Who woulda thunk it??? China American Psychoanalytic Alliance

The big news from CAPA is that all 6 Two-year Psychotherapy Training Programs have begun. We are training 56 people (the Washington Psychoanalytic Institute is training 10 of them). We may be the largest psychoanalytic psychotherapy-training program in the world.
Who woulda thunk it???
And we now have a waiting list of more than15 people who want to begin the training in September 2009 as well as our usual waiting lists of people who want analyses and psychotherapies.
And we need YOU
To treat
To supervise
To teach
To join our committees
To visit China on tours we are planning
Please email me for more information and please pass this email along to your colleagues.

elise

BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT

With pleasure and pride CAPA announces the birth this week of sextuplets:

6 Two-year Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy Training Programs.

Delivered by: CAPA five, Washington Psychoanalytic Institute one.

Place of Birth: CHINA.

Statistics: Each program is 30 weeks long, conducted via Skype, and consists of
1 hour 15 minutes/week theory class
1 hour 15 minutes/week technique class
1 hour 15 minutes/week continuous case seminar
1 hour of individual supervision/week
3-7 days face-to-face training a year

Each class has 10 students. People are already on the waiting list for next year.

In addition, there are now 26 people in analysis, 11 in psychotherapy and another 29 (not part of the Two-year program) in supervision. There are waiting lists in all modalities

The proud parents of these endeavors are the almost 150 CAPA members.
Please join us. It takes an analytic horde to train a country.

Elise Snyder, Midwife

Psychoanalytic Olympics

CAPA (China American Psychoanalytic Alliance) is coming down to the wire. We have filled 52 of 55 teaching positions in our Two-Year Psychotherapy Training Programs in 5 Chinese venues. These three positions remain to be filled. Everyone who has done this work has enjoyed it immensely. Please contact me. Play a role in the Psychoanalytic Olympics,

1. Development 5 Sessions: Tuesday nights: 3/10,3/17,3/24,3/31,4/21
East Coast Time: 9:45-11:00 PM
Central Time: 8:45-10:00 PM
Mountain Time 7:45- 9:00 PM
West Coast Time 6:45-8:00 PM
Topics: Oedipal and Latency periods

2. Assessment 5 sessions: Tuesday nights: 2/3,2/10,2/17,2/24,3/3
East Coast Time: 8:15-9:30 PM
Central Time: 7:15-8:30 PM
Mountain Time 6:15-7:30 PM
West Coast Time 5:15-6:30 PM
Topics: Taking a history, Helping patient tell his story, Evaluating ego functions,
Selecting patients for exploratory psychotherapy, Supportive psychotherapy, Couples therapy, Marital therapy

3. Early Development 10 sessions: Tuesday nights: 12/9,12/16,1/6,1/13, 1/20,
2/3,2/10,2/17,2/24,3/3
East Coast Time: 10:10-11:25 PM
Central Time: 9:10-10:25 PM
Mountain Time 8:10-9:25 PM
West Coast Time 7:10-8:25 PM
Topics: Inborn capacities & environmental influences, The importance of mothers & fathers, The development of psychic structure, Early object relations, Infancy & early childhood, Toddlerhood

Please contact me elise.snyder@yale.edu

并颂夏安
wish you a tranquil summer day

Elise

Help Wanted in China: I.3 billion Chinese need YOU

Despite many many responses, we still need supervisors for some of the 42 Chinese mental health professionals taking one of our five Two Year Psychotherapy Training Programs.

Supervision is for 45 minutes a week at your convenience on Skype.

We also have a few teaching slots still open. Classes are 1 hour and 15 minutes long, Tuesday evenings, on Skype, from your home or office (even Starbucks). The students range from third year residents to professors with more publications than most of us dream of.

