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  • April 2019 Newsletter

 April 2019
 Newsletter Editor:  Heather Blessing, MA, LMFT
info@svccamft.org 
 
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Newsletter Highlights & Important Information

   Don't forget to check out - Listings of paid internships in the Sacramento Area

All of our workshops are at Rancho Cordova City Hall - Click Here for Directions   
  
Special Feature -  Real Selfcare by Mere Yost, LMFT 


We want to thank our amazing volunteers for the month of March 2019: 

Amita Khare


We would like to thank our Gold Level Sponsor:

Triad Behavioral Health



Letter from the Board

April 1, 2019

Greetings {Contact_First_Name} {Contact_Last_Name}! 

Thank you to all who participated in our 2nd Annual Mental Health Professionals' Job Fair!   It was a great success!  From an attendee, 

"...Thank you also for the opportunity to attend the job fair. It was extremely helpful and I was also contacted for a interview. I just wanted to offer my appreciation."

I would like to thank our board members and our administrative assistant, Heather Blessing who worked tirelessly to assure its success.  You can see the employers and the job listings here: http://www.sacramentovalleycamft.org/JobFair2019Listings.

Our monthly training, From Clinician to Confident CEO: How to Have More Ease, More Time Off, and More Profit by Casey Truffo, LMFT   was well attended and provided useful information for those working in a private practice setting.  Casey Truffo,  LMFT was very knowledgeable and our chapter is very appreciative for her words of wisdom and expertise.

Our April training will be an Introduction to EMDR by Kim Johnson, LCSW.   If you are unfamiliar with EMDR, this will give you an opportunity to learn the basics and ask any questions you might have.
The April meeting of the 3000 Club is on  High Conflict Divorce and Custody by Carla Friend, LMFT

We hope to see you there for an opportunity to learn about his important topic and to network with other professionals in the area.

In May, we will have Tracy McCarthy, MD speak to us on Functional Medicine and the 3000 club will have The Basics of Treating Athletes and Teams by Dr. Shana Alexander.

Please feel free to contact the board with any future training suggestions. Shortly, we will be sending out a survey to members and would appreciate any feedback you have for the board.

The board has initiated a diversity committee. Please contact the board president if you are interested in joining this committee.

Peace,

Ann Leber




This issue:
· Upcoming Event Information
· Upcoming Board Meetings

· Special Feature
· Letters to the Editor

· Psyched about Books and Movies

· Paid MFT Internships
· Advertising and Announcements

· Advertising Policy for the Newsletter

BOARD OF DIRECTORS
President:

Ann Leber, LMFT
President-Elect:
Linita Morris, LMFT
Past President:
Talal Alsaleem, LMFT, PsyD
Secretary:
Susan Armstrong, LMFT
Treasurer:
Merrett Sheridan, LMFT
Program Co-Chairs:

Susan Martin, AMFT
VACANT
3000 Club Chair:
Alicia Pharis, LMFT
Volunteer Chair:
Martha Cowley, LMFT
Membership Chair:

Krista Kleeman, LMFT
Sponsorship Chair:
Nichole Cobb, AMFT




 



News from the BBS

RENEWAL COUPON FORMS NO LONGER PROVIDED Registrants and licensees will no longer receive renewal “return coupon” forms in the mail. The board will continue to mail a courtesy renewal notice 90 days prior to each licensee’s and registrant’s expiration date. The renewal notice will provide directions for renewing online through the BreEZe system. The board will continue to accept printed manual renewal forms, which can take four to six weeks for processing. Renewing online takes effect instantly as long as all renewal requirements are met. Online Is Easier! A Variety of Online Services Now Available via BreEZe For faster service, manage your registration and license online! BreEZe provides services for applicants, registrants, and licensees that can save you weeks of processing time compared to paper applications. Services available include the ability to:

• RENEW a license or registration instantly (up to 90 days in advance).

• SUBMIT an address change (takes effect instantly).

• REQUEST a replacement registration or license (allow two weeks for delivery).

• VERIFY a license and obtain proof of renewal status.

• PAY with a major credit card in a secure environment. Consumer complaints can also be filed on BreEZe at www.breeze.ca.gov.















 

We wanted to thank our

SPONSORED EMPLOYERS

and our

EMPLOYERS

Auburn Davis Center for DBT * Center For Discovery * El Dorado County Health and Human Services Agency * Insights Counseling * River Oak Center for Children * Sacramento Children's Home * Sierra Forever Families * Sierra Mental Wellness Group * Solano County * Telecare Corporation * The Anxiety Treatment Center * The Place Within Counseling Folsom * WEAVE 

For participating in our 2nd Annual Mental Health Professionals' Job Fair!





2019 Events

May 3000 Club Workshop

Topic: The Basics of Treating Athletes and Teams
Presenter: Dr. Shana Alexander, PsyD

Date: 
Friday, May 3, 2019
Time:
 8:30am to 9:30am

Location:  Rancho Cordova City Hall, 
                2729 Prospect Park Drive, 
                Rancho Cordova, CA 95670 (
map)
Room: American River South 
Free Coffee and Donuts 
Space is limited so please register here

Workshop Information:  

Dr. Shana Alexander will introduce sports psychology and discuss the basics of treating athletes and teams. She will also discuss the emotional challenges of living with diabetes.   

Presenter Bio: 

Dr. Shana Alexander is a licensed clinical psychologist, who specializes in Health and Sports Psychology; specifically, chronic illness, with an expertise in type 1 diabetes, sports performance enhancement, and other sports related concerns. Dr. Alexander has experience working with and treating a wide variety of populations in multiple different settings, including working internationally at The University of Sydney. She also previously worked at UC Davis and Kaiser Permanente. Dr. Alexander now owns her own practice, Folsom Health Psychology, and focuses primarily on treating the emotional concerns associated with diabetes and sports psychology.   

** Please be courteous and send us an email at info@svccamft.org if you are unable to attend after you have registered. **


April Workshop

Topic:  Tap into Innate Healing: A Functional Medicine Approach to Depression and Anxiety
Presenter:
  Dr. Tracy McCarthy

Date:  Friday, May 3, 2019
Time: 10:00 AM to 12:00PM
Location: Rancho Cordova City Hall, 
2729 Prospect Park Drive, 
Rancho Cordova, CA 95670 (map)
Room: American River North

Doors Open at 9:00AM
Networking starts at 9:00 AM

It is the goal of SVC-CAMFT is to ensure that we have an environment that is conducive to learning for all of our attendees so we ask that at our events\workshops not to wear scented products.  Thank you.

This program will benefit LMFT, LPCC, LEP and LCSW licensees and pre licensees by improving the understanding of the way lifestyle, nutrition and stress impact mental health. Clinical skills gained include knowing evidence-based lifestyle changes to recommend to clients and support them in implementing that reduce symptoms of depression and anxiety. Participants will learn up to date research on the biological underpinnings of mental health symptoms that they can discuss with clients, rather than relying on outdated biological concepts. Helping clients understand the role they can take in their own healing is empowering to them.


Includes: Breakfast and meets the qualifications for 2 hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.  Sacramento Valley Chapter of California Marriage and Family Therapists (SVC-CAMFT) CAMFT CEPA CE Provider #62279 is approved by the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists to sponsor Continuing Education for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and LEPs. SVC-CAMFT maintains the responsibility for the program and all its content.  CE Credit will be awarded after the completion of the course via email in exchange for a completed course evaluation form.


No CEs will be awarded to persons arriving late or leaving early. Partial CE credit will not be awarded. 

  
Workshop Information:

Workshop covers the complexity of causes of chronic illness as contrasted with acute illness, and how a systems-based approach recognizes and addresses these causes to restore health. Workshop goes into detail about the role of the HPA Axis, gastrointestinal system and microbiome in mood and anxiety symptoms, as supported by the published literature. Lifestyle and nutrition interventions are recommended in the workshop that reduce symptoms, as supported in the published literature. 

Schedule:
9:00 am Registration Starts
9:00am - 9:45am - Networking 
9:45am - 10:00am - Announcements
10:00am - 11:00am 
- Lecture
11:00am - 11:10am - Group Discussion
11:10am - 12:00pm - 
Lecture
noon - Workshop Ends

Learning Objectives:
1. Participants will learn the causal differences between acute and chronic illness
2. Participants will gain an understanding of the role of the HPA axis in creating symptoms and how they can correct these.
3. Participants will learn the role of the gastrointestinal tract and microbiome in inflammation and symptoms, and how they can promote gut health to improve mental health


Presenter Bio:
Ever since she first learned about the healing power of lifestyle and nutrition, Dr. Tracy McCarthy has been transforming lives. An honors graduate of UC Davis School of Medicine and a board-certified psychiatrist, she is passionate about getting this life-changing information into the hands of those who are suffering and whose symptoms have been dismissed or can’t be explained. In her practice, she works intensively with patients to help them uncover the hidden causes of their symptoms and supports them in making lasting changes to their health. Dr. McCarthy is an Institute for Functional Medicine Certified Practitioner with additional training from the Kresser Institute for Functional and Evolutionary Medicine. With her unique combination of conventional clinical and Functional Medicine training, her therapeutic skills, compassion and her passion for health, she is a sought-after practitioner who provides truly holistic transformational care.


Register and pay online 

Early registration ends Thursday, April 25, 2019 Early registration rates:

2019 Licensed, Associate or Affiliate Member of SVC-CAMFT or a local chapter of CAMFT: $20

2019 Pre-Licensed Member of SVC-CAMFT or a local chapter of CAMFT: $15

Non-Member: $30

Starting Friday, April 26, 2019 rates:

2019 Licensed, Associate or Affiliate Member of SVC-CAMFT or a local chapter of CAMFT: $25

2019 Pre-Licensed Member of SVC-CAMFT or a local chapter of CAMFT: $20

Non-Member: $35

Registration Ends Wednesday, May 1, 2019No Walk-in Registration unless announced.  


Registration Policy 
Effective January 1, 2018 SVC-CAMFT event registration must be paid online except with prior approval.  Registration dates and fees may vary and are subject to change without notice.  Event discounts prices and discount periods may or may not be offered.  Event registration is deemed complete during the registration period in which registration payment is received.  Incomplete or unpaid registration will be cancelled and removed at the end of each registration period. 


Refund Policy 
Cancellations received more than 7 days prior to an event may be subject to an administrative fee to cover costs of the initial transaction.  No shows, failure to attend, and cancellations 7 or fewer days prior to an event for any reason are non-refundable, including registrations received fewer than 7 days prior to an event. No credit, refunds, or price adjustments will be given for typographical advertisement errors. A $25 fee in addition to the registration fee will be charged for insufficient funds, denied credit cards, or charge-backs. By registering for the event you agree to the terms of the Refund Policy.

Grievance Policy 
is located here.

To request accommodations for a disability or an ASL interpreter for any of our events contact our Administrative Assistant at info@svccamft.org


******************

We listen to your feedback - New for 2019:
  • For 2019 Workshops, there is an option for printed handouts for an additional $5 added on to your registration fee.  If you select this option handouts with your name will be waiting for you when you sign in.

  • Friday Law and Ethics and Saturday Law and Ethics will have different lunch buffets.

  • We will have Law and Ethics for Supervisors on Friday of our Law and Ethics in addition to our regular Friday Law and Ethics.  Saturday Law and Ethics will go over the Therapist Will among other things.  More option to choose from.

  • Bigger Job Fair with more employers.

2019 Upcoming Events\Workshops


·  **Free** Pre-Licensed 3000 Club Workshop - High Conflict Divorce and Custody

Fri, April 05, 2019 8:30 AM•Rancho Cordova City Hall, 2729 Prospect Park Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670

·  EMDR by Kim Johnson, LCSW 

Fri, April 05, 2019 9:00 AM•Rancho Cordova City Hall, 2729 Prospect Park Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670

·  **Free** Pre-Licensed 3000 Club Workshop - May TBD

Fri, May 03, 2019 8:30 AM•Rancho Cordova City Hall, 2729 Prospect Park Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670

·  Functional Medicine by Dr, Tracy McCarthy

Fri, May 03, 2019 9:00 AM•Rancho Cordova City Hall, 2729 Prospect Park Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670

·  **Free** Pre-Licensed 3000 Club Workshop - June TBD

Fri, June 07, 2019 8:30 AM•Rancho Cordova City Hall, 2729 Prospect Park Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670

·  Gender: Non-Binary Issues and Concepts by Finley Terhune

Fri, June 07, 2019 9:00 AM•Rancho Cordova City Hall, 2729 Prospect Park Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670

·  2 - Day Law and Ethics Symposium

Fri, July 26, 2019 9:30 AM•Rancho Cordova City Hall, 2729 Prospect Park Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670

·  **Free** Pre-Licensed 3000 Club Workshop - September TBD

Fri, September 06, 2019 8:30 AM•Rancho Cordova City Hall, 2729 Prospect Park Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670

·  Addiction: Opiate Crisis by Dr. Justin Altschuler

Fri, September 06, 2019 9:00 AM•Rancho Cordova City Hall, 2729 Prospect Park Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670

·  **Free** Pre-Licensed 3000 Club Workshop - October TBD

Fri, October 04, 2019 8:30 AM•Rancho Cordova City Hall, 2729 Prospect Park Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670

·  Cultural Diversity by Nassiba Cherif, LMFT, Nicolas Caballero Talavera, LCSW and Dr. Shannon Cooper

Fri, October 04, 2019 8:30 AM•Rancho Cordova City Hall, 2729 Prospect Park Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670

·  **Free** Pre-Licensed 3000 Club Workshop - November TBD

Fri, November 08, 2019 8:30 AM•Rancho Cordova City Hall, 2729 Prospect Park Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670

·  The Work of Byron Katie, Using The Work to Get Unstuck with Clients by Jane Bertolani, LMFT

Fri, November 08, 2019 9:00 AM•Rancho Cordova City Hall, 2729 Prospect Park Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670


Upcoming Board Meetings

Board Meetings are FREE for anyone to attend BUT you MUST register so we have an accurate headcount.

To Register click on the board meeting(s) you wish to attend.


APRIL BOARD MEETING

Fri, April 05, 2019 12:30 PM • Rancho Cordova City Hall

JUNE BOARD MEETING

Fri, June 07, 2019 12:30 PM • Rancho Cordova City Hall

SEPTEMBER BOARD MEETING

Fri, September 06, 2019 12:30 PM • Rancho Cordova City Hall

NOVEMBER BOARD MEETING

Fri, November 08, 2019 12:30 PM • Rancho Cordova City Hall

 
 







Special Feature

(If you would like your article published in our newsletter please email info@svccamft.org)

Real Self-Care

By Merle Yost, LMFT

Self-care is a constant topic of conversation in our community, although we may not have enough time for it. In graduate school, we talk about maintaining rituals, such as changing clothes or showering after work. We might meditate or pursue some other kind of spiritual practice at the end of the workday, all with the idea of getting some self-care in our world that is always about the other.

All of these ideas are great, as far as they go. Real self-care is how you take care of yourself in the office during your session, rather than dealing with the aftermath. Not merging with your clients yet having genuine empathy and compassion. Self-care is not taking on anything from your clients so that at the end of the day, you have nothing to “get rid of”— because you did not absorb it during the process of helping them.

Merging, often in our socialization, is seen as a good thing. We are taught in our culture that it is the best way to feel empathy and know what the other is feeling. In reality, it is intrusive. And as therapists, the last thing we want to do is to merge with our clients. We are supposed to be giving them a reparative experience, not reinforcing the intrusions and violations of their childhood.

