Wednesday, July 1, 2015

New Narrative Website

Hi folks,

We changed our main site over to Bay Area Narrative Therapy Resource (BANTR) at sfbantr.org.  We've got a narrative therapy podcast (BANTR Radio), and any current trainings or gatherings we're organizing.

Best wishes,
Will Sherwin, MFT

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

SF Bay Area Narrative Therapists

We're starting to collect the contact information for narrative therapists in the San Francisco Bay Area.  If you are interested in working with someone who uses a narrative approach, take a look at the therapists we have listed.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Narrative Salons

We had the one year anniversary of our monthly Narrative Salon this November!  We've got regulars who come by almost every month and we're always open to newcomers who want to check it out.

Posting the date and topic every month on this site turned out to be a bit ambitious for me.  So, if you're interested in more info about the salons send me an email:  mftsfbay@gmail.com

I do know that our next salon will be Monday Jan. 14th in the East Bay near Rockridge BART.

Happy Holidays!
Will
(Photo by Will Sherwin)

David Epston -- "What Makes a Good Question?" November 2012 Workshop in Berkeley.



(From left to right:  Joelle Ehre, Erika Zarko, David Epston, Will Sherwin, Zemeira Singer, and Elijah Nella.)  Good times!

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Upcoming Narrative Salons



I should really start posting our monthly narrative salons on this website.  Here's a bit of what we've done since December:

We had a couple meetings where we watched and discussed Michael White's video on trauma.


Jill Freedman has a creative approach to case consultation that we tried out and loved.

Will Sherwin and Julia Wallace presented on a few of the workshops we went to for the TC X conference in Vancouver:  Walter Bera's Narragram, narrative grief work, and Stephen Madigan's approach to crafting questions.

Photo by Will Sherwin
Our next two meetings are going to be:

July 10, 7-9pm - We will be watching and discussing video of Stephen Madigan doing narrative therapy.

August 7, 7-9pm - David Page will be showing us his library and presenting on some topic yet to be decided.

Send me an email if you'd like to join us!

Will Sherwin, MFT
mftsfbay@gmail.com

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

"Tree of Life" Narrative Salon January 9th

Narrative Therapy Salon

Come to a fun evening with other narrative practitioners and learn about an expressive arts narrative practice, the Tree of Life.

Tree of Life is a collaborative narrative therapy practice, originating in Southern Africa. It has been adapted by CIIS’s Expressive Arts Therapy Program (EXA) to incorporate multimodal arts connections (visual arts, drama, song, poetry etc.). Its original focus was on enabling traumatized children to identify individual and collective strengths to draw from in facing life’s overwhelming challenges. It has since been used internationally with peoples struggling with trauma, poverty and oppression.  We will detail the approach, offering illustrations from our work with children, families & workers serving homeless and disenfranchised children & families in The Tenderloin, San Francisco as well as offering participants a “taste” of the methodology in practice.

Bios:
Shoshana Simons PhD, RDT is Chair of CIIS’s Expressive Arts Therapy Program <http://www.ciis.edu/academics/faculty/Academics/Graduate_Programs/Expressive_Arts_Therapy.html> where she teaches Narrative Expressive Arts Therapy. Shoshana has a background in narrative and constructionist therapies and their application in work with individuals, couples, families, groups and organizations.  Shoshana’s current interests include the use of expressive arts modalities for promoting and maintaining mental health for therapists and human service workers, the role of expressive arts in leadership & social change, and arts-based research methods, especially Cooperative Inquiry methodology.

Danielle Burnette MA/MFTI, is a recent graduate of the Expressive Art Therapy program at the California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS).  She has eight years’ experience working in the nonprofit arena as the Program Director for Pivotal Point Youth Services and Founder and Executive Director of Creation Cocoon for Girls.  Danielle has used narrative expressive arts techniques in her individual and group work with marginalized communities at Bay Area Community Resources in her role of School-Based Counselor at DeAnza High School in Richmond, CA.  She additionally uses narrative expressive arts while working with at-risk youth at Pivotal Point in Oakland, CA.  Through training other trainers the techniques are currently being used at Santa Rita Jail in Alameda County with youth offenders re-entering the community. Danielle focuses her therapeutic work with adolescents, young adults, and young families from marginalized communities and typically uses visual art, poetry, and music as the primary art modalities. Currently Danielle holds an adjunct faculty at CIIS teaching Narrative Therapy.  She will begin work toward a PhD in Clinical Psychology in the Spring, with her research studies focused on work with African American individuals and families around healing the inter-generational trauma of slavery using Expressive Art Therapy. As a spoken word artist she was the 2003 Oakland Poetry Slam Champion, is author of a book titled, Cast Iron Life:  a collection of poems and recipes, and has performed throughout the nation most recently performing in a spoken word tribute to Dr. Cornel West.
RSVP to Will Sherwin at mftsfbay@gmail.com
We are going to cap this event at 25 participants so RSVP soon if you'd like to be assured of a spot.  CIIS has a strict policy about getting into the building in the evenings so we'll put your name on a list for entry.
  
Where: California Institute of Integral Studies, 1453 Mission Street, San Francisco, CA
When: Monday January 9th, 6-8:30pm
What to bring: yourself! If easy for you, bring a snack to share

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

David Epston comes to Berkeley

Co-founder of narrative therapy David Epston will be coming back to Berkeley December 2nd and 3rd to give a training entitled "Can a young person's mischief make trouble for a problem?"

Click here for more information.