- A 21st Century Behavior Therapy Podcast -
September 12 & 13, 2016
Acceptance & Commitment Therapy: 2-Day Intensive ACT Training
New York City, NY
September 15 & 16, 2016
Acceptance & Commitment Therapy: 2-Day Intensive ACT Training
Portland, ME
September 19 & 20, 2016
Acceptance & Commitment Therapy: 2-Day Intensive ACT Training
Honolulu, HI
September 27, 2016
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Everyday Practice
Syracuse, NY
September 28, 2016
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Everyday Practice
Rochester, NY
September 29, 2016
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Everyday Practice
Buffalo, NY
October 3 & 4, 2016
Acceptance & Commitment Therapy: 2-Day Intensive ACT Training
Seattle, WA
October 6 & 7, 2016
ACT I: Two-Day Training with Praxis
Columbus, OH
October 13, 2016
Keynote Speech at the BSN Conference:
Building Leadership Commitment
Jacksonville, FL
October 20 & 21, 2016
ACT I: Two-Day Training with Praxis
Pittsburgh, PA
October 24 & 25, 2016
Acceptance & Commitment Therapy: 2-Day Intensive ACT Training
Sacramento, CA
October 26 & 27, 2016
Acceptance & Commitment Therapy: 2-Day Intensive ACT Training
San Francisco, CA
November 3-6, 2016
ACT BootCamp with Steve Hayes, Robyn Walser, Kelly Wilson, Tim Gordon, Matt Boone, Emily Sandoz, and Thomas Szabo
Tampa, FL
November 15-16, 2016
Acceptance & Commitment Therapy: 2-Day Intensive ACT Training
Des Moines, IA
November 17-18, 2016
Acceptance & Commitment Therapy: 2-Day Intensive ACT Training
Omaha, NE
Brandon Gaudiano has done a great deal of research in contextual behavioral approaches related to clinical work. His website at Brown University is a treasure trove of great publications that you can download, read, and apply. He also has a new book titled Incorporating Mindfulness and Acceptance into the Treatment of Psychosis: Current Trends and Future Directions. It is available on Amazon, and you can get to that bookstore by clicking through the ACBS website. Whether you treat individuals with serious mental illness or not, Brandon discusses important points for anyone applying the ACT model in treatment. Enjoy!
I am very excited to have Tony Biglan on Functionally Speaking. He wrote a fantastic book called The Nurture Effect: How the Science of Human Behavior Can Improve Our Lives & Our World. I highly recommend the book, and you can order it by going to the ACBS Click-Thru page first. Check out his cool website that hosts a neat video about the topic, and even shows endorsements from many scholarly people, including Senator Jeff Merkley. Tony’s answers to my questions are really enlightening, and I think you’ll find this podcast particularly interesting. And, if you like this interview, check out Tony’s interview on Trent Codd’s CBT Radio podcast. I look forward to your feedback.
Beate Ebert is doing a remarkable job helping reduce suffering and improve quality of living for people in Sierra Leone. She’s helping establish mental health infrastructures, training professionals in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, and doing important implementations of public health initiatives to reduce the spread of Ebola in West Africa. She and I worked together with Joanne Dahl presenting ACT workshops in Sierra Leone. Beate and I reminisce about that experience and talk about the challenges of disseminating the contextual behavioral sciences. Beate explains how she used ACT to influence people’s actions to reduce the spread of the Ebola virus. (Check out Steve Hayes’s blog about this topic here.)
We also discuss our experience in the amputee camps, conversations with adults who were child-combatants, prevention measures, and our interaction with Father Peter Conte, a great community organizer in Freetown. (To read a little bit about Peter, look here).
If you’d like to assist in this Beate’s initiatives, check out the Commit + Act organization’s website and Facebook page.
This edition of Functionally Speaking includes two interviews. They were both done back when I was more involved with this podcast a few years ago, but just because they are old, doesn’t mean I shouldn’t put them out for folks to listen to! Kelly Wilson joins me to talk about his book Mindfulness for Two and then I interview Julie Vargas, B.F. Skinner’s daughter, about her book Behavior Analysis for Effective Teaching. Enjoy!!
For folks interested, I’m doing several trainings in the next few months:
CBT & Mindfulness
Kalamazoo, MI – December 9, 2014
Grand Rapids, MI – December 10, 2014
Lansing, MI – December 11, 2014
Sacramento, CA – January 27, 2015
Oakland, CA - January 28, 2015
Palo Alto, CA - January 29, 2015
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
Macon, GA - February 9, 2015
Norcross, GA - February 10, 2015
Marietta, GA - February 11, 2015
Tuscon, AZ – March 10, 2015
Scottsdale, AZ - March 11, 2015
Phoenix, AZ - March 12, 2015
Treating OCD & Hoarding
Tinley Park, IL - April 29, 2015
Lisle, IL - April 30, 2015
Arlington Heights, IL – May 1, 2015
If interested in my scheduled dates about SAFETY or LEADERSHIP training, or for information on how to register for the above events, please feel free to email me: [email protected]. Thanks for listening!
It’s the triumphant return of Functionally Speaking! After several years of dormancy, the podcast is back and featuring an interview with Dennis Tirch. He’s an awesome contextual behavioral scientist, compassionate therapist, and passionate mindfulness enthusiast. He and I speak about the book he coauthored with Benji Schoendorff and Laura Silberstein, The ACT Practitioner’s Guide to the Science of Compassion: Tools for Fostering Psychological Flexibility. If you enjoy the podcast, or have feedback... or a request related to what I should talk about, tweet me! @drdjmoran
AND - Click here to help raise funds for ACBS when you shop on Amazon
Before the Association for Contextual Behavioral Sciences conference in The Netherlands, there were many requests to record the workshops. Joanne Dahl, Jennifer Plumb, Ian Stewart, and Tobias Lundgren led a fantastic workshop entitled The Art & Science of Valuing in Psychotherapy. They wrote a book with the same title published by New Harbinger, and it is excellent.
This is Part Two of the workshop. Just to clarify, all I did was record this workshop and asked for permission to post it here on the Functionally Speaking website. Enjoy!
D.J. Moran
Before the Association for Contextual Behavioral Sciences conference in The Netherlands, there were many requests to record the workshops. Joanne Dahl, Jennifer Plumb, Ian Stewart, and Tobias Lundgren led a fantastic workshop entitled The Art & Science of Valuing in Psychotherapy. They wrote a book with the same title published by New Harbinger, and it is excellent.
This is Part One of the workshop, and I’ll post Part Two fairly soon. Just to clarify, all I did was record this workshop and asked for permission to post it here on the Functionally Speaking website. Enjoy!
D.J. Moran
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