1. Basic Concepts 10 sessions
9/2,9/9,9/16,9/23,10/21,10/28,11/4,11/11,11/18,12/2

2. Early Development 10 sessions
12/9,12/16,1/6,1/13,1/20,2/3,2/10,2/17,2/24,3/3

3. Later Development 10 sessions
3/10,3/17,3/24,3/31,4/21,4/28,5/5,5/12,5/19,5/26

4. Beginning Treatment and Practical Arrangements 10 sessions
9/2,9/9,9/16,9/23,10/21,10/28,11/4,11/11,11/18,12/2

7. Continuous Case Seminar Fall Semester
9/2,9/9,9/16,9/23,10/21,10/28,11/4,11/11,11/18,12/2, 12/9,12/16,1/6,1/13,1/20

Everyone who has participated has found work in china both fascinating and rewarding. for more information, please contact me

Elise Snyder elise.snyder@yale.edu

1.3 Billion Chinese Can’t Be Wrong

Dear Colleagues

It begins to appear that all 1.3 billion Chinese want analysis, psychotherapy, psychotherapy supervision and psychotherapy training. There has been an upsurge of requests for all of these, probably as a result of
1. The earthquake
2. CAPA’s work for the earthquake survivors which received a lot of publicity in the Chinese media
3. The Chinese government’s campaign for more psychotherapy and psychotherapists.

For example, one medical school and one major teaching hospital just contacted us for psychotherapy training programs. This coming year there will be six Two Year Psychotherapy Training Programs (one run by the Washington Center for Psychoanalysis and five run by CAPA itself) in China. All of the teaching is done on Skype computer-to-computer protocols.

We need instructors to staff these five programs and analysts, therapists and supervisors for the Chinese mental health professionals who are flooding us with applications.

Please volunteer. It is an extraordinary experience. CAPA NEEDS YOU

Warm regards

Elise Snyder

Chengdu 6/17: A kaleidoscope of events

Chengdu: A kaleidoscope of events

I had dinner last night with a friend, a psychiatrist getting his PhD, (his doctoral dissertation is on PTSD with a series of 3000 prisoners). He is back here to work in the Disaster region. He had come in in the first days after the earthquake with the Army at the request of the government. He had asked a colleague of his to join us, (himself, myself and an American analyst disaster expert, Jeff Taxman). The friend arrived and we went through the lovely Chinese custom of handing each other our cards with both hands, receiving them with both hands and reading them carefully. I looked at his. “0ooh, you are Jie”—some one I had never met but had been emailing back and forth for a couple of years. He grinned at my shock.

He had especially wanted to see me. He was starting a two-year training program at a University in the Disaster region (In China today the number of universities grows every minute. My friends here, mainly academics, have to call to find out where universities are in their own city that they have never heard of, universities with 10-20,000 students.) His training program (masters degree) will teach all modalities of psychotherapy. There will be no tuition. The students will come from the Disaster area and will sign a contract to return to their villages and towns to work for 5 years. Out comes his laptop amid all of our cell phones, Blackberries, platters of food. He showed me his curriculum and suggested we collaborate. Could CAPA teach the psychodynamic courses? One of the courses is called something like the Importance of English for learning and doing psychotherapy. He will have them read one paper in English a week. Jie has PEPWEB.

A few days ago I visited the Department of Psychiatry at the Sichuan University Medical School. I have tried for a number of years to make contact with them. They have not been interested. This invitation was arranged by a member of our local CAPA group, a woman in treatment and supervision with CAPA, not a mental health professional. She works for a corporation that has given her time off to work in the Disaster region where she goes almost every day with a team from the medical school. She has been teaching them about what to do with children. She convinced the department of psychiatry to see me. On our way there she warned me not to talk about psychoanalysis, to talk only about the Mercy Corps Children’s workbook (Gil Kliman’s) and about the Disaster trainer that CAPA had brought to town. Both psychiatrists spoke excellent English. They listened to my spiel somewhat impatiently and said, yes yes we want both the child trainings and the general disaster training, but we hear that you have a two-year training course in psychotherapy. Tell us about it. I did—“Don’t you have a brochure? No but I will send you a description of the curriculum (Linn Campbell’s and others’ work). We definitely would like if you can arrange that for us here. We know nothing about psychotherapy we want it for our younger faculty and residents. We will need it even more now after the earthquake. The tuition is high ($3000/student/year) I told them that we are trying to raise scholarship money. They grinned and said Maybe something good will come from the Earthquake. You will be able to convince people to donate scholarship money for us poor suffering people in Sichuan. We laughed and shook hands. They were my kind of people.

