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Digital Seminar

Debunking the Safety Myth

A New Framework for Healing Amidst Uncertainty

Speaker:
Lucie Fielding, PhD, MA, LMHC
Duration:
1 Hour 31 Minutes
Language:
Presented in EN, subtitles in EN, ES, DE, IT, and FR, handouts in EN, ES, DE, IT, and FR
Copyright:
25 May, 2023
Product Code:
POS059261
Media Type:
Digital Seminar


Description

Psychotherapists often presume that most forms of deep healing can take place only after we support a client in establishing a sense of safety. However, insisting on establishing a sense of safety can be countertherapeutic and invalidating for clients who are members of marginalized groups. A reliance on feeling safe may set up an impossible expectation for our clients, namely, that they can—and should be able to—feel safe in a profoundly unsafe world. In place of the safety axiom, this workshop will propose engaging our clients, and particularly those from marginalized communities, in nurturing a sense of boundedness. I propose boundedness as a framework that is more culturally humble and allows us to support a client in sitting in the kinds of decidedly queer ambivalence, ambiguity, and uncertainty that are essential to growth, change, healing, and coming into relationship with our embodied selves.

Credit


Self-Study Credit

This self-study program consists of 1.75 clock hours of continuing education instruction. Credit requirements and approvals vary by country and local regulatory bodies. Please save the course outline, the certificate of completion you receive from the activity and contact your local regulatory organization to determine specific eligibility and requirements. 



Handouts

Speaker

Lucie Fielding, PhD, MA, LMHC's Profile

Lucie Fielding, PhD, MA, LMHC Related seminars and products


Lucie Fielding, PhD, MA, LMHC, (she/they) is a white, neurodivergent queer, trans misogyny affected (TMA) femme, and a therapist practicing in Virginia and Washington (on Monacan lands and unceded Duwamish territory, respectively). They specialize in sex therapy, kink-knowledgeable therapy, 2SLGBTQIA-knowledgeable therapy, sex work-affirming therapy; and they work from the narrative, imaginal, and somatic frameworks that honor the (intergenerational) wisdom of the body, promote community-care, and support empowered embodied eroticism. She holds an MA in Counseling Psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute (2018) and a PhD in French from Northwestern University (2008), specializing in erotic literature. Their background in literature attunes them to the ways that cultural scripts inscribe themselves on our bodies and inform our embodied erotic lives. In addition to being a therapist, Lucie is a sex educator who has facilitated workshops for a range of groups, organizations, universities, and agencies. They are the author of Trans Sex: Clinical Approaches to Trans Sexualities and Erotic Embodiments (2021), which was awarded an AASECT BookAward (Lammy) in the Transgender-Nonfiction category. You can find out more about Lucie at luciefielding.com or follow them on Instagram (@sexbeyondbinaries).  

 

Speaker Disclosures:
Financial: Lucie Fielding has employment relationships with WattPad, Trans Care BC and Antioch University. She receives royalties as a published author. Lucie Fielding receives a speaking honorarium, recording, and book royalties from Psychotherapy Networker and PESI, Inc. She has no relevant financial relationships with ineligible organizations.
Non-financial: Lucie Fielding is a member of the American Association of Sexuality Educators, Counselors and Therapists and the Transgender Health Alliance of Central Virginia.


Additional Info

Program Information

Access for Self-Study (Non-Interactive)

Access never expires for this product.

 

For a more detailed outline that includes times or durations of time, if needed, please contact cepesi@pesi.com. ** no”Access to Self Study” tab available. 


Objectives

  1. Articulate three (3) ways in which a discourse of safety can be countertherapeutic. 
  2. Define the concepts of “boundedness” and “bounded chaos”.
  3. Apply and deploy at least three (3) somatic, trauma-informed, and pleasure-centered techniques or interventions for building embodied awareness presented in this workshop within one's clinical practice. 

Outline

The Safety Axiom in Psychotherapy  

  • How the Safety Axiom is Embedded in Clinical Practice 

Problems with the Discourse of Safety 

The Therapeutic Situation as “Bounded Chaos”: From Safety to Boundedness 

Strategies for Nurturing Boundedness 

Tools for Building Embodied Awareness 

  • The Somatic-Imaginal 
  • Finding “yes” and “no” in the body 
  • Identifying Sensations 
  • Case Study

Target Audience

  • Addiction Counselors
  • Counselors
  • Marriage and Family Therapists
  • Nurses
  • Psychologists
  • Therapists
  • Social Workers
  • Other Mental Health Professionals

Reviews

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