James Fitzgerald Therapy, PLLC

James Fitzgerald, MS, NCC, AAP, Psychotherapist

Strengthening Your Conscious Self © 2022

A Detailed Overview of the Therapy Process for Couples

Please read this important disclaimer first

This area of the website is for James Fitzgerald’s therapy clients only. You must be registered, with a subscription, and logged into your account to view this page. If you have reached this website in error, please notify the website owner, and choose another page to exit.

This page (therapy action plan) on the website (jamesfitzgeraldtherapy.com) is a dynamic and ever evolving online document. Some of the links to websites, videos, audio, and documents may not work or the page it links to may not be set up yet. You are welcome though to start using this page for a reference and guide to therapy sessions. Stay in constant communication with your therapist as you work through this plan. I encourage you to take your time and be patient with yourself. I humbly ask for your patience with the process of setting up this invaluable resource. This plan is directed toward my individual clients. In the near future (December of 2022) I will also have a similar plan for couples. Please keep checking on the progress. In the time between, please review the plan listed here, as some information is relevant to couples therapy, it is all connected.

There is no charge for the information on this website, and the information or website is not dependent on the money received from therapy sessions. There does not seem to be any conflict of interest. Many of the resources linked to from this site are subject to copyright laws and permission has been granted for use with my clients only. James Fitzgerald is not responsible for the content on the content creator’s website or media channels, and makes no claims as to their authenticity, veracity, integrity, validity, accuracy, and/or reliability of any claims they make in their content. I have provided links to the content in order to offer many different options for characterization of the concepts and topics. Every content creator has their own personality, demeanor, presence, and knowledge.

The material and content on this page is educational and informational only, to be used as a reference point, and not intended to be construed as your specific treatment plan. I will develop and implement a treatment plan for you, which is required by insurance and outlined in ethical standards of practice. We will review this outline together, and I will provide guidance and direction for you, on how to navigate through this process. This action plan outlines and details many but not all of the techniques, interventions, and approaches that might be in your treatment plan. An electronic copy of your treatment plan is stored in the electronic health records software’s servers, and is available upon written request.

Why do I recommend following a therapy action plan and assign “homework” in between sessions?

More and more therapists are assigning homework to their clients. Not only have short‐term therapy models endorsed this practice, but the benefits are being recognized by many traditional therapists as well.

Why homework? Assigning homework is beneficial for several reasons. With the evolution of health insurance company’s plans and practices, therapists assign between‐session homework to help maximize the effectiveness of treatment. Homework is an extension of the treatment process, provides continuity, and allows you to work between sessions on issues that are the focus of therapy. Homework is also a tool for more fully engaging you in the process of change. Assignments place more responsibility with you to resolve presenting problems, counteracting the expectations that some may experience— that it is the therapist alone who can cure the client. For some, an action plan with homework can even bring a sense of self‐empowerment.

Another added benefit of homework is that these assignments give you the opportunity to implement and evaluate insights or coping behaviors that have been discussed in therapy sessions. Practice often heightens awareness of various issues. Furthermore, homework increases the expectation for you to follow through with making changes rather than just talking about change.

Homework requires participation, which creates a sense that you are taking active steps toward change. Homework allows you to try new behaviors, bringing these experiences back to the next session for processing. Tracking your progress with assessments, diary cards, and journals makes the process tangible and objective. Modifications can then be made to your thoughts, feelings, or behaviors as the homework is processed in the therapy session. Occasionally treatment processes can become vague and abstract. By adding focus and structure, homework assignments can reenergize therapy.

Moreover, homework can improve discipline and increase your motivation to change as it provides something specific to work on. Additionally, homework may increase the involvement of your family members and significant others in your process by using assignments that call for their participation. It promotes more efficient care by encouraging you to actively develop insights, positive self‐talk, and coping skills between therapy sessions.

Consequently, many clients express increased satisfaction with the therapy process when homework is given. They are empowered by doing something active that facilitates the change process, and it reinforces their sense of control over the problem. All of these advantages have made the assignment of therapeutic homework increasingly prevalent.

Jongsma, Arthur E.; Bruce, Timothy J.. Adult Psychotherapy Homework Planner (Practice Planners) Wiley. Kindle Edition.

