Our Practice
Sasha Ginsburg and Erin Lotz were born and raised in Los Angeles. They met working together in 2010 as therapists at Cedars Sinai Medical Center, teaching Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT) and using it to treat patients struggling with many different diagnoses. After sometime, they discovered that was a huge gap in the field of Mental Health and they decided to launch a clinic in West Los Angeles dedicated to teaching DBT individually and in group settings.
9 Things Psychologists Do When They Have Anxiety
By Sarah Klein Everyone gets a little anxious now and then, whether it’s over a work deadline, a new relationship, or a dwindling bank account. Even psychologists. And just like in regular folks, that anxiety can get out of control and become a bigger problem. “Mental-health professionals are not immune to ...
Read More Making Peace with Reality: The Practice of Radical Acceptance
By Ben Ringler, MFT, GoodTherapy.org Topic Expert Have you noticed a general unease, anxiety, or agitation as you move through your days, with sudden bursts of more extreme rage or anxiety when certain things don’t go your way? Do you notice a frequent feeling of depression and despair when you think about how your ...
Read More A Connection Practice for Feelings of Isolation
By Bob Stahl We often want to extinguish feelings of panic. But when we turn toward the physical sensations and thoughts panic evokes—acknowledging and letting them be—the rush of feeling consumed or out of control can begin to dissipate. As you continue to work with panic and learn from it, ...
Read More How Mindful Parenting Differs From Just Being Mindful
By Jill Suttie Mindfulness has been gaining traction as a way of improving individual well-being, from our health to our happiness and resilience. But according to critics, some mindfulness practitioners focus too much on self-improvement, to the point of becoming self-absorbed. Now, two new research studies paint a different picture, suggesting ...
Read More Why Are More American Teenagers Than Ever Suffering From Severe Anxiety?
ill. CreditSasha Rudensky for The New York Times Parents, therapists and schools are struggling to figure out whether helping anxious teenagers means protecting them or pushing them to face their fears. By BENOIT DENIZET-LEWIS The disintegration of Jake’s life took him by surprise. It happened early in his junior year of high ...
Read More The Science of Taming the Wandering Mind
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EtCjqFSyBdc&feature=emb_title By Amishi Jha Consider the following statement: Human beings only use 10 percent of their brain capacity. Well, as a neuroscientist I can tell you that, while Morgan Freeman delivered this line with the gravitas that makes him a great actor, this statement is entirely false. The truth is ...
Read More Quick Tricks To Stop Rumination
Are you stuck on an embarrassing comment you made the other day? Or maybe you’re having an imaginary conversation in your head with someone who has been upsetting you. Or, maybe you fumbled at work and you can’t stop thinking about it. Rumination is when we spend time obsessing over ...
Read More 8 Ways To Show Compassion In Everyday Life
Compassion is a non-judgmental emotion that we practice to ease pain and showgenuine love to one another. Here are 8 ways you can positively impact someone’s day using skills like empathy, patience and understanding. Be considerateBe equally considerate to friends, family and strangers. Listen fully without judgment, and give each person your full attention (no texting, no phone calls, no seeming to be bored!) – use direct eye contact and keep your ears open to their ...
Read More Resensitization: Coming Back to Life after Trauma
By Jeremy McAllister, MA, LPCI, Hakomi Experiential Psychotherapy Topic Expert Contributor Trauma dysregulates the body. It moves energy levels away from baseline to extremes of hyperarousal (“too much,” panic, overwhelm) and sometimes hypoarousal (“low,” lethargy, emptiness), not only alternating but sometimes getting stuck in either extreme. When we experience overwhelm in the body, ...
Read More Interpersonal Mindfulness with Teens
By Britt Rathbone Interpersonal exchanges can trigger strong emotions. Just as the skills we learn through personal mindfulness practice can help us cope with things that trigger us in our daily lives, those same skills, when applied to our relationships, can be very useful in navigating relationships and building respect ...
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