This last weekend there were many two and three day Disaster training sessions, I had a part in arranging three of them. One was sponsored by the Young Communist League in cooperation with EAP, a private company where I had given lectures in previous years. The other was arranged by members of the local CAPA group. A Buddhist businessman friend of one of them had paid Jeff’s fare. There were two hundred Buddhists at that one, many of them monks in their robes, from Sichuan and other provinces. Is this your picture of Chins? An American, working with a private Chinese company, invited by the Young Communist League? A Buddhis businessman, paying the airfare of an American psychoanalyst and robed Buddhist monks receiving Disaster training from him?

The Chinese government has thrown a huge amount of manpower, supplies etc into the Disaster area. Every one is now sheltered, in tents and other places, those without cooking facilities are being fed, there is clean water, there are no epidemics, and schools are reopening in tents and other temporary buildings. Every American I have met here asks-“Why couldn’t we have done that in New Orleans?” The government has, for about 4-6 years been aware of the need for more mental health professionals and has opened schools of counseling, sent psychologists abroad to study best practices, etc. In their usual way they will now probably try to open many many schools of psychotherapy. The problem as my Chinese colleagues are aware is that they do not have the clinical teachers for these schools. I believe that the Sino-German group, which has been teaching psychoanalysis in China for 15-20 years, has funding from the Volkswagen Foundation. I think that the Norwegian and Swedish analysts also receive some support from foundations or their governments. I do not know for sure. CAPA runs on the $25/year dues of its members and on all the analysts and psychotherapists who are paid the munificent fee of $4-$8/session (many of them donate their fees to CAPA), who come to China paying their own way to teach supervise, and work with their patients in person. I want to thank them for having made all this possible

As I was walking down the street with a Chinese colleague, she ran into two friends on the street She introduced us and the women thanked me “Who were they?” “Counselors at XYZ University. They had heard about you.” (China is a very very small place—at least the mental health community). She said that they ran the local hotline. The Youth Hotline was started about 25 years ago by a journalist. It now has hundreds of volunteers all over China some of whom are mental health people, others they train. I lectured there three years ago and have become friendly with one of their volunteers an English professor in Beijing sShe is Chinese) with a counseling degree. She and her graduate students have worked on the translation of Gil Kliman’s children’s’ workbook. In a few days, she is going to Boston where her parents live—(I don’t know why they are there) and she and I plan to meet midway between Boston and New York for lunch.

When the women on the street thanked me, I said, as I have learned to do in China, “It is my pleasure.” And indeed it is. My work here, both with CAPA and with the Earthquake Relief, has been an extraordinary opportunity: to become a small part of a world I did not know, to meet wonderful people, to do something very very useful here in China and, I had hoped, for psychoanalysis and psychoanalysts in America. I will light a candle to Saint Rita. Ubaldo Leli, the Vice President of CAPA tells me she is the saint of lost causes.

6/12 Chengdu: A visit to a school in the earthquake area

6/12 Chengdu Update

Things are becoming less chaotic here. Coalitions are forming between government departments, Chinese corporations, and Chinese NGO’s. They want university professors to train volunteers and others. The university professors want us to train them. A variety of large groups are holding training session in the next three days, some of them three day sessions: the Chinese Red Cross, the Chinese Academy of Science (under the auspices of the Foundation for Sichuan Earthquake Psychological Assistance a large newly formed Chinese NGO), the Counseling Department of Sichuan University, a large Buddhist group and the Young Communist League of Sichuan (in association with EAP in China a group whose on-line training we arranged). I don’t know whether to describe my self as a spider in the center of a large net or as a match-maker. It has been a real pleasure for me to watch and help these various groups coalesce and begin working together.

I usually have breakfast and dinner with old or new friends and colleagues (People I know from Beijing and Shanghai are constantly arriving to work in the disaster zone or to train others.) or journalists. We talk about the earthquake and what each group or person can do for the other and what I and CAPA can do for them. We also talk about—what else?— politics. Here as many views are expressed as freely as they are in America. No secret police at the dinner table. No glancing uneasily over one’s shoulder when something critical of the government is said. (I am writing all these details in part because of the TAP article, which gives such a bizarre picture of China and in part to give those of you who have not been here some view of how it is.) Continue reading 6/12 Chengdu: A visit to a school in the earthquake area

6/10 UPDATE FROM CHENGDU

REPORT FROM CHENGDU Tuesday JUNE 10 2008

First let me apologize both for the length and the disorganization of this report.
This is a kind of nuts and bolts report of what I have been doing up until the 10th. Later today I will write a report about my visit to a devastated village with 110 dead children and also about some plans to reduce the chaos.