Table of Contents

A short summary outline of this plan and the natural progression of therapy

  1. Intake and screening process completed, documents are signed and reviewed. 
  2. Education and brief overviews are provided for the types of therapy (individual and couples)
  3. Issues commonly addressed by therapy, counseling, and coaching (individual and couples)
  4. SMART long-term goals for therapy, short-term objectives, and interventions planning
  5. Orientation to therapy and what to expect, frequently asked questions reviewed
  6. Beginning assessments toward a diagnosis for insurance purposes and ethical practice guidelines 
  7. Review of the learning objectives for the modules
  8. Therapy sessions progress on a regular basis 
  9. Interventions (Guided Meditations)
  10. The Couples Therapy Treatment Planner by Jongsma is integrated into this plan.
  • Psychoeducation homework will be assigned in sessions; most of the materials and content will be on this website
  • Homework assignments and daily practice; these will be essential
  • Review of barriers and blocks to completing homework, reassess therapy plan if needed
  • Therapeutic interventions processed with therapist
  • Lessons/Exercises and Handout/Worksheet pdfs will be located on the client engagement website 
  • Assess for further interest in adjunct services for guidance on developing a health and wellness plan.
  • Participate in sessions informed by the primary therapy approaches in the individual therapy plan.
  • Adhere to the Gottman “Sound Relationship House” and “Love Maps” Method
  • Review of “The Four Agreements: A Practical Guide to Personal Freedom” by Don Miguel Ruiz
  • Review of “How to be an Adult in Relationships” 
  • Review of “The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work” by John Gottman 
  • Review of “Internal Family Systems Therapy with Couples” Toni Herbine-Blank & Martha Sweezy
  • Review of “DBT Skills Training Manual Interpersonal Relationships Module” Marsha Linehan
  • Review of other relationship self-help and/or self-improvement podcasts, seminars, books and workbooks as needed.
    • Brene Brown “Atlas of the Heart”
    • John Howard “More than Words”
    • Melanie Beatty “Language of Letting Go”
    • Harriet Lerner “The Dance of Anger” & “The Dance of Intimacy”
    • Gary Chapman “The Five Love Languages”
    • Sue Johnson “Hold me Tight”
    • Deb Dana “Anchored”
    • Bell Hooks “All about Love”
    • Marshall Rosenberg “Non-Violent Communication”
    • Amir Levine & Rachel Heller “Attached”
  • Continuing assessment of goals, the approach to therapy, and the program evaluation
  • Relapse prevention planning and implementation

There is some overlap of the objectives, interventions, skills, techniques, and knowledge from the approaches listed. Other approaches have an influence on the work but are not described here 

1. Intake and Screening

You should have received an encrypted email (HIPAA compliant for privacy) with the intake forms to sign electronically for the official electronic medical records. The following forms will serve as a reference only. If you have any questions, comments, or concerns, please contact me. Thank you. In May, 2023, these forms will all change and you will be asked to complete the new forms.

2. Types of Therapy

The therapy action plan is informed by and will integrate the following therapeutic approaches, science, and best practices.

This page may include approaches intended for individual therapy. The following links will lead you to brief descriptions and landing pages for that module/section. Some of the links are to free resources:

3. Relationship Issues Addressed in Therapy

RELATIONSHIP ISSUES ADDRESSED

This link leads to a page with a thorough list of common issues people experience that motivate them to seek out therapy. This list may include problems experienced by both individuals and couples.

Short Term Goals in Therapy Sessions

Provide a confidential dialogue, which normalizes feelings.

Enable each person to be heard and to hear themselves.

  • Establish boundaries so each person feels safe and empowered to express their point of view in a way the other can hear and understand, even though they may not agree.
  • Teach active listening, using I statements “a part of me feels…” “when….” “because another part needs…”  and objective terms from the beginning

Reflect the relationship’s difficulties and the potential for change

  • Inform couples that it is not a matter of one person being right or wrong, since both partners make sense from their perspective. They will be learning how to better understand each other and improve communication to restore harmony and intimacy
  • Identify times in the past that have been good and what was different.

Help each partner begin to understand how he or she is contributing to the conflicts and can contribute to solutions.

