A Therapist’s Path for Exploring Implicit Bias and Racial Trauma.

$97.00

Understand the experiences of people of color. A safe place for all groups to vocalize their thoughts and feelings.

Dear Therapist,

Since the tragic deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and many more, racial trauma is increasingly being recognized by the mainstream as a threat that people of color face on a daily basis.

Even the conservative Wall Street Journal recently published an article A Growing Push to Treat Racism’s Impact on Mental Health highlighting the effects of racism on the black community and their mental health.

In the context of racism and threats of violence, people of color experience threat on a daily basis in the form of “microaggressions.” As is true for battered wives or abused children or soldiers in wartime, danger is ever-present even when nothing frightening appears to be happening.

The three of us have joined together—Janina Fisher, Debra Chatman-Finley, and Gliceria Pérez—to share our perspectives as women of different colors walking through our current world. We feel that we embody the differences we plan to discuss in this program.

Over the course of three weeks, we will look at the role we play as therapists when dealing with microaggressions and racial trauma. We will ask ourselves:

How does racial trauma show up in the therapy room?
Do you find it difficult to validate or empathize with the experiences of your clients of color?
What has prevented therapists from recognizing its effects for so long?

After the traumatic death of Floyd, many people experienced an “A-ha!” moment, and these moments are when people are most open and willing to take in new information.

We want to take advantage of this openness and receptivity by creating an outlet for people to make sense of everything that’s happened in the past few months and get a better perspective on those events. This is also a safe place for all groups to vocalize their thoughts and feelings.

The goal of this course is to help everyone understand the experiences of people of color. When we see color and embrace our differences, we can work together to mend the inequalities in our world today.

We invite all races and groups to join us for this important and timely mini-course.

After this course, you’ll be adept at:

  1. Understanding and validating your client’s experience as a person of color
  2. Creating a safer place for a client of color to share experiences of racial trauma
  3. Recognizing the signs of racial traumatization in psychotherapy
  4. Understanding your own implicit bias and microaggressions.
  5. Helping clients by repairing moments of rupture or microaggression

Here’s Everything That’s Included In

Three 2-hour Video Sessions with Janina Fisher, Debra Chatman-Finley & Gliceria Pérez (6 hours of in-depth training)

 

Three 2-hour Video Sessions with Janina Fisher, Debra Chatman-Finley & Gliceria Pérez (6 hours of in-depth training)

User-Friendly Membership Site

User-Friendly Membership Site

Downloadable Replays of Each Session and Transcripts

Downloadable Replays of Each Session and Transcripts

Rewind: Cleanup Your Own Micro-Aggression

Rewind: Cleanup Your Own Micro-Aggression

Neurobiological Effects of Racial Trauma: What it Means to Live with Threat by Janina Fisher

Neurobiological Effects of Racial Trauma: What it Means to Live with Threat by Janina Fisher

The Validate, Challenge, and Request Approach: A Practical Tool for Facilitating Difficult Dialogues by Kenneth V. Hardy

The Validate, Challenge, and Request Approach: A Practical Tool for Facilitating Difficult Dialogues by Kenneth V. Hardy

and An Exclusive Webinar Session With Dr. Nathalie Edmond:

and An Exclusive Webinar Session With Dr. Nathalie Edmond:

Here’s What We'll Learn Together In

A Therapist’s Path for Exploring Implicit Bias and Racial Trauma

Meet Your Presenter

Debra Chatman-Finley, LPC, NCC
Licensed Professional Counselor
a National Board-Certified Counselor in private practice in Montclair, NJ with over 20 years clinical experience. She is an Adjunct Professor at New York University, teaching Racial and Social Micro-Aggressions in Clinical Practice. She has also facilitated numerous workshops such as Micro-Aggressions: Making the Invisible Visible, and Unmasking Race With Interracial Couples. Debra has a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology and a Master’s degree in Counseling Psychology. She is a graduate and former Associate Faculty of the Multicultural Family Institute. Debra enhanced her expertise in the treatment of the traumatic effects of racial trauma on people of color through her training at the Trauma Center at the Justice Resource Institute in Boston, MA where she received her Certification in Traumatic Stress.
Gliceria Pérez, LCSW
Bilingual Licensed Clinical Social Worker
a Master of Social Work degree from Fordham University Graduate School of Social Service. She has years of experience in the fields of mental health, trauma, domestic violence, and child abuse/neglect. For the past 14 years, Ms. Pérez has provided short-term therapy to traumatized immigrant children/adolescents and their families. Ms. Pérez is trained in Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing (EMDR) and completed the Certificate Program in Traumatic Stress Studies at the Trauma Center at JRI as well as the Multicultural Family Institute. Since 2011, she has been an Adjunct Faculty at New York University Silver School of Social Work. Ms. Pérez conducts workshops/presentations on parenting, trauma, microaggressions and immigration. She maintains a private practice in New Jersey.
Janina Fisher, PhD
Licensed Clinical Psychologist
Instructor at the Trauma Center, an outpatient clinic and research center founded by Bessel van der Kolk. Known for her expertise as both a therapist and consultant, she is also past president of the New England Society for the Treatment of Trauma and Dissociation, an EMDR International Association Credit Provider, a faculty member of the Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Institute, and a former Instructor, Harvard Medical School. Dr. Fisher lectures and teaches nationally and internationally on topics related to the integration of research and treatment and how to introduce these newer trauma treatment paradigms in traditional therapeutic approaches.

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