There’s Danger in Black and White

Black and white cupcake

Black and white cupcake

Black and white, at least in therapy, is all about thinking and has nothing to do with race, color or culture. Black and white thinking is one of the major hurdles we address and challenge in therapy and it has an ability to slip into what we call rigid thinking in so many ways. A quick definition of black/white thinking is to liken it to either/or thinking. With this type of thinking, things are very rigidly and distinctly drawn as either/or, good/bad, on/off, with me/against me, right/wrong. Yet in reality, there are very few things that can be so cleanly defined or separated. Rather, the world is host to a dizzying array of gray, many subtleties and perceptions that are all valid, viable, yet for some may not be comfortable or familiar. So in therapy, we strive to first identify where the black/white has us stuck and then challenge our perceptions to find multiple plausible alternatives and enter into the gray, or for dichotomy, the both/and place.

Both/and? Why that’s crazy talk! (overheard in a therapist’s office…) Yet when we think about it a little more, we come to realize that both/and really frees us up to embrace all of the subtleties of any given situation, giving us permission then to access a greater diversity of emotions or tools to manage what we are faced with. Hmmm, not so crazy after all, now is it?

Examples of challenging black/white and embracing both/and could be: I am both angry and sad and confused and hurt. Previously someone may have only believed that they had to choose one, I am either angry or sad. In reality, we tend to be many things at once, and when faced with choosing anger over a more vulnerable emotion, like hurt, we tend to go for anger. But this is exactly where the stuck has us trapped. If we reach for anger every time we are faced with vulnerability, we never get to the core of the feeling so we aren’t able to resolve the feeling so we are stuck in being angry that our vulnerability isn’t being assuaged. See the pattern here? Rather, by embracing both/and we are able to give voice to all of the feelings we have, including the vulnerable ones, which gives us access to a wider variety of coping tools and words to help those we are seeking help from to meet our needs better. This is a great approach for kids, too. By allowing them to be many things at once they feel validated and temper tantrums tend to become less necessary.

Like the cupcake above, it is both chocolate and vanilla and it has a tinge of lemon, it is a dessert and a treat and not good for us. By linking as many things as we’d like in the and string, we come closer to the complete experience and therefore invite in more understanding for ourselves and those around us.

Try it and see for yourself. Both/and.

FacebookLinkedInEmailShare
Posted in Educational, Good Things, Parenting | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

A Thankful March

crocuses

crocuses

March has been shaping up as a banner month for MFT3 and we’d like to give a run-down of some of the highlights.

March started out with a message from the APA in which MFT3 has been chosen as a clinical field trial site for the upcoming DSM-5. This is a huge honor as MFTs have not been invited to this dance historically and with Katherine Allen, LMFT, in our little entity being among only 500 MFTs in the nation selected for this information gathering research process, well we feel pretty special about that. (here’s the FAQ)

Secondly came the great news that our associate, Erica Cannata, had sat for and successfully passed the MFT licensing exam. Horray Erica! So to her already lengthy list of credentials and accomplishments she has now added LMFT. I’m not sure we can fit all of the letters after her name on the new business cards, but just watch us make it happen!

Following this good news was the surprise honor when the AAMFT chose our blog as “blog of the week“. Being recognized on the national level for our blog is such an exciting thing. To know that this typing and sending out into the world each month is being recognized is very satisfying, someone is paying attention and appreciating the thoughts and insights that we share for those who may be contemplating therapy or looking to supplement their ongoing therapy with more information. (and now that we realize there is a larger audience, we’ll be writing more!)

ugh, snow!

actual view from actual car

Katherine Allen is also running for a seat on the CTAMFT Board of Directors and the voting is scheduled to end on March 30. Cross your fingers for her, and fellow CTAMFT members if you haven’t yet voted please do so!

And finally, on a much lighter note, it’s great to see the epic Northeast snows of winter disappear and the first signs of spring emerge. We welcome the tulip and the Robin. It’s a nice reminder that the one constant in life is change, whether we want it or not.

In closing, we hope that if you find yourself feeling stuck, there is help out there and we are happy to take your calls and answer your questions.

 

FacebookLinkedInEmailShare
Posted in Good Things, Gratitude, MFT3 News | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Guilty pleasure

Yes, I know it’s bad to laugh, but sometimes we do need to know that no matter how bad our day seems to us, it just might be worse for someone else. Guilty pleasure, enjoy.

Awkward Family Photos

Awkward Family Photos.com

FacebookLinkedInEmailShare
Posted in Good Things | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Our Second Anniversary

MFT3 has turned two today. Two years of being open, establishing in a new market and eventually, serving so many wonderful people.

We’d just like to pause as we enter year three and say thank you to all who have put their trust in us. We are grateful for your loyalty and honored to continue to serve you.

FacebookLinkedInEmailShare
Posted in Good Things, Gratitude, MFT3 News | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Therapy is actually hard work

A recent article in the New York Times has left me a bit steamed. In it, the author (Dr. Richard A. Friedman) states that he does not believe that insight can help someone in therapy feel better. To this point I would agree, insight alone is definitely not enough. But therapy isn’t about just understanding what the problem is, it is about challenging and embarking on answering this question; what are you willing to do to make it different? And this is where my job hits the pavement, sitting with and supporting clients through the hard work of change. Together we identify, interrupt and replace the old pattern/message/story and craft a new one.

There is an adage that comes from the world of addiction recovery but it’s one that I use with every client. It states that “Change will not happen until the pain of remaining the same is greater than the pain of change”.

In session, I hold out my hands and gesture that in one hand we have the pain of remaining the same and in the other hand we have the pain of change. Clients now have to choose a pain. Clients are typically in my office because the pain of remaining the same has reached a point of being greater than the unknown pain of change. So we discuss this and contract together to move into and through the pain of change.

There are few guarantees in therapy. What I can guarantee clients is pain, they just have to choose which one they are willing to embrace. If they choose the pain of remaining the same then they do not need my assistance, they are already familiar with what it is they do or tell themselves to manage their everyday. If they choose the pain of change, well then here we go. The second thing I can guarantee in therapy is work.

My style and approach may be different from the author’s but I would then challenge him to possibly embrace some pain of change and see how he can offer his patients a new experience.

The truly amazing thing about this profession is that the therapist is never done learning either.

FacebookLinkedInEmailShare
Posted in Educational, MFT3 News | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Weathering winter’s wonders

Well, CT is being hit with the 3rd major snowstorm in 3 weeks, seems like we are getting good at this! Officially, the offices of MFT3 will be closed tomorrow, 1/12/2011 for safety’s sake.

But what some may see as adversity can be seen as a wonderful opportunity through a different lens. Mother Nature has us in her clutches, we are truly powerless over the weather. Yes, one may have 6 or 7 apps to keep abreast of the comings and goings of the weather, but all in all we are still ineffective at doing anything about it. We can whine and grumble and complain or we can embrace the fascinating opportunities each change holds for us.

Plan for that day off, gather friends and ingredients and make forts and later have cookies and hot cocoa, gather together and just be with one another. Relish all of nature’s strength and beauty, even down to the smallest delicate details of a snowflake.

I have been reflecting on recent sad events in our world; the Arizona shootings and the suicide of a popular web personality, Bill Zeller. What do these two sad events have to do with winter weather? Well, powerlessness of course.

When we are confronted by what we believe to be unchangeable or overwhelming events or stimulus, sometimes the human being can retreat into a state of constant fear and panic. Interestingly, the best way to manage powerlessness is to embrace it. No, we don’t have power over the weather, or what others may do to us, but that doesn’t make us powerless over how we handle it. I wish Bill had found some good therapy, I wish the shooter had done the same. We do have power over what we tell ourselves these random events mean. We always have the power to find help, to invite in another person and “share our rocks”.

If you or anyone you know seems to be struggling with darkness and despair, please help them find help. Whether at MFT3 or elsewhere, the most important step is the first one, into a therapist’s office.

FacebookLinkedInEmailShare
Posted in Educational, MFT3 News | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

From all of us at MFT3, we wish you and yours a happy and healthy Christmas and New Year.

It is a time of reflection and hope, a time to slow down and appreciate all that the previous year has brought and all that is yet to come. So often in therapy this time of year brings regret or comparison, neither of which are helpful in managing the heightened emotions of the season. Best recommendation: slow down, take deep breaths and remember that even if this Christmas isn’t what you’d like, it’s only one day in one year and that next year holds the promise of being entirely different.

All the best to you and yours.

FacebookLinkedInEmailShare
Posted in Good Things, Gratitude, MFT3 News | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Giving Thanks

Turkey Trot

Here we are, on the threshold of the “Holiday Season” and at least in my office, panic, doubt, self-loathing and dread are already at the table.

The holidays conjure up so many emotions and feelings, not to mention the fact that smell is our most powerful memory and food is akin to love in so many cultures, it’s no wonder that Thanksgiving is the harbinger of dismay for so many.

I’d like to offer some relief if I may.



Image courtesy: Rockwell Gallery Collection

First: let’s all stop trying to re-create and hold ourselves to the iconic (and fake: it’s just a painting!) Norman Rockwell idyllic image of a family holiday gathering. More often than not, there are fights, drunkenness, the “special” dish drops or is eaten by the dog, we’re missing at least one major ingredient, and Aunt Somebody throws in a snide comment about our housecleaning skills, our hair, or our culinary prowess. I have been working diligently this past week in preparing couples to be each other’s backup, to “have each other’s backs” and however crass the analogy, we often use WWE tag-team wrestling as a model. Instead of pointing out one another’s faults, let’s support one another through what may be an emotionally tough and sometimes unpredictable event. Here’s a link to a post about using yourself up for all the wrong reasons.

