This week, Dr. Allison Kramer speaks with Professor David L. Prucha on the challenges parents and children face in the wake of divorce. Going beyond platitudes, Prucha offers concrete clinical suggestions on how counselors can help both parents and children to avoid the pitfalls of poor parenting, even in times of great emotional pain.
For more on David, links from the conversation, and the APA citation for this episode visit https://wp.me/p7R6fn-t9.
A conversation with Madeline Clark on the intersections of poverty, social class, and mental health, poverty beliefs among counselors, and how the counseling profession can chart a path forward.
For more on Madeline, links from the conversation, and the APA citation for this episode visit https://wp.me/p7R6fn-sY.
A conversation with Samara Stone on challenges to practice building in diverse communities, demystifying mental health services, and making a difference while trying to make a living.
For more on Samara, links from the conversation, and the APA citation for this episode visit https://wp.me/p7R6fn-sK.
A conversation with Dr. Kevin Doyle on the origins of the current opioid crisis in the United States, our collective struggle with pain, and what counselors can do at the systemic, community, and individual levels.
For more on Kevin, links from the conversation, and the APA citation for this episode visit https://wp.me/p7R6fn-sx.
A conversation with Guy MacPherson, founder of The Trauma Therapy Project, on owning our own stories and histories, cultivating presence in our work, and is new cause in inner work for practitioners interested in trauma work.
For more on Guy, links from the conversation, and the APA citation for this episode visit https://wp.me/p7R6fn-sp.