage 1 relieves the pressure for the youth/adolescent. 34:00. How can we support trans and queer youth? 37:40. We discuss how to frame/see gender identity development and experiences. 39:00. As kids experience their own gender identity process, they need to know that they are loved and supported unconditionally for who they are at any given time on any given day. 40:00. Kathryn summarizes our goals as parents/caregivers and therapists: listen carefully and follow their lead, and they are trying things out and figuring it out, and be ready for rupture and repair. Thank you for listening! Kathryn de Bruin is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, EFT supervisors and therapists, and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn de Bruin Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Evans Facebook Facebook IG LinkedIn Website You can follow Laura Castro here: Affirming Journeys Family Counseling California LMFT145842 / Florida TPMF1308 AAMFT Clinical Fellow & Approved Supervisor Cell: 619.387.8386 info@affirmingjourneyscounseling.com | |||
| E15. Genetic Mirrors, Connection & Loss with Pendo Galukande | 16 Jul 2024 | 00:39:48 | |
Welcome back for the next journey of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans where our destination is resilient and connected families. Today’s guest is Pendo Galukande, licensed counselor in Uganda and graduate student in the US, and we are talking about loss, genetic mirrors, and maintaining connection with loved ones beyond time and space. All Aboard ! 2:50. Pendo describes the silence around her parent's death and her work to maintain her connection with them in their deaths. 5:50. Pendo describes her frozen, silent response to her mother's death and how this was misinterpreted by the adults in her life at the time. She then describes the disorienting experience of how her home life and environment changed in her new adopted family. 11:15. She expands on how the silence about her mother's death was devastating and traumatic with loss of connection, loss of processing, loss with parts of self, loss of opportunities to grieve. 14:10. Pendo describes that her personal journey into the mental health field led her to read about experiences of the adopted child and the loss of genetic mirrors. 18:27. Pendo tells about the adult in her life who broke the silence about the stories and life experiences of her parents which at first was disorienting too since it was a whole new world compared to the business world of her adoptive family. 20:25. Pendo recalls her first experiences of genetic mirrors as adults exclaim that Pendo looks just like her mom. 23:40. Kathryn reflects on the deep emotional impact that genetic mirrors can have on a person and how it deepens the felt sense of connection with someone who has died, and the impact on identity development and sense of belonging. 24:45. Pendo and Kathyrn reflects on the implicit sense of belonging and security that can be built into sharing genetics and looking similar to those around oneself. 29:45. Pendo and Kathryn acknowledge the yearning to ask about the loved one who died, while silence has been the chosen path, and Pendo expresses gratitude that the adult in her life volunteered to share the stories and reflect the genetic mirrors. 31:40. Kathryn pivots us to the family therapy room and new creative questions we can be curious about when first getting to know a family. 32:40. Pendo remarks on how children need to be helped to grieve, mourn and retain connection in the aftermath of a loss. 35:30. Kathryn provides a recap of the link between death and loss, connection, attachment, belonging and the risk of not feeling that belonging and the link to emotional health and relational health. 37:50. Ronda offers the significance of 'breaking the silence' and how taking the implicit to the explicit in story among families, and in the family therapy room. Thank you for listening! Kathryn de Bruin is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, EFT supervisors and therapists, and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn de Bruin Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Evans Facebook Facebook IG LinkedIn Website You can follow Pendo Galukande here: | |||
| E14. Engaging Muslim Families with Cultural Humility and Understanding with Dalia Sileem-Naguib | 02 Jul 2024 | 00:43:25 | |
Welcome back for the next journey of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans where our destination is resilient and connected families. Today’s guest is Dalia Sileem-Naguib who will speak with us about engaging Muslim Families with Cultural Humility and Understanding. All Aboard ! Dalia opens our conversation speaking about the families she works with and the presenting issues and therapy experiences that parents/families would tell her about in the beginning of the therapy work together. We touch on discrimination, Islamaphobia, and lack of knowledge, negative pre-conceived notions or assumptions about Islam and Muslim families that may deter family therapists from working with Muslim families. Dalia describes that we are recording this episode during Ramadan, the holiest month in Islam, and describes that is a time of great self-reflection and focus on faith soul through taking away the basic necessities of food and water. Ronda tells a story and that segues Dalia into talking about acceptable accommodations for Muslims. Dalia provides listeners with the acronym of SALAM to help guide our approach to working with Muslim families. SALAM is inspired from the Muslim phrase Salam alaikum which means peace upon you. S - safety. Establish safety to help clients feel safe and comfortable with therapist to explore the client's inner world. A - appreciate. Appreciate that there is great diversity within every single individual and every single Muslim client, and within the Muslim faith and diversity in the people practicing. L - lay of the land - Explore what is happening with this family and their presenting issue. What is the family having a hard time with?What kind of Islamic umbrella or foundation are they trying to instill? What are they dealing with in this environment that they're in? Is there a generational gap? Is there a faith-based level gap? Is there a developmental issue? And ultimately, the family disconnect comes down to a stuckness in the process of relaying these messages to each other. Dalia makes explicit that for many Muslim families the word fear keeps repeating itself -- fear underpins the stuckness. And for the kids, autonomy and acceptance keeps coming up. Can I be who I am ? Parents, can you accept me for who I am? Kids have been taught that they want the acceptance of their parents and ultimately Allah's acceptance, and the kids wants autonomy. A - alliance. Establish a working alliance through being curious, open, non-judgmental, accepting of them the family as they are, and work towards buy-in. M - modest. Approach Muslim families with cultural humility and modesty. Let them know that you don't know. Dalia provides a generalized storytelling example of a family who is struggling with fear and acceptance and autonomy. Dalia explains that knowledge and awareness of the fears that are underpinning a parent's rules or shut down or refusal can be an antidote to the parental fears. Dalia describes that Muslims and Muslims parents are guided by two things: the Quran and the Sunnah. Muslims are obliged to inform their children about how to navigate life, walking the path, walking the Islamic way, and then the parent submits. In Islam, the most important thing is to submit. We clarify that clinicians can reframe the family stuckness, such as in this example, as a developmental issue, and it's not a religious or value issue. Kathryn introduces the concept of faith development and wonders if this could be tricky to use with families. Dalia adds that a faith development could be helpful by then circling back to parents inform and then submit, accept where your kids are, submit to Allah and let go. Thank you for listening! Kathryn is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, EFT supervisors and therapists, and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn de Bruin Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Evans Facebook Facebook IG LinkedIn Website You can follow Dalia Sileem-Naguib Email: dssnaguib@gmail.com Website: www.egyceft.com | |||
| E13. How Connection Brings Hope to Neurodiverse Families with Elizabeth Gillespie, MAC, MEd, LMFT | 18 Jun 2024 | 00:36:24 | |
Welcome back for the next journey of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans where our destination is resilient and connected families. Today’s guest is Elizabeth Gillespie, MAC, MEd, LMFT from Boulder, Colorado. Our conversation centers the importance of connection with neurodiversity. All Aboard ! 1:14 Elizabeth tells us how her path led her to work with neurodiversity almost exclusively. 3:47 Parents are feeling helpless, exhausted, financially worried and stressed, and medication is not enough, and they are in desperate need of support. They are in “fight more” as they advocate for accommodations. There are social struggles, and other mental health issues. 6:04 Neurodiversity is highly heritable. 8:05 When Elizabeth works with families experiencing neurodiversity, where does she start? Elizabeth tries to have the whole family attend the first session. 10:34 Elizabeth pauses to reflect on the complexity of these cases, including sensory struggles. 13:53 Families and kids experience frequent judgment for their behavior or responses to cues. 15:19 Elizabeth describes what their renovated office space will look like. 17:17 Elizabeth returns to reflecting on the quote by Patricia Crittenden and Kathryn and Elizabeth underscore the therapeutic alliance and relationship and the connection that comes with that is so key. 22:12 Elizabeth talks about Dr. Thomas Brown, and the new model of ADHD he created informed by research that centers on 6 components including emotional modulation and working memory. 27:45 Building connection and engagement through the creative way that reaches a particular client is critical because it soothes the physiological and sensory needs of that client. 28:50 Elizabeth shares an example from her life in which joining the intellectual understanding of a specific topic is part of the alliance building and connection because the intellectual topic is tied up in self-identification. Thank you for listening! Kathryn is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, EFT supervisors and therapists, and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn de Bruin Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Evans Facebook Facebook IG LinkedIn Website You can follow Elizabeth Gillespie | |||
| E12. Parents and Therapists Getting Comfortable with Identity Development in their LGBTQ Queer Children with Abraham Mehboob Alam, LMFTA | 04 Jun 2024 | 00:37:21 | |
Welcome back for the next journey of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans where our destination is resilient and connected families. Today’s guest is Abraham Mehboob Alam, LMFTA (they/them). Our conversation today centers around identity development and some helpful guidelines in approaching family therapy with queer youth. All Aboard ! 1:00 Kathryn and Ronda ask for Abraham's help and correction with any language bias, or closed mindedness heard in our questions or comments. 4:19 Abraham discusses being cautious and intentional about family sessions with queer youth/clients. Abraham describes using active listening for indicators about the parent's comfort and acceptance of their child's identity. 7:00 Abraham discusses the absolute need for collaboration with the minor client/youth in what is discussed in a family therapy session. 11:30 Kathryn and Abraham discuss the nuance of being intentional and cautious about topics addressed in family therapy sessions. 13:30 Abraham describes possible ways that the EFFT therapist can respond to the parent's conjecture about their child's identity such as "how did you come to that conclusion?" 16:00 Abraham emphasizes maintaining a zoomed out approach to the conversation about their child's identity -- talk in generalities "so it can't be traced back to the client." 16:55. Kathryn makes explicit that the EFFT therapist needs to maintain close collaboration with the client about the focus/agenda of family sessions. 18:40 We discuss that identity development is a private matter until a youth is ready for their identity to not be private anymore, in their own time and way. 23:15 Abraham and Kathryn explore what it could mean about the family system if something noticeable is not talked about by the family. 27:00 Abraham makes the point that when therapists and parents are leaning in with curiosity to their child's identity development to also lean with openness to education and correction -- including the nuance between "who is my child going to be?" versus "who is my child". 34:00 Abraham leaves their final message to EFFT therapists: 1. do your own research/education and then take this back to the client, 2. be open to correction and feedback. Thank you for listening! Kathryn is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, EFT supervisors and therapists, and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn de Bruin Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Evans | |||
| E11. Preparing Teens to Launch with Dr Katherine Stavrianopoulos | 21 May 2024 | 00:38:23 | |
Welcome back for the next journey of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans where our destination is resilient and connected families. Today’s guest is Dr. Katherine Stavrianopoulos. Our conversations centers around the unique developmental stage of adolescence with brain changes and the seismic relational shift. All Aboard ! 1:39 Dr. Stavros tells us where she starts with families who are launching a teen. 2:33 Dr. Stavros frames the parent's concerns as wanting to help their teen. 4:20 Dr. Stavros leans into psychoeducation about the developing teenage brain 6:55 Kathryn turns this psychoeducation into an entryway to empathizing with the parent's frustration, and their meaning-making that comes from these repeat interactions. 9:37 Kathryn then moves from meaning-making to the parent's fears about losing their impact and influence on their teens, and their fears of "am I doing a good enough job?" (indicative of parental shame). 11:55 Dr. Stavros explains her own experience of navigating the teen years and how that increased her empathy for parents going through this developmental stage with their teens. Dr. Stavos tells us a story of a time when she faced her own fears of losing control – of losing influence on her son. 17:10 Ronda and Dr. Stavros talk about the seismic shift in the agenda going from the parent's agenda to a co-created "our" agenda and relationship between parent and teen. 19:00 Dr. Stavros says that a "successful" teen launch centers around the teen knowing that they will be loved and understood with their mistakes and through their mistakes, and the security in knowing they can reach for their parents when a mistake has happened. 22:25 Dr. Stavros describes the importance of parent's having self-compassion for their efforts to prepare teens for launching. 23:43 Kathryn emphasizes the role of therapists in supporting parents and validating the challenges of parenting, and helping parents to emotionally regulate so that parents can have balanced responses to their teens. 25:43 To launch a teen well, Dr. Stavros describes a teen will have an internalized embodiment of "knowing’: that when the teen turns to their parent, the teen knows their parent will respond. 27:00 Kathryn comments that family therapists can facilitate this process through explicit, intentional conversations in our offices. Kathryn and Dr. Stavros describe that EFFT therapists can facilitate these conversations between parents and children – feedback conversations. 27:30 Dr. Stavros reflects on her experience of this conversation when she and her sons participated in the "Hold Me Tight, Let Me Go" program. 34:10 Dr Stavros returns to the notion of the developmental scaffolding of “co-creating” a parent-child relationship. Thank you for listening! Kathryn is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, EFT supervisors and therapists, and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn de Bruin Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Evans Facebook Facebook IG LinkedIn Website You can follow Dr. Katherine Stavrianaopolous Email: kathstav@gmail.com IG: @kathrystavros | |||
| E10. Families Responding to Suicidal Ideation in their Children with Preston Herdt, LMFT | 07 May 2024 | 00:39:09 | |
Welcome back for the next journey of The Family Express Podcast with Kathryn de Bruin and Ronda Evans where our destination is resilient and connected families. Today’s guest is Preston Herdt, LMFTA. Our conversation centers around helping families respond to suicidal thoughts in their children (abbreviated as SI). All Aboard ! 1:10 Preston tells us about how we got started working with youth with SI. 4:00 Preston describes from the beginning that he helps parents "show up the best way they can with their children." He is listening for the emotional pain that is under the suicidal ideation. 5:30 Kathryn and Preston describe that SI in your child can be experienced as "uh oh!" moment by parents, and then the parents' fears are activated and the parent can go on high alarm. 9:50 Preston walks us through the general process of supporting parents, assessing the child and making appropriate referrals. 11:45. Preston describes having an emergency preparedness or safety plan for youth who have a history of suicidal ideation. 13:35 Kathryn and Preston discuss helping parents to assess accurately if this alarm is truly reduced and educating parents about the specific warning signs for their child. 14:40 Preston explores common fears that parents have and how their fears are connected to their attempt to understand if the risk has been reduced: 19:00. Preston emphasizes the EFFT therapist needs to build a working alliance and trust with the whole family, and that the whole family, not just the child/youth, need support and stabilization. 21:15 Kathryn and Preston describe the different family experience between an externalizing child and an internalizing child. 25:30 Kathryn describes the importance of exploring a child's need such as having someone who is willing to explore and tolerate "the darkness". Kathryn uses the metaphor of a basement. 28:50 Preston describes the importance of the felt sense of emotional safety that a child feels in the therapy room that fosters the child's willingness to explore their own basement of darkness with a stronger, wiser, other person. 29:30 Kathryn and Preston explore that youth who are having SI really want to talk that "darkenss" out with someone. While that can be scary for others, Preston reassures families that talking about is helpful, and he dispels a common myth. 34:30. Kathryn makes explicit that Preston's approach to the assessment and safety planning process is in itself therapeutic. 38:05. Kathryn summarizes key elements of Preston's approach including slowing down the pace, focusing on the goal of de-escalation, being a firm stable presence, and seeking to understand. Thank you for listening! Kathryn is an ICEEFT Certified EFT Trainer. Kathryn and Ronda are both licensed marriage and family therapists, EFT supervisors and therapists, and AAMFT Approved Supervisors. You can follow Kathryn de Bruin Facebook YouTube IG Yelp Google + Twitter Website You can follow Ronda Evans Facebook Facebook IG LinkedIn Website You can follow Preston Email: preston@renovasandiego.com Instagram: therapywith_ph Facebook: Preston Herdt Therapy | |||