A Better Way

The first step is to stay inside of our bodies. The task, especially in a therapeutic session, is to recognize what you are experiencing emotionally and physically — so that when you begin to pick up the energetic experiences of others, that you are able to distinguish what is you and what is them. This requires being inside of yourself and practicing at identifying the difference between you and others.

BUBBLE


The second step is to have a strong sense of your “energetic bubble”. Everything in the universe is energy. That cup you use, the car you drive, and your hand are all examples of energy put together in different forms that we recognize. Each of us has an electromagnetic field outside and around ourselves. This life force is also described as Qi. Becoming hyper-aware of that bubble is the first step to owning your space and being able to understand what is happening around you — by simply being conscious of your bubble.

How would it be possible to have this constant awareness? It feels like it would take all of our attention if it we were thinking about this all the time. We could say the same thing, however, about breathing. We need to breathe constantly. If we don’t breathe, we die. So you must be hyperaware of each breath, or you would stop breathing. Of course, breathing is automatic. Most of the time we don’t have to think about it. When we do, something is wrong, or at the very least deserves our attention.

The same is true with our bubble. It is just part of us. Once we learn to hear the alert system of sensation, of feeling, that signals to us that something is amiss, where we choose to tune in to take the emotional temperature of a person, it is just like breathing. It becomes automatic once we are aware of it and understand how it works.

How Do We Keep Our “Bubble” Solid?


Unfortunately, childhood, for most people, does not offer great experience for learning boundaries. For many, as children, we experienced whatever limits we tried to establish being torn down and trampled. Too often, parents intrude on their children and use them to meet the parent's needs. No one gets through childhood unscathed. Childhood is not designed that way. The task of parenting is to help a child navigate those painful experiences, so that the child has the tools and confidence to explore the world successfully. Not many succeed completely.

CRAWLING OUT OF THE BUBBLE


Parents who are the source of the unresolved pain in their child’s lives are what cause personality disorders and neurosis. Our own bodies’ beautifully designed system of electromagnetic energy, one that can protect and inform us is, often riddled with “holes” from the unresolved trauma of childhood and life. Instead of having this solid bubble, we have holes that leak out our energy and have been socialized to allow in the energy of others. And if sufficiently triggered, a child part of our self, from some unresolved pain in our lives, will crawl out of one of those holes in our bubble and suddenly take charge of a situation or our life. There is nothing quite like a four-year-old self suddenly deciding they need to protect us from someone perceived as a threat, a threat that is sourced from pain from long ago. We have all been there, and we see it in others, and our clients, every day.

HOLES / WOUNDS IN BUBBLE

These “holes in our bubble.” in turn, make us vulnerable to taking on others’ energy. We begin to directly experience the other’s emotions and pain, in our own emotions and even in our own bodies. Yet it is their energy, it is not ours, and it should stay outside of you, not inside. This is not about being uncaring or unavailable; it can actually make the opposite happen. You are genuinely available and are a profound witness to their experience without intruding on them or their experience. If you keep them “out”, and you “in”, at the end of the work day, you are alive, full of energy, and ready to be fully present with your home life and loved ones. This feeling shouldn’t be something you only achieve after hours of decompression, solitude, or the requisite glass(es) of chardonnay. This is real self-care and it is available to anyone that learns this approach to energy management. Staying in your body, learning to read the environment from inside your bubble, is how you know what is happening outside of you.

Our task as healers is to heal our own wounds, so we don’t leak out our own emotions and issues. We must assist our clients in their healing themselves, so they don’t “leak,” either. We need to teach them about their bubble, how to stay inside of it and how to recognize when others are attempting to intrude, and what to do about it. This would be a much better world for all of us if everyone could be aware of this process.

What Can I Do?

Most of us have had the experience of going home to visit our parents and regressing to a child state. Saying no to parents can be very difficult if not impossible. One technique of several to use in that moment of trouble, is a figure eight visualization. This specific approach is from a book called Cutting the Ties that Bind by Phyllis Krystal

Imagine two hula hoops. Put yourself in one of them and put someone you are having trouble keeping out of your bubble in the other. The hula hoops should be adjacent but not overlapping. Turn the two hula hoops into neon and begin moving the energy between the hula hoops in the form of a figure eight. Starting in front of you, start by running the energy clockwise around them and then coming around, and then going counter-clockwise around you until it forms a figure eight. Continue doing this until you begin to notice that you are breathing more naturally and have more mental clarity. I call this exercise a Disconnecting Figure 8.