Each day when I sat down to write, something happened and I could not continue with it. I get up at about 5 and fall into bed at midnight. New volunteers continue to email me, the result of all of you sending on my postings. Thank you.

This report is somewhat chaotic, mirroring the situation in Sichuan. I left NY on Monday 6/2. I am staying at a Sichuan University guesthouse, a large three star hotel on the edge of campus. Chengdu’s climate is like that of Savannah, hot humid—but there is less pollution than on any of my previous visits. The city is bustling, all the classy high-end shops, boutiques (places like Prada etc) are filled with smiling shoppers and lots of beautiful clothing, etc. The only sign of the earthquake is the small tent cities that have been used to house local Chengdu people whose houses fell down. About 1000 people died in Chengdu, but there is no feel of a place only 40 miles from devastation. There has only been one mild set of tremors since I came. Sitting in my 4th floor room with two Chinese volunteers from a local medical school. I asked, What do we do? They said, Keep on talking– and so we did. Continue reading 6/10 UPDATE FROM CHENGDU

News from the China American Psychoanalytic Alliance

Here is an update on the activities of the Alliance. We are a completely volunteer organization. We have NO hired employees. We need help in a variety of capacities.

1. Psychoanalyses (20 in progress), Psychotherapies (4 in progress) Individual Supervisions (20 in progress). Now we will be screening all patients thoroughly. (Gardner Jacobs and Lana Fishkin will be doing these screenings.) VOLUNTEER FOR THE SCREENING COMMITTEE. We have people waiting for psychoanalysis, psychotherapy and individual supervision and we will have many more in September. VOLUNTEER TO ANALYZE, DO THERAPY AND SUPERVISE.

2. Two Year Psychotherapy Training Programs:
A. Massachusetts General Hospital, thanks to Scott Wilson, will be teaching one and possibly two programs in China starting this September. We will be providing much of the individual supervision and psychotherapies.
Continue reading News from the China American Psychoanalytic Alliance

Video-conferencing in China

Dear Colleagues,

For members interested in teaching international groups through video-conferencing, I would like to report an academic experience of a lifetime.

As part of the Chinese American Psychoanalytic Alliance educational program, last Friday I held a two-hour clinical conference from my home office in Port Republic, Maryland for 12 Chinese psychiatrists, psychologists, and social workers in Shanghai, China. This class will alternate bi-weekly with a similar group of 12 mental health professionals.

The students, most in their mid-thirties with several years experience as psychotherapists, were open minded, eager to learn, and highly excited about gaining knowledge of psychoanalysis and psychoanalytic psychotherapy. The experience is a refreshing change from the frustration of facing the intellectually muscle bound and emotionally unaware students we often encounter when teaching, for example, modern day American psychiatric residents. 

“How do ‘self-knowledge’ and ‘self-understanding’ (my terms for the benefits of psychoanalysis) help a patient?” one student asked early on, then responded thoughtfully to my “Knowledge is Power” illustrations. The group was particularly impressed with the psychoanalytic discussion that unfolded as the case presenter reported the patient’s ongoing complaint of mental helplessness when the she was faced with feelings she could not describe. The entire class, even the child therapists, responded with awe as they observed, “I would never have thought of that,” as I went into considerable detail to show how such an adult experience could have originated in the pre-verbal period of one’s life, a time when a child experiences feelings but has not yet gained the mental capacity even to conceptualize the feelings’ existence, much less identify and articulate them. Although many Chinese psychotherapists are widely read in psychoanalytic literature, clinically they remain largely innocent.

I was motivated to teach these conferences to express my gratitude to the team of 24 mental health therapists who wanted to translate my book, Now It All Makes Sense, into Mandarin. The book is composed primarily of explicit dialogue between analytic therapist and patient and is especially suited to their needs. We expect, however, that the classes will stimulate the student’s interest in enrolling in the two-year psychoanalytic psychotherapy programs that CAPA will begin in September 2008. This prospect appeared validated when, as the session ended, the presenter eagerly asked, “Can I present again next time?” to which the other members yelled, “No, I want to.”  

If you have questions , please contact me

William Stockton wjstockton@rcn.com