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.
3 Keys to Cultivating a Healthy, Balanced Nervous System
By Lisa Danylchuk, EdM, LMFT, E-RYT, Posttraumatic Stress/Trauma Topic Expert Contributor If you have studied trauma or yoga in the past decade, you’ve likely heard about the nervous system and its role in healing. Indeed, research and theory in trauma recovery has focused intensively on bringing balance to the nervous system and processing somatic impulses ...
Read More Two simple mindful meditation exercises for teachers
Take a mindful moment with these simple exercises for teachers. Photograph: Alamy Mindfulness can help teachers reduce stress and boost confidence. Clinical psychologist Erin Olivo shares her handy guide for getting started... In my 20-years of practice as a psychologist, I’ve found that mind-body strategies such as mindfulness meditation are ...
Read More Uncomfortable with Feeling Sadness? These Tips Might Help
By Margarita Tartakovsky, M.S. Associate Editor When we’re upset, many of us do everything but cope with our sadness. We work. We shop. We eat. We drink. We clean. We run errands. We organize. We simply don’t stop moving. And we convince ourselves that we’re too busy to feel sad. We just ...
Read More Embracing Your Inner Self
By Elizabeth Grasher, M.S., LPC, LMFT Embrace and make peace with life because in this very moment you are right where you were meant to be. We have the opportunity to grow and learn from the past and create an amazing future. Growing up, I never felt good enough. Not ...
Read More How Walking in Nature Changes the Brain
By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS A walk in the park may soothe the mind and, in the process, change the workings of our brains in ways that improve our mental health, according to an interesting new study of the physical effects on the brain of visiting nature. Most of us today live in cities ...
Read More Thoughts, Emotions, and the Body: Mindfulness for Anxiety
By Manuel A. Manotas, PsyD, Mindfulness-Based Approaches/Contemplative Approaches Topic Expert Contributor Anxiety can show itself in many forms. Some can be very painful and impairing, and we may need professional help to deal with them. But anxiety is something that everyone experiences at different times, and there’s something you can do about it. One ...
Read More 7 Secrets of Highly Happy Children
By Katie Hurley, Author, The Happy Kid Handbook When it comes to kids, people just don't think about happiness enough these days. They think about success. They think in comparisons. They think about milestones, graduations and shiny trophies. (The ones they earned, of course. Because, you know, not everyone deserves ...
Read More How to Write a Daily Journal in Two Minutes or Less
By Indra Cidambi, MD Keeping a journal is often recommended as a powerful tool to aide addicts on their road to recovery. Journals not only help patients reflect on and express their feelings, but also to examine ways to avoid relapse. However, many patients don’t stick with journaling because it can ...
Read More The Neuroscience Of Change—Or How To Reset Your Brain
Learn how to rewire your brain by changing how you think through a simple four-step approach. By Matthew May, Strategic Faciliation and Ideation The mysteries of the mind and brain are many and complex. Neuroscience, through the magic of technology is just beginning to unravel some of them. Given that ...
Read More Self-Validation: What Do You Do?
By Karyn Hall, PhD Validation is like relationship glue. Validating someone brings you closer. Validating yourself is like glue for fragmented parts of your identity. Validating yourself will help you accept and better understand yourself, which leads to a stronger identity and better skills at managing intense emotions. Being out ...
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