You can make the energy field bands you are visualizing very tall, or very thick, whatever is necessary for you to feel safely separate from the other.

Another setting for this exercise can be at work. Bosses are often experienced as intrusive, and we frequently turn them into our parents. Using the figure eight will give you space to step back, breathe, and have a better picture of what is happening in the moment.

This technique will help you (and your clients) be better able to see the person instead of the projection. Ghosts from the past, reflected by people in the present, can make us regress and be overwhelmed in the moment. In the moment of stress, healing that past is generally not an option. Having tools in your arsenal to help you deal with the situation is essential to be the best you can be in the here and now.

Figure eights can also be used on bad dreams, obsessive thoughts, and other intrusions where you need to create distance. By doing this tool long enough, that “other” will simply dissipate or at least it will give you more distance and perspective to handle the situation in the moment.

Healing is a life-long process as we are constantly uncovering ‘new’ old stuff that needs to be addressed. Understanding and using strong, clear energy boundaries is real self-care.  This allows us to re-orient ourselves, and our clients, making the healing process easier and faster, and in turn, it makes life more enjoyable.

Try it. See the diagram as it may help to make sense of the visualization.

DISCONNECTING FIGURE 8


Merle Yost, LMFT

merleyost.com

merle@merleyost.com

Merle Yost is the author of six books, the latest, Facing the Truth of Your Life and his current workshop is Unspoken Boundaries: Energy Hygiene for Everyone. He has retired from private practice but does short-term Intensives and adjunct EMDR.  


_______________________

The views expressed in the Special Feature Articles do not necessarily reflect the Sacramento Valley Chapter of CAMFT or CAMFT. They should be understood as the personal opinions of the author. No information in this article will be understood as official.  Other views and commentary are welcome and will be published as long as they are respectful and stick to the topic.
 



Letters to the Editor
Welcome to the Letters to the editor Section.  We want to hear what you want to say about SVC-CAMFT, CAMFT, current events and issues.  Please see below guidelines on submitting a letter.



 We Have No Letters to the Editor!  Let your voice be heard!  Write a letter to the editor!
__________________________________

 Letters to the Editor Guidelines
  • You must be a current SVC-CAMFT member.
  • You cannot be a SVC-CAMFT board member or employee.
  • It must be no more than 250 words.
  • You must send in your full name so I can verify that you are a member.
  • If you wish your name not to be published please indicate.
  • Any letter published without a name will be listed as Anonymous MFT or Anonymous pre-license or Anonymous Associate
  • All letters must be respectful and without inappropriate words or phrases including name calling.
  • Please send your letters to info@svccamft.org
  • If you do not get a response back within 2 days that it has been received please email back.
  • ALL LETTERS RECEIVED WILL RECEIVE A RESPONSE THAT IT HAS BEEN RECEIVED AND WILL BE IN THE NEXT NEWSLETTER.
  • If there is a problem with the letter (language, misspellings, length or appropriateness) you will receive an email back with the reason for the rejection and a chance to fix the problem and send it back in. 

 
                                                           
Psyched about Books and Movies

Welcome to "Psyched about Books and Movies!"  Each month we include a book or movie review by one of our readers.  Please see below guidelines on submitting a review.  

Title:  Through Deaf Eyes
Web Address: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tJeAG8tZyf4
Copyright:
  2007
Reviewer:
 Heather Blessing, LMFT

Review: April is Deaf Awareness Month so I thought I would watch a movie about Deaf Culture.  This was an amazing unbiased history of deaf culture.  It gives you an understanding of different schooling methods and the positives and negatives of assisted hearing devices and technology.  I had no idea of many of the milestones in deaf culture and found this a very interesting and informative movie.  I highly recommend it as it gives an opportunity to better understand deaf culture and how it is not always considered a disability.


 

Book/Movie Review Submission Policy

All reviews are not to exceed 1000 key strokes.
Your review should include the title, a short synopsis about why you like or dislike it, and the author’s name & publication date.You can also include a picture of the book and/or movie. After review, we will publish your review in our next newsletter. Reviews submitted that are longer than 1000 characters will be returned for editing. It is best to type your review in a Microsoft Word document to note how many key strokes (characters with spaces), how big your review is, and for your own record keeping. You can then copy and paste it into the online submission form located here (http://www.svccamft.org/Newsletter.html) To learn more about checking your review for key strokes, spelling grammar and size click below: (http://www.svccamft.org/How_to_check_review_in_microsoft_word.doc).

It is your responsibility to check for spelling and grammar errors.  Reviews must be received by the 20th of the month in order to appear in the next newsletter.

You can submit your review by: Visiting our webpage: www.svccamft.org

Mailing it in: P.O. Box 163385, Sacramento, CA 95816

 



Listings Provided by:


Prelicensed is a free resource for MFT registered associates, trainees, and students in California. We offer numerous services that are designed to help you prepare and prevail over the course of your journey to licensure


MFT and PCC Associate/Trainee Positions Available - Jackson, CA - Nexus Youth & Family Services

Mental Health Specialist - Sacramento, CA - Sacramento Children's Home

Therapist - Sacramento, CA - Northern California Preparatory School


For more job listings and other free resources, visit Prelicensed!








Advertising and Announcements




SPRING WORKSHOP FOR SACRAMENTO-DAVIS EMOTIONALLY FOCUSED THERAPY CENTER - EFT WITH COUPLES BY SUE JOHNSON

Spring Workshops for Sacramento-Davis Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) Center

sacdeft.org

· Master Class with Dr. Sue Johnson: Flying Through the Storm to Safe and Sound: EFT with Challenging Couples

 Date & Time: Tuesday, April 16, 2019 from 9:00 am – 5:00 pm

 Location: The Veteran’s Memorial Theater: 203 E 14th Street, Davis, CA 95616

 Cost: $225 for Licensed Therapists ($195 before March 16, 2019)

$150 for Students/Interns ($135 before March 16, 2019)

 CE Credits: 6 CE Credits

 More information and registration: visit https://sacdeft.org/dr-sue-johnson-visiting-sacramento/

· A Free Evening with Dr. Sue Johnson

 Date & Time: Monday, April 15, 2019 from 7:00 – 9:00 pm

 Location: The Veteran’s Memorial Theater: 203 E 14th Street, Davis, CA 95616

 Cost: Free and open to the public!

 More information: visit https://sacdeft.org/dr-sue-johnson-visiting-sacramento/



 

Advertising Policy for the Newsletter

All ads and reviews are not to exceed 1000 key strokes. Chapter members advertise at no cost. Non-members can advertise about employment opportunities at no cost. Non-members, non employment-related ads follow these rates:

 

$10 for 200 key strokes

$20 for 201-600 key strokes

$30 for 601-1000 key strokes

Full page and ½ page ads are not accepted.

 

All ads contain text only; no graphics will be included.

Ads submitted that are longer than 1000 characters will be returned for editing. It is best to type your ad in a Microsoft Word document to note how many characters, how big your ad is, and for your own record keeping. Please visit our site to find more information on how to use Microsoft word for editing. You can then copy and paste it on our online submission form located here (http://www.svccamft.org/Newsletter.html)

It is your responsibility to check for spelling and grammar errors.

 

Ads must be received by the 25th of the month in order to appear in the next newsletter. Ads are placed in the order that they are received.

 

You can submit and pay for your ad by:

 

Visiting our webpage: www.svccamft.org

Mailing in payment: P.O. Box 163385, Sacramento, CA 95816

Emailing the Newsletter Editor: info@svccamft.org

Thank you for contributing to the newsletter!

 
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