  • Move from the “blame game” to looking at what happens to them as a process.
  • Look for exceptions
  • Help both partners see the relationship in a more objective manner
  • Identify repetitive, negative interaction cycles as a pattern
    • Sex/Intimacy
    • Resentments > Explosions
  • Change the view of the relationship via functional perspective taking
    • How is this behavior helpful to him/her/you?
  • Understand the source of reactive emotions that drive the pattern
    • How does this situation trigger past hurts?
    • How does this situation trigger feelings of failure, rejection, loss of control or isolation?
  • Empower the partners to take control and make vital decisions
    • What are workable solutions to this problem?
  • Facilitate a shift in partners’ interaction
    • Which solution will you choose?
    • What is each person’s responsibility?

Create new and positively bonding emotional events  and establish intimacy

  • Meet the couple where they are— What can they currently comfortably do?
  • What do they hope they will eventually be able to do?
  • Teach the 5 love languages (touch, gifts, words, acts, quality time)
    • Have each partner make a list of what those things are for them

Long Term Goals of Therapy

1. Verbalize a basic understanding of the following approaches to therapy and the underlying science

  • Gottman Method and the Seven Principles
  • Non-Violent Communication
  • Neuroscience of Human Connection
  • Internal Family Systems
  • Dialectical Behavior Therapy
  • Cognitive Behavior Therapy
  • Attachment Theory
  • Somatic Approaches
  • Sensorimotor Approaches
  • Polyvagal Theory
  • Restorative Yoga
  • Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy
  • Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction
  • Interpersonal Psychotherapy

2. Reduce symptoms (frequency, duration, severity) of the following:

  • Adjustment (Life Changes)
  • Anger (Resentments and Contempt)
  • Anxiety (Fear and Worry)
  • Attention Deficit (Inattention and Poor Concentration)
  • Autism Spectrum (Awkwardness, Introversion, Isolation)
  • Bipolar 1 & 2 (Depression, Hypomania, Mania, Psychosis)
  • Chronic Pain (Autoimmune, Diabetes, Fibromyalgia) 
  • Depression (Anhedonia, Suicidality)
  • Eating Problems 
  • Self Harm
  • Personality
  • PTSD
  • Grief/Loss
  • Shame/Guilt
  • Substance Abuse

This is not a complete list of the problems, just the most common I see.

3. Prevent relapse of behaviors and/or symptoms

4. Achieve and maintain a baseline level of satisfaction, functioning, and daily activities of living

5. Increase satisfaction in primary relationship, and improve communication and non-violent conflict resolution skills.

6. Learn mindfulness practices, emotional regulation skills, anger management techniques, and grounding and coping skills that result in a reduction of symptom frequency, severity, and duration.

7. Develop and maintain self awareness, insight, and wisdom as measured by self-report

8. Develop and maintain a structured daily routine of self-care, relapse prevention, and health and wellness

9. Address individual needs for the couple as they arise (Refer to the Wiley Treatment Planner Series)

The treatment plan, therapy outline, goals, objectives, and interventions are subject to change as your therapist develops new skills, attains new certifications, and integrates new material into this website. You may or may not be given notice of any changes in advance of updates to this page.

5. Orientation to Therapy

  • We will review the intake documentation, public disclosure statement, informed consent to treatment, limits of confidentiality, privacy policy, consent to telehealth, consent to electronic communication, and treatment plan.
  • We will review the optional health and wellness program, ‘strengthening your conscious self’ to determine the appropriateness and level of commitment to participate in the adjunct program.
  • We will establish rapport toward building trust and a therapeutic alliance, in a safe and supportive, validating environment. We will strive to achieve attunement, and conscious presence of the moment.
  • You will be invited to describe in as much detail as you are comfortable with; the nature and history of the symptoms of the presenting problem, including sensations, emotions, thoughts, and behaviors that are unwanted, maladaptive, unhelpful, or harmful.
  • You will be asked to verbalize any symptoms of depression, anxiety, anger, dissociation, hallucinations, recent episodes of hypomania or mania, history of psychosis, self harming thoughts, suicidal thoughts, and homicidal thoughts.
  • Your therapist may, if appropriate to circumstances, assess the depth of depression and any suicide potential.
  • Your therapist will address such concerns appropriately, taking the necessary safety precautions as indicated, including referrals to higher levels of care (i.e. hospitalization, inpatient setting, residential programs, rehabilitation and treatment facilities, etc.)

6. Assessments

Please do not complete any assessment listed on this page unless I have asked you to complete an assessment. Many of them have been adapted directly from the official testing/assessment instrument. They may require assistance in scoring and interpreting results. Thank you for your cooperation. 

  • We will determine behavioral, emotional, and attitudinal information toward an assessment of specifiers relevant to a DSM diagnosis, the efficacy of treatment, and the nature of the therapy relationship.
  • Your therapist will help you identifying your current stage of change. We will assess your level of insight (syntonic versus dystonic) toward the “presenting problems”
    • Do you demonstrate good insight into the problematic nature of the “described behavior,” agrees with others’ concern, and are you motivated to work on change?
    • Do you demonstrate ambivalence regarding the “problem described” and are you reluctant to address the issue as a concern?
    • Do you demonstrate resistance regarding acknowledgment of the “problem described,” you are not concerned, and you have no motivation to change?
  • We will determine if you meet the criteria for co-occurring mental health disorders using the necessary evidence-based assessments (oppositional defiant behavior with ADHD, depression secondary to an anxiety disorder) including vulnerability to suicide, if appropriate (increased suicide risk when comorbid depression is evident).
  • We will determine if there are any issues of age, gender, or culture that could help explain the currently defined “problem behavior” and factors that could offer a better understanding of the behavior.
  • We will assess the severity of the level of impairment to functioning to determine appropriate level of care (if the behavior noted creates mild, moderate, severe, or very severe impairment in social, relational, educational, or occupational endeavors)
  • We will continuously assess this severity of impairment as well as the efficacy of treatment (no longer experiencing severe impairment but the presenting problem now is causing mild or moderate impairment).

The online version is available, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

The online version is available, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

The online version is available, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

The online version is under construction, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

The online version is under construction, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

The online version is under construction, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

The online version is under construction, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

The online version is under construction, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

The online version is under construction, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon. Only available from SASSII and PAR

The online version is under construction, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

The online version is under construction, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

The online version is under construction, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

The online version is under construction, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

The online version is under construction, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

The online version is under construction, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

The online version is under construction, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

The online version is under construction, a PDF version of the assessment will be available for download soon

7. Learning Objectives

  • After completing this section you will be able to…
    • Verbalize an accurate understanding of the presenting problems (diagnoses) and how they developed.
    • Discuss how symptoms result from exposure to trauma; results in intrusive recollection, unwarranted fears, anxiety, and a vulnerability to other negative emotions such as shame, anger, and guilt; and results in avoidance of thoughts, feelings, and activities associated with the trauma.
    • Verbalize an understanding of the treatment rationale for mental health disorders and other problems.
    • Discuss effective treatments for mental health care that address the cognitive, emotional, and behavioral consequences of mental health disorders using cognitive and behavioral therapy approaches.
  • You will be asked to read psychoeducational chapters of books or treatment manuals that explain features and development of the symptoms of the disorder. See the separate page about additional resources for a complete book list.
  • You will be asked to read self-help and self-improvement books and read and complete self-help and self-improvement workbooks.

8. Outline of Sessions

 

  • You will be asked to: continue to meet with me on the agreed to frequency. I will ask you to practice new skills and complete some work in between session. I will also ask you to watch videos, listen to podcasts, read books and articles, review handouts, and complete worksheets. You will be responsible for arriving at sessions prepared and ready to participate in sessions. I recommend that you keep a journal for writing ideas or items you wish to discuss in therapy sessions.
  • You and I will utilize and adhere to the following in sessions: Treatment plans; evidence based assessment tests and surveys; SAMHSA oriented health and wellness dimensions; ethical guidelines, evidence based measurement tools to assess progress in therapy; the process of therapy and the therapeutic relationship; and a therapeutic partnership based on empowerment, agency, autonomy, fidelity, responsibility, and cooperation.
  • I will: Hold fidelity for the individual models of therapy within the eclectic, integrated approach to therapy in our sessions, as much as possible. I will continue to assess for changes in core beliefs, expectations, perceptions, thoughts, emotions, feelings, personality traits, and undesirable behaviors. I will continuously assess for completion of therapy goals, and the agreed upon objectives and interventions. I will follow up with you on in between session work and skills practice. I will also discuss your progress in therapy with my supervisor in clinical supervision. I will keep accurate records of your progress, including in between session work status.
  • A CBT approach: Because many of my approaches have CBT in their foundation, every session will proceed the way a Cognitive Behavioral Therapy session should. We will have a brief check in; I will follow up from last session; we will review the in between session assignments (when applicable); we will process assignment ambivalence, avoidance, skepticism, questions, comments, concerns, and begin analyzing the assignment (when applicable); I may offer knowledge, share resources, teach psychoeducation; we will engage in discussion; we may engage in some creative solution focused problem solving; I will assist you with setting smart goals, that are future oriented and goal directed; we will conclude with a brief check out; a brief session evaluation; we will plan next steps; I may assign videos, lessons, readings, and practice work for in between sessions; and we will schedule the next session.

 

 

9. Interventions

Here are some calming skills to learn and use in between sessions for when you are feeling overwhelmed, anxious, and/or stressed. If you do not have a premium YouTube account, there will be advertisements in the videos. I do not receive compensation for the number of visitors I send to these videos and channels.

Guided Meditations

Please note: You do not have to engage in every therapy approach described on this website, you may choose the approaches that you feel the most attracted to and resonate with. The information that follows may or may not align with your specific religious or spiritual beliefs or values, or lack thereof (i.e., Atheism). For the complete library of videos please click here

Breathing Techniques & Meditations

10. The Couples Therapy Treatment Planner by Jongsma

Interpersonal Relationship Skills

  • Learn and implement interpersonal skills to manage challenging situations associated with the presenting problems.
    • Use techniques like visualization [imagining the successful use of the strategies]
    • Role-play, practice, and generalization to learn calming and coping skills for managing fears, overcoming avoidance, and increasing present-day adaptation.

 

Self Talk & Inner Dialogue

  • Learn and implement guided self-dialogue to manage thoughts, feelings, and urges brought on by encounters with distressing situations.
    • Use guided self-dialogue procedure to learn to recognize maladaptive self-talk, challenge its biases, cope with engendered feelings, overcome avoidance, and reinforce accomplishments; review and reinforce progress, problem-solve obstacles.
    • Use the Internal Family Systems approach with Self-Therapy and Parts Work for exploring your own system.
    • Use the Hal Elrod “Miracle Morning” influenced approach of silence, reflection, visualization, imagery, mantras, and affirmations.

 

Anger Management

  • Determine and acknowledge the need to implement anger control techniques; learn and implement anger management techniques.
    • Assess for instances of poor anger management that have led to threats or actual violence that caused damage to property and/or injury to people. Learn and use anger management techniques.

 

 

Adult Psychotherapy Treatment Planner & Adult Psychotherapy Homework Planner (Wiley Publishing)

 

Adult Psychotherapy Treatment Planner & Adult Psychotherapy Homework Planner (Wiley Publishing)

 

Adult Psychotherapy Treatment Planner & Adult Psychotherapy Homework Planner (Wiley Publishing)

Shame

  • Learn and implement approaches for addressing shame and self-disparagement. Use the IFS approach to identify and change self-attacking and personal shaming.

 

 

Adult Psychotherapy Treatment Planner & Adult Psychotherapy Homework Planner (Wiley Publishing)

 

Adult Psychotherapy Treatment Planner & Adult Psychotherapy Homework Planner (Wiley Publishing)

 

Adult Psychotherapy Treatment Planner & Adult Psychotherapy Homework Planner (Wiley Publishing)

Anxiety

  • Learn how to recognize, stop, and postpone worry to an agreed upon “worry time” using skills such as thought stopping, relaxation, and
    redirecting attention to assist skill development. You will be encouraged to use “worry time” in your daily life. We will review and I will reinforce success while providing corrective feedback toward improvement.

