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.
What Is Serenity
By Leslie Glass A Reach Out Recovery Exclusive By Leslie Glass 7 Ways Serenity Can Change Your Life What is serenity anyway? People talk about it, and those in recovery swear by the serenity prayer. Some people recite the Serenity prayer in 12-step meetings. Some say it to quietly to ...
Read More Emotional Rescue: Using Mindfulness to Reset Your Reactions
By Mark Bertin The idea of emotional awareness can seem almost mundane. Most of us recognize the benefits of being conscious of our emotions on some level. Yet, being skillful with our emotions isn’t just about recognizing when we feel happy, angry, or sad. Awareness means noticing all of our emotions, and ...
Read More 7 Health Benefits of Vibroacoustic (Sound & Vibration) Therapy
By Deb Wellmes, MA, SLP, ND Guest Writer for Wake Up World Like waves of vibration that are eternally connected and influenced by one another, our understanding and appreciation of vibro-tactile healing has ebbed and flowed. Ancient traditions recognized vibration and sound as an important method for returning to balance and healing. ...
Read More The Benefits of Not Jumping to Conclusions
By Hillary Jacobs Hendel, LCSW Human brains simplify information under stress. Largely out of awareness, we have a tendency to categorize experiences into extremes of good and bad, black and white, right or wrong. Most of life, however, happens in the gray areas. We lose the subtleties that are always ...
Read More Interpersonal Mindfulness with Teens
Applying Mindfulness Skills to Engage Authentically with Adolescents 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 ...
Read More How I Live My Life by Conscious Choice
By Dr. Larry Berkelhammer To help you understand how living by choice works in practice, here are a few examples of how I do it myself. When I sit down at my desk, I choose to breathe diaphragmatically and slowly. Normally, without consciously making that mindful, intentional choice, my respiration ...
Read More How Everyday Life Demands Our Courage
Contributed by Mary Bradley, LSCSW, LCSW For some, just getting out of bed in the morning takes courage. Depression, for example, can be debilitating and make it difficult to get out of your head and into your daily life. For many others, most days seem easy. Many optimistic people appear to sail through their ...
Read More 7 Powerful Reasons You Should Stop Trying to Be ‘Normal’
By GoodTherapy.org Staff People generally want to be accepted. For many, this means fitting in with the crowd. In order to do that, you may feel pressure to think and behave a certain way. The trouble is that when you try so hard to be what someone else considers normal, ...
Read More Increase Your Self-Love: 8 Ways to Be Good to Yourself
By Pinky Jangra “You yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe, deserve your love & affection.” ~Buddha Someone asked me a couple of years ago, out of ten how much to did I love myself? I said four. I had to give my immediate, intuitive answer, as this was ...
Read More The Importance of Validation in Dialectical Behavior Therapy
By Suzette Bray, Topic Expert Contributor Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) combines cognitive and behavioral therapies with Eastern mindfulness practices. Developed by psychologist Marsha M. Linehan, DBT is useful in treating individuals with a wide variety of issues, including depression, anxiety, bipolar, self-injury, eating disorders, substance abuse, and relationship conflict. The goal is for clients to learn to manage their ...
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