Finding Your Way: What Every Therapist Should Know About Treating Trauma

Traumatic experiences have a pervasive effect on our nervous systems, relationships, and sense of self in the world. They disrupt our capacity to experience a sense of safety, integrity and connection. Though advances in neurobiology have taught us a great deal and led to the development of many useful treatment approaches, the fact remains that as therapists, we are not simply treating “sexual abuse” or “an eating disorder” or “distorted thoughts”. We are treating human beings, and there is no one model that can address all of human experience and suffering.  

In this workshop, we will focus on some of the fundamental building blocks of trauma-informed treatment (including the Window of Tolerance, working with the body, Polyvagal Theory, working in the present moment, attachment wounding and using an anti-oppressive lens).  We will explore how to integrate these concepts into our work regardless of theoretical orientation.

This workshop will be interactive, allowing for exploration of the clinical material of our clients and our own experience as therapists. Therapists will leave with new ideas for how to translate their existing strengths, knowledge, and training into effective interventions with clients.

 

Event Details

Facilitator: Amy Zajakowski Uhll, LCPC

6 CEUs  are offered for LCPCs, LCSWs, LMFTs, and Clinical Psychologists.
CCIH is a licensed CEU provider in the state of Illinois. If you are a licensed provider in another state, contact our office manager at officemanager@theccih.com to inquire about CEUs. 

Fee: $175

CCIH strives to make training accessible for as many participants as possible. For this workshop, we are offering a lowered fee of $125 for students or other participants in need of a reduced fee. Contact Victoria at officemanager@theccih.com to request. 

This event will take place virtually. Participants will be emailed a Zoom link a few days in advance.

 

REGISTER NOW

 

Amy Zajakowski Uhll is the founder and director of the Chicago Center for Integration and Healing.  For more than 30 years, Amy has been committed to exploring the harm caused by traumatic experiences. She helps individuals discover their own unique journey toward healing and supports other therapists in their work with trauma.

Amy spent the early years of her career working in community mental health. Her experience there deepened her awareness that there is no single approach that can treat all of human suffering, and she began her career-long interest in integrating body-centered and neurobiological approaches with more relational and developmental work. She specializes in complex and developmental trauma and dissociative disorders.

In 2011, Amy founded CCIH as part of her ongoing mission to create a community centered around the treatment of trauma. At CCIH, Amy had a lead role in creating the center’s treatment philosophy, therapist training programs  and Integrated Practices curriculum. In addition, she has created and facilitated many professional development workshops and offered trauma-informed training and consultation to individual therapists,  group practices, social service agencies and other groups. 

Amy understands that trauma reverberates at all levels of human experience: the individual, relational, communal and societal. She supports therapists as they interrogate their own history of wounding, implicit biases and present experience in the development of their own authentic approach to healing work. She holds that the healing of traumatic experiences is an essential agent of social change.

Amy is originally trained in psychodynamic treatment and graduated with her Master’s in Counseling Psychology from Northwestern University in 1991. She also completed the Level 1 Training for the Treatment of Trauma (2006) and Level II Emotional Processing, Meaning Making and Attachment Repair (2018), through the Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Institute of Boulder, CO.


CCIH Cancellation Policy:
If you are unable to attend, you may send a substitute or request a refund. All refund requests must be made in writing at least one week prior to the event and are subject to an administrative charge of $30. Alternatively, you may transfer your full registration fee to a future workshop. Cancellations and transfer requests made less than one week prior to event will not be honored and registration fee will be forfeited. Requests must be emailed to officemanager@theccih.com and will not be accepted by phone. We reserve the right to cancel the workshop, in which case participants will receive a full refund.

 

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