 

 

Adult Psychotherapy Treatment Planner & Adult Psychotherapy Homework Planner (Wiley Publishing)

 

Adult Psychotherapy Treatment Planner & Adult Psychotherapy Homework Planner (Wiley Publishing)

  • Gain an understanding of the role that cognitive biases play in excessive irrational worry and persistent anxiety symptoms. We will discuss examples of unrealistic worry when you might overestimate the probability of threats and underestimate or overlook your ability to manage realistic demands. I will assist you in analyzing your worries by examining potential biases such as the probability of the negative expectation occurring, the real consequences of it occurring, your ability to control the outcome, the worst possible outcome, and your ability to accept it. I will help you gain insight into the concept that worry can function as a form of avoidance of a feared problem and that it creates acute and chronic tension.

 

 

Adult Psychotherapy Treatment Planner & Adult Psychotherapy Homework Planner (Wiley Publishing)

 

Adult Psychotherapy Treatment Planner & Adult Psychotherapy Homework Planner (Wiley Publishing)

  • You can learn how to Identify, challenge, and replace biased, fearful self-talk with positive, realistic, and empowering self-talk.
    • You can explore your own schema and negative self-talk (inner critic or worry part) that trigger your fight, flight, or freeze response
      • I can assist you in challenging the biases
      • You can replace the distorted messages with reality-based alternatives and positive, realistic self-talk (self in the leadership role) that will increase your self confidence in coping with irrational fears
    • You will be asked to practice skills in between sessions in which you identify fearful self-talk, identify biases in the self-talk, generate alternatives, and test through behavioral experiments.
    • We will review outcomes and I will reinforce your success, providing corrective feedback toward improvement.

 

Adult Psychotherapy Treatment Planner & Adult Psychotherapy Homework Planner (Wiley Publishing)

Mind-Body Practice

  • We can discuss whether you would be willing to implement a regular exercise regimen as a stress release technique, and I can provide the scientific evidence for the benefits of physical activity on overall health and wellness, including a better ability to regulate your central nervous system and your fight, flight, or freeze response.
    • You can develop a physical health and wellness plan and maintain a routine of physical exercise.
    • You can read and implement practices from this website’s health and wellness program ‘strengthening your conscious self.’
  • We can discuss whether you would be willing to implement a mind-body health and wellness program of daily practice which will integrate
    • Restorative yoga, tai chi, or qi gong
    • Sensorimotor Psychotherapy (book, videos and lessons)
    • Somatic Therapy (book, videos and lessons)
    • Polyvagal Theory in Therapy (book, videos and lessons)

 

Strengthening Your Conscious Self Health & Wellness Program

Sleep Patterns

  • You can learn how to develop a healthy sleep pattern, despite the symptoms and patterns of trauma, anxiety, attention deficit disorder, and/or depression.
    • Develop the habit of monitoring your sleep patterns. (Biometrics smart device)
    • Use relaxation, positive imagery, and sleep hygiene as aids to sleep

 

Adult Psychotherapy Treatment Planner & Adult Psychotherapy Homework Planner (Wiley Publishing)

Treatment Plans for Specific Issues 

ADULT ATTENTION DEFICIT DISORDER

There are some common state/trait behavior clusters associated with this disorder. (1) Hyperactivity; (2) Impulsivity; (3) Inattention; and (4) Irritability. In adults, all 4 can be present, or any combination of the four can manifest in objectively observed behavior patterns. ADHD is not about poor parenting, lack of discipline, or conscious patterns of behavior. ADHD is a Neurodevelopmental disorder, that has biological, social, and psychological factors in its progression and severity. In order to meet the criteria for a diagnosis, the symptoms must have been present in childhood, and they must significantly interfere with functioning in the relational, occupational, social, and educational domains of daily life.  

Post traumatic stress disorder

Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a prevalent and disabling condition that can persist for many years and is often associated with exposure to multiple traumatic events (Kessler, 2000). Exposure to multiple types of trauma during childhood has particularly deleterious consequences (Cloitre et al., 2009; Karam et al., 2014; Kessler, 2000). With increasing exposure to trauma in childhood, comes increasing risk for both severity (Steine et al., 2017) and range (Cloitre et al., 2009) of mental health symptoms. This includes severity of PTSD (Steine et al., 2017), but also increased risk for symptoms of depression, dissociation, somatization, affect dysregulation, and disrupted self-perceptions, such as shame and guilt (Deering et al., 1996; López-Castro et al., 2019; Luxenberg et al., 2001).

Couples Therapy Approaches

Please note: You do not have to engage in every therapy approach described on this website, you may choose the approaches that you feel the most attracted to and resonate with. The information that follows is a more detailed outline and plan of action for the interventions, practices, and therapy approaches I integrate. The following therapy approaches are listed in the order they could be completed to be most helpful and effective.

Individual Therapy Approaches

The sections below are for individual use that will benefit the relationship, marriage, and/or partnership. These can be completed at the same time you are completing the couples therapy plan.

MBSR MINDFULNESS MODULE

Complete the work of Mindfulness Therapy and Practices: Formal Meditation practice. Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction. Formal Mindfulness practice.

MBCT MINDFULNESS MODULE

Complete the work of Mindfulness Therapy and Practices: Formal Meditation practice. Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy. Formal Mindfulness practice.

DBT INTRODUCTION & ORIENTATION

Complete the work of Dialectical Behavior Therapy General Skills Introduction & Orientation to DBT Module

DBT MINDFULNESS SKILLS

Complete the work of Dialectical Behavior Therapy Mindfulness Skills Module. Wise Mind (Reasonable Mind/Emotion Mind). What & How Skills Training. The Mindfulness Learning Module is a separate area of the website.

IFS INTRODUCTION

An introductory lesson on the theory, therapy, and other integrated approaches. The Neuroscience of therapy and the mind-body practices with connections to IFS.

IFS SELF AND PROTECTORS

The Six Fs. Accessing Parts. Accessing Self-Energy Source. Eight Cs. Five Ps. Getting to Know Protectors. Developing Healthy Relationships with Protectors and Concerned Parts. 

SOMATIC THERAPY

Complete the work of Somatic Experiencing informed Therapy for Central Nervous System Regulation.

SENSORIMOTOR THERAPY

Complete the work of Sensorimotor Psychotherapy for Central Nervous System Regulation.

POLYVAGAL THERAPY

Complete the work of Polyvagal Theory informed Therapy & Practice for Central Nervous System Regulation.

DBT EMOTION REGULATION

Complete the work of Dialectical Behavior Therapy Emotion Regulation Skills Module. Coping Skills.

DBT DISTRESS TOLERANCE

Complete the work of Dialectical Behavior Therapy Distress Tolerance Skills Module. Grounding Techniques.

IFS WORKING WITH EXILES

Complete the work of IFS Getting Permission. Accessing Exiles. Witnessing. Retrieving. Reparenting. Healing. Integration. 

DBT INTERPERSONAL SKILLS

Complete the work of Dialectical Behavior Therapy Interpersonal Effectiveness Skills Module for developing healthy relationships and boundaries. 

COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL THERAPY

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Module. Core beliefs and narratives. Intermediate beliefs and schemas. Automatic negative and irrational thoughts and cognitive distortions. Cognitive restructuring and challenging negative thinking patterns. The mind-body connection. CBT focuses on thought processes and behaviors whereas DBT focuses on emotions and behaviors.

MIND-BODY PRACTICES

Formal Integral Life Practice: Yoga, Tai Chi, Qi Gong. Other Martial Arts, Jujitsu, Kung Fu, Aikido, Karate, etc.

 

Relapse Prevention

  • You can gain an understanding of relapse prevention.
    • Learn a rationale for relapse prevention that discusses the risk and introduces strategies for preventing it.
    • Learn the distinction between a lapse and relapse, associating a lapse with a temporary setback and relapse with a return to a sustained unwanted pattern of thinking, feeling, and behaving.
    • Identify and rehearse the management of future situations or circumstances in which lapses could occur.
  • You can learn and implement strategies to prevent relapse of symptoms.
    • Use strategies learned in therapy (e.g., continued everyday exposure, cognitive restructuring, problem-solving), building them into daily life as much as possible.
    • Develop a “coping card” or other reminder on which coping strategies and other important information can be recorded (e.g., steps in problem-solving, positive coping statements, reminders that were helpful to the client during therapy).
    • Schedule periodic maintenance or “booster” sessions to help the client maintain therapeutic gains and problem-solve challenges.
  • Continue to the next section >