The Velvet Rope

Second: better yet, let’s just not invite the offending parties to our homes. I know, how dare I say something so utterly insane? But really, if the definition of insanity is doing the same thing again and again and expecting a different outcome, then who is the insane one if Aunt So-And-So continues to be invited year after year? Embrace instead the mindset of what I have coined “the velvet rope” and set a clear, yet still somewhat inviting, boundary for the offending parties. The velvet rope is my analogy for the place we’d like to go but that place has some rules and guidelines about what kind of behavior (think moral, value) is required to ensure entry. It’s always toughest the first time when we say, essentially, “no thank you” to someone’s presence, but I assure you it gets easier as time goes on.

Third: let’s use the 80/20 principle in shifting the focus. Instead of focusing on the 20% that is awful or uncomfortable or disappointing, rather let’s focus on the 80% that we do like about our lives and the holiday. And let’s use our own lenses in this exercise, not the one that the media (e.g: Norman Rockwell et al) has set as the bar. We all have so much to be thankful for, there is a lot of good going on in our world, but it may not appear so if you go by what the “news” points out as important.

T-day 2009: the ladies prepping the bird

Here, I’ll go first. I am thankful for my loving husband and family, for a thriving practice where I feel blessed to be invited into so many miraculous lives every day. I am thankful for a dry, warm, safe home, enough of what I truly need, and the ability to keep doing what I love week after week. I am thankful for those whom I love who are far away, thankful that even in their struggles they are getting up each and every day and making a go of it again and again. I am thankful for finally buying a real turkey roaster pan and seeing how we will “christen” it this year, and I am thankful for the minor disasters of this year’s event that will become humorous stories in future years that will mark the thread of our lives together and the passing of time.

As my final gift to you this Thanksgiving, here’s a funny to make it through for those of you who need a good chuckle. Hint: it’s a letter from an OCD matriarch that makes Mommie Dearest look like June Cleaver.

I wish one and all a Happy Thanksgiving.

FacebookLinkedInEmailShare
Posted in Good Things, Gratitude, MFT3 News | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

A great tool for kids with difficulties

I learned about this iPod/iPad/iPhone app today through a networking group on LinkedIn and I am so impressed with this tool. It’s called Behavior Tracker Pro and Skill Tracker Pro and while it may require some discipline and a learning curve for the adults, it seems like an amazing gauge for kids who are struggling with the frustrations that come with developmental delays and autism presentations.

So often I hear parents who are frustrated and I can see how this tool could truly help everyone; the parents, the teachers and the kids. It removes some emotionality, it uses a clear programmed and scientific approach and has useful graphing to visually see progress and share information.

(I am not being paid for this posting, I am just sharing something that I saw and feel good about)

FacebookLinkedInEmailShare
Posted in Educational, Good Things, Parenting | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Waiting for the second marshmallow

A series of recent tidbits have been rattling about in my brain and I think I have finally found the thread that connects them all. So bear with me and see what you think.

It all started with a New York Times article about the change in 18-year olds on college campuses, how they are truly unprepared for the realities of independent thinking and decision making and that it is a crisis of parental coddling country-wide. This stance was further supported in a story in Psychology Today and how the phenomenon is one of addiction to the pattern of thought and behavior, rather than a chemical.

Which leads into the recent re-report of “The Marshmallow Test” on CBS news in which the longitudinal study of 4-year olds and the ability to wait for a greater reward (the second marshmallow) has been proven to generate more successful and self-determined adults. Hmmmmm.

Next, I heard an NPR radio interview about the observers of violent video games having higher traumatic responses to the experience than those playing it:

It can actually be more intense to watch the game than to play it

Play

Which finally crystalized into my hurting myself in fits of laughter (and possibly sadness) by the following video:

But after all is said and done, the common thread I have identified is one of a crisis of immediate gratification. It is the basis of all addiction and it unfortunately is not only ascribed to by 4-year olds desiring a marshmallow (or iPod or DS game) but by their parents too. All too often I hear parents complain about their children’s behavior issues yet in the same breath give in to a perceived societal norm, “well, how can we say no, all the other kids are doing/using it too”.

The crisis cannot be shrugged off or ignored any more. Kids are failing, employers and professors are saying no to them and they are returning home, defeated, to the very place where these mores were instilled. Since when was waiting for a long term reward associated with being bad? I remember a story about the things in life that are truly worthwhile – love, education, long-term friendship – all taking a lot of time and that bad things – the call in the night, the accident – were immediate and swift. Can we shift our society to remember that the word no is good? I have heard from education professionals that even grading has taken a hit for the worse, that rather than kids, and parents, waiting for quarterly grades to measure progress, they are considering bi-weekly grading. Where and when will it end?

Kids no longer know how to play without electronics, to make believe. I mean, “Tag” is fun! Look at sites like Streetplay.com, not just for nostalgia but for a blueprint of how to get back on track. Letting kids figure it out for themselves has great value. College freshmen are texting their parents about every little bump and bruise. Just because you can doesn’t necessarily mean you should.

How are you demonstrating the value in waiting for the second marshmallow?

FacebookLinkedInEmailShare
Posted in Educational, Inspiration, Parenting | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment