Oh…the disappointment…

A few days ago I received an email from NorCATA informing me (and everyone on their mailing list) that the bill for the LPC in California failed to pass the Senate by one vote. This is so disappointing and I’m trying not to let it get me down.

I would like to thank everyone who is working hard on this issue, and I very much hope that next year the bill will pass. In the next few months, as they gear towards another attempt, there will be emails sent out asking for psyc professionals in California to write to their Congressman/woman to express their support for the bill. If you are interested in getting involved or getting on the mailing list for updates, I’m sure if you contacted NorCATA or the California Coalition for Counselor Licensure that could be arranged.

Creative Pier

Martha Mysko from Creative Pier recently introduced me to some of the current workshops being offered at her facility, which is located in New York City.

Creative Pier is a studio space as well as an art gallery, and they offer regular classes, workshops and events. Their purpose is to promote art making as a way to explore the self, raise self esteem, and make connections with others.

Here’s some of the upcoming events:

Giving Art: Prayer Flags
Thursday, September 25th
6 PM – 9 PM

Take an opportunity to learn new ways of making art and to expand your creativity, while expressing kindness and sharing it with those in need. In this workshop we will create prayer flags, whose origins come from Tibet where the flags are made to promote peace, compassion, strength, and wisdom.

Every prayer flag made in this workshop will be sent to a patient diagnosed with cancer, whose hopes for healing will be supported by your good will.
The intent of this workshop is to welcome positive life changes and to acknowledge that all beings are part of a greater cause.

$35 to participate. Art materials are included. 15% of the proceeds will be donated to Gilda’s Club, and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.

Art for Bliss Sake
Begins Wednesday, October 1st
6 sessions
6:30 PM – 9:00 PM
$285/6 sessions or $50/1 session
Unlock the key to your creativity and find your unique voice!

Explore and expand your creative expression in a mixed media workshop, using collage, drawing, sculpting and writing. Liberate your creative potential from any censoring by focusing on the process rather than the product, and experience the delight of authentic self-expression and personal exploration.

Judy de Zanger, author of the Tao of Creativity, invites beginners as well as practicing artists to play and experiment with a variety of materials and processes, discovering and enjoying the creative spirit within.

Please check out the Creative Pier website for registration details and info on upcoming events, workshops and classes.

Tele-Therapy (Cyber Counseling)

The latest Creative Therapy Session podcast featured a topic that I have always been interested in, but always felt hesitant to bring up during my schooling. I felt that the idea of conducting art therapy sessions online would have been a taboo topic in a program that emphasized the presence of the therapist with the client in order to foster a therapeutic relationship, not to mention the fact that I had no idea how one could go about making artwork online.

In this fourth episode of the podcast, Melissa Solorzano, ATR, interviews Kate Collie, PhD, ATR, RPsych, about the work she does in the emerging field of cyber counseling and the way she combines tele-therapy with art therapy. During the interview, Melissa and Kate discuss many of the questions described above and more.

Thank you Melissa for getting this interview! I believe that cyber therapy is a field that is not only emerging, but is here to stay and will only grow bigger, and for this reason its something that needs to be addressed and talked about extensively amongst the psychological community. Like it or not, there therapists like Kate who offer online group therapy services for people who live in remote areas, and there are also therapists who have set up shop in virtual communities like Second Life. Not only must we begin exploring the effect working virtually has on the therapeutic alliance, transference, picking up nuances during sessions, curative factors in therapy, socialization etc…, but we must also remember issues such as confidentiality and technological limitations (i.e., whether someone has a computer, speed of internet, malfunctioning software). Other questions to consider; is there a difference between being present in a therapy session as an avitar versus through a webcam where the therapist and client can see each other’s faces? What are the differences between text forms of communication (email, instant messaging) versus hearing someone’s voice through a microphone during an online therapeutic session? Are there populations that online sessions are more suited for than others? Is online therapy more effective than no therapy at all?

Its certain that a new frontier in therapy is already here and cannot be ignored. To quote Heidi Klum from Project Runway, “either you’re in or you’re out!”. I certainly don’t want to be left behind by technology, if in fact there are ways to work around all the issues discussed above and more.

AATA Conference

For those of you who are interested, the registration is open for the AATA (American Art Therapy Association) conference this year. Its from November 19-23 in Cleveland. The keynote speaker, Dr. Bruce Perry, M.D., Ph.D. discuss “the topic of how art therapy can have an impact on the healing, recovery and restoration of healthy functions of the brain of a child who’s been through trauma and neglect” (AATA conference website).

I’ll be there…will you?