Psychoanalysis and Buddhism
Six-Session Program (9 Contact Hours)
Instructor: Jeffrey B. Rubin, PhD
Dates: November 2, 9, 16, 23
December 7 and 14, 2015
Time: 10:30am – 12:00pm
Location: Upper West Side, NYC
We live in a world where increasing numbers of mental health professionals meditate, and in which meditators, including Buddhist teachers, avail themselves of psychotherapy. There is a burgeoning interest in the relationship between these two disciplines of transformation.
Both psychoanalysis and Buddhism are concerned with alleviating suffering and illuminating human identity. Each has a “treatment plan” as well as a diagnosis of what truly afflicts us. And both can help us lessen anguish through cultivating clarity and equanimity, while exploring what it means to be fully human. Each can aid us in more completely inhabiting our lives and experiencing greater intimacy and wisdom. The relationship between the Western psychotherapeutic and Eastern meditative traditions, several decades old, has been a wonderful gift to the world – illuminating the causes of human suffering, as well as offering paths to healing and transformation. Increasingly, practitioners of each are using – even blending – insights and practices from both, leading to mutual enrichment. For example, therapists who meditate consistently report that it cultivates greater self-awareness, compassion, and wisdom. The “marriage” of Western psychotherapeutic and Eastern contemplative disciplines promises a drug-free way of addressing painful and stubborn psychological conditions – from anxiety and depression to personality disorders and drug addictions.
In this program we will explore potentials and obstacles to integrating psychoanalytic and meditative perspectives on listening and working with emotional conflicts and trauma.
Jeffrey B. Rubin, PhD practices psychoanalysis and psychoanalytically-oriented psychotherapy and teaches meditation in New York City and Bedford Hills, New York. Considered one of the leading integrators of the Western psychoanalytic and Eastern meditative traditions, he is the author of six books and has presented on psychoanalysis, psychoanalysis and Buddhism, and meditation throughout the United States and abroad.
Learning Objectives:
At the conclusion of this program participants will be able to:
1. Define the differences in goals and methods between psychoanalysis and Buddhism.
2. Delineate how meditation can enrich psychoanalytic listening.
3. Articulate how psychoanalytic understandings of unconscious meaning and communication can enrich the meditative process.
Continuing Education Credits:
Psychologists: The Contemporary Freudian Society is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. The Contemporary Freudian Society maintains responsibility for this program and its content. CE credits are granted to participants with documented attendance of the entire program and completed evaluation form. It is the responsibility of the participants seeking CE credits to comply with these requirements. Upon completion of this program and evaluation form, participants will be granted 9 CE credits.
Social Workers: The Psychoanalytic Training Institute of the Contemporary Freudian Society SW CPE is recognized by the New York State Education Department’s State Board for Social Work as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed social workers #0087. CE credits are granted to participants with documented attendance of the entire program and completed online evaluation form. No partial credits will be offered. It is the responsibility of the participants seeking CE credits to comply with these requirements. Upon completion of this program and online evaluation form, participants will be granted 9 CE credits
Professional Counselors: The Boards of Professional Counselors in the District of Columbia and Virginia will accept continuing education credits for Counselors attending a program offered by an APA-authorized sponsor, provided they comply with the requirements stated above for psychologists. The Board of Professional Counselors in Maryland will accept CE credits granted by a program that is recognized by the Maryland Board of Examiners for Psychologists and Social Workers.
Program Fee:
$270 CFS Members and Associate Members
$320 Non-CFS Members
$ 100 Candidates and Students with Valid ID
No Refunds
For further information regarding this course, please contact Connie Stroboulis at ConnieS3@aol.com or 732-446-4867.
REGISTRATION FORM:
Name:
Address:
Email:
Program Fee: __________
Please mail this form with payment to “PTI of CFS”:
PTI-CFS-NY “Buddhism” – 11/2/15
11 Bunker Hill Drive
Manalapan, NJ 07726
If you would like to pay by credit card, please provide the information below via mail or email. There is a 3% service charge for credit cards.
❏Visa ❏MasterCard ❏Discover ❏American Express
Name on Card:
Card Number:
Expiration Date:
3/4 Digit Security Code: