provided by Sand Therapy expert and practitioner
Dee Preston-Dillon, Ph.D.
through City of College Park, MD Advanced Clinical Training Institute
registration contact: phiggins@collegeparkmd.gov
Monthly Case Consults
For all clinicians using sand and symbols, including sand tray and Sandplay.
Refresh knowledge and skills -- Learn new ways to comprehend and respond to clients and sand scenes
Consults with Dr. Preston-Dillon at Brandywine Studio
Focus on the use of sand, sand scenes, and clinician experience with clients across life span and clinical disciplines.
Small group setting
Registration contact: phiggins@collegeparkmd.gov
Advanced Clinical Sand Therapy Certificate Program
Competency with sand therapy, Sandtray and Sandplay, is based in clinician insights into the process and meaning of symbols and the skills to respond to client sand scenes. This certificate program develops competencies for using sand in three core areas: 1) understanding theories for an integrated, holistic practice, 2) development of ethics, mindfulness, and integrity in the use of sand, and 3) advancement of skills training through a small group for individualized feedback during case consultations.
FALL SESSION BEGINS OCTOBER 4, 2017
For More Information, please see the tab above for
Advanced Clinical Sand Therapy Certificate Program
“If you ever find yourself in the wrong story, leave.”
Mo Willems, Goldilocks and the Three Dinosaurs
Thursday, August 24, 2017
Trauma Representation in Sand Therapy: Safety and Empowerment for Healing
Trauma Representation in Sand Therapy: Safety and Empowerment for Healing
provided by Sand Therapy expert and practitioner
Dee Preston-Dillon, Ph.D., and
The Ferentz Institute
Advanced Psychotherapy Training and Education
Tuesday, September 19
8:45 AM - 4 PM
Doubletree Hilton Hotel
$159; 6 CEUs
This workshop will explore protection for boundaries, clinician projections, therapist-client engagement, therapist interpretations, and implications for use with families and groups. During this training, theory, ethics, practice, and process are presented along with essential experiential work with symbols in sand. Participants will focus on safety and empowerment; essential competencies for use of sand and symbols with trauma clients.
For More Information and to Register, Go To TheFerentzInstitute.com.
provided by Sand Therapy expert and practitioner
Dee Preston-Dillon, Ph.D., and
The Ferentz Institute
Advanced Psychotherapy Training and Education
Tuesday, September 19
8:45 AM - 4 PM
Doubletree Hilton Hotel
$159; 6 CEUs
This workshop will explore protection for boundaries, clinician projections, therapist-client engagement, therapist interpretations, and implications for use with families and groups. During this training, theory, ethics, practice, and process are presented along with essential experiential work with symbols in sand. Participants will focus on safety and empowerment; essential competencies for use of sand and symbols with trauma clients.
For More Information and to Register, Go To TheFerentzInstitute.com.
Saturday, May 06, 2017
Summer Intensive Sand Therapy Training
Training in sand therapy includes: full immersion in use of sand with symbols, four theories, principles and best practices, ethics for using sand, the role of the therapist, boundaries for the clinician, principles that ground work in sand - - the therapist’s experience and work with clients. Each of these 6-hour sessions is rich in creativity and explorations of meaning, intensive, and set up to give therapists personal feedback, guidance with special client populations, and participant’s unique skill set/ clinic or school setting. We cover the basics as well as advanced material, and the relevance of culture. The primary theories are existential, humanistic (client-centered), Jungian, and Narrative/ social constructionist perspectives.
The Case Consults
focus participant client work, construction of client sand scenes, therapist
sand scenes reflecting their experience with clients, and the application of
theory and best practices for using sand and symbols. Always an emphasis on
ethical use of sand and symbols. I bring
my four decades of clinical work, my immersion in sand therapy for over 35
years, my doctoral research on sand for cultural implications, and 16 years
case consultations working with therapists from mental health disciplines.
The description of Level I is under the Advanced Clinical Sand Therapy tab (click here). I cover the
same material in all Level I sessions; tailored to meet the unique needs of
participants.
I provide an organic lunch for the 6-hour sessions.
Let me know if you need additional information. Regards, Dee
Saturday, April 22, 2017
Sand Therapy Case Consultations
Beginning May 8th!
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Please sign up for our newsletter and/or subscribe to our blog (links on the left) to keep up with our news.
Tuesday, April 18, 2017
Saturday, January 21, 2017
The Clinician's Journey Pt.2: A Series on Sand Therapy
A Series on Sand ... The Clinician's Journey
Each installment of this miniseries addresses some aspect of the series questions posed in part 1. This episode touches on potential problems, differences in theory and practice, and hence has relevance for ethics, competency, and training differences. The scope of these briefs is limited to allow exploration of essential features rather than being a comprehensive, in-depth exploration.
Series Questions to Consider
• What should we consider regarding ethical use of sand, principles and best practice guidance?
• What is the role of the clinician using sand and symbols with clients?
• What clinician preparation; professional-theoretical preferences, attitudes, and perceptual ability are essential for clinician use of sand?
• What are the key distinctions in theory and practice among sand therapies?
Sand therapy and its various theoretical approaches add a rich and beneficial component to a clinician’s ability to conceptualize, comprehend, and respond to his/ her clients. Competency with specific approaches to sand therapy will vary significantly. Because of this preparation, attitude, clinical insights, interventions, and training will vary in quite significant ways. Clinician ability with sand relies on theory, philosophical roots, a specific skill set, and a clearly defined role of the therapist. The enormous difference in clinician ability is one reason we must be careful with terminology, claims of efficacy, training, ethical parameters, and use.
Theory provides the framework that defines therapist perspective and interventions which can make a substantial difference in client experience. Work with sand and symbols often complements a therapist’s primary theoretical leaning which may include trauma work, family systems, mindfulness, positive psychology, therapeutic metaphors, analytic analysis, and various cognitive, humanistic, and post-modern approaches. However, a therapist schooled solely in pre-mindful cognitive-behavior interventions must be exceptionally careful to avoid defaulting to behavioral directives, questioning, attitude, and interventions since work with sand therapy, a projective technique, is complex requiring special boundaries and safety from therapist projections. Clinician curiosity, sense of power, and the drive toward instruction can easily cause the therapist to cross appropriate boundaries. On the other hand, many will handle this more gracefully, such as a trained art therapist, a practitioner of Milton Erickson’s therapeutic metaphors, clinicians who are well-practiced in mindfulness, and those skilled in Jungian process will have perhaps greater ease. This flows from a practiced intuitive resonance with symbol meanings, and well-honed witnessing and containment abilities when using sand.
Sand therapy is a wonderful play therapy approach that engages the imagination of clinician and client, and is fairly flexible regarding theoretical leaning. However, nomenclature is sometimes confusing. The terms Sandplay and sandtray are often used interchangeably and this is problematic if we wish to keep the integrity of the process. For example, Sandplay therapists take extensive training in Jungian conceptualization of symbols in sand, and they complete a series of personal sand scenes often taking a year or two. To use the term Sandplay implies that one has this specialized background. Sandtray, an American appropriation of Sandplay, most often relies on Rogerian Person-Centered or Adlerian perspectives to conceptualize the client’s work in sand. No training or personal process is required with sand but the clinician may be highly skilled in Person-Centered therapy.
One particular problem, more serious than nomenclature is authority. For example, too often clinics and mental health agencies encourage masters’ level interns to use sandtray with clients without prior training. There are several issues. An intern’s early perception and experience with one population will have no comparative basis for grasping important differences with other populations and problems; lack of a well-informed foundation gives ways to bias and assumptions about the purpose and process for using sand; open-ended permission from clinical authority (supervisors, licensing agencies, clinical directors) can leave the impression that use of sand without significant training is acceptable and efficacious. Permission once given to encourage intern exploration without authorial stipulations to obtain real grounding in the use of sand leaves open the door to use sand in future practice with no challenge to clinician suppositions and clinical habits. We’ve set a precedent for potential misuse.
Besides nomenclature and misjudgment of authority another gap to address is the practice of continuing education. Clinicians, pressed with an exhausting schedule, intense cases, and little self-care must organize their quite limited time to obtain required credits toward their license. The rich array of offerings in conferences and local trainings are a great support for continued growth. It all makes sense if we don’t look too closely at the implications. Continuing education courses, online and face-to-face, are supposed to support professional development within certain parameters. The ideal centers on therapists learning new interventions, ethics and best practices, obtain needed credits, and leave the experience rejuvenated. Presenters have an opportunity to offer emerging ideas, and professional associations bring in a financial base to continue. Everyone should be happy. But there is a gap in this process when it comes to sand therapy. A one-day conference presentation or workshop can be an excellent introduction. However, time is simply not available to present critical aspects of theory, ethics, complex practice skills, and a safe private in-depth experience of their own. When using sand therapy much more is involved, and essential to support clinician competency and his/her capacity to conceptualize, comprehend, and respond to clients and their sand scenes.
Sand and symbols opens the way for representations trauma, of client grief and loss, especially those experiences most difficult to share with others; the experience and emotions for which one is unable to speak. The client places images in the sand tray while the facilitator keeps a mostly silent, safe, mindful presence, a highly tuned resonance with the emerging images and the client. If the client chooses to share parts of his/her sand scene the facilitator must be a trusted witness, listen with care for layers of meaning, remain in the present, honing immediacy to resonate more fully -- in a stillness that attends to the tone and tenor of the sand scene and client story. The clinician is witness and guardian, acknowledging the deeply felt experience of the client – and ways they themselves are moved. The process is empowering, honoring grief and layers of loss as well as the client’s special strengths and unique story. We are the gatekeepers for the integrity and safety of this process. It is through our own immersion we gain insight, the ability to resonate with client and sand scene, strengthen our boundaries, and validate the healer within.
Dee Preston-Dillon, Ph.D.
The Center for Culture and Sandplay, Brandywine Studio
dee@thecreativeclinician.com
©Dee Preston-Dillon, Ph.D. All Rights Reserved.
To share article, please use a link directly to this site. Other sharing prohibited.
Each installment of this miniseries addresses some aspect of the series questions posed in part 1. This episode touches on potential problems, differences in theory and practice, and hence has relevance for ethics, competency, and training differences. The scope of these briefs is limited to allow exploration of essential features rather than being a comprehensive, in-depth exploration.
Series Questions to Consider
• What should we consider regarding ethical use of sand, principles and best practice guidance?
• What is the role of the clinician using sand and symbols with clients?
• What clinician preparation; professional-theoretical preferences, attitudes, and perceptual ability are essential for clinician use of sand?
• What are the key distinctions in theory and practice among sand therapies?
Sand therapy and its various theoretical approaches add a rich and beneficial component to a clinician’s ability to conceptualize, comprehend, and respond to his/ her clients. Competency with specific approaches to sand therapy will vary significantly. Because of this preparation, attitude, clinical insights, interventions, and training will vary in quite significant ways. Clinician ability with sand relies on theory, philosophical roots, a specific skill set, and a clearly defined role of the therapist. The enormous difference in clinician ability is one reason we must be careful with terminology, claims of efficacy, training, ethical parameters, and use.
Theory provides the framework that defines therapist perspective and interventions which can make a substantial difference in client experience. Work with sand and symbols often complements a therapist’s primary theoretical leaning which may include trauma work, family systems, mindfulness, positive psychology, therapeutic metaphors, analytic analysis, and various cognitive, humanistic, and post-modern approaches. However, a therapist schooled solely in pre-mindful cognitive-behavior interventions must be exceptionally careful to avoid defaulting to behavioral directives, questioning, attitude, and interventions since work with sand therapy, a projective technique, is complex requiring special boundaries and safety from therapist projections. Clinician curiosity, sense of power, and the drive toward instruction can easily cause the therapist to cross appropriate boundaries. On the other hand, many will handle this more gracefully, such as a trained art therapist, a practitioner of Milton Erickson’s therapeutic metaphors, clinicians who are well-practiced in mindfulness, and those skilled in Jungian process will have perhaps greater ease. This flows from a practiced intuitive resonance with symbol meanings, and well-honed witnessing and containment abilities when using sand.
Sand therapy is a wonderful play therapy approach that engages the imagination of clinician and client, and is fairly flexible regarding theoretical leaning. However, nomenclature is sometimes confusing. The terms Sandplay and sandtray are often used interchangeably and this is problematic if we wish to keep the integrity of the process. For example, Sandplay therapists take extensive training in Jungian conceptualization of symbols in sand, and they complete a series of personal sand scenes often taking a year or two. To use the term Sandplay implies that one has this specialized background. Sandtray, an American appropriation of Sandplay, most often relies on Rogerian Person-Centered or Adlerian perspectives to conceptualize the client’s work in sand. No training or personal process is required with sand but the clinician may be highly skilled in Person-Centered therapy.
One particular problem, more serious than nomenclature is authority. For example, too often clinics and mental health agencies encourage masters’ level interns to use sandtray with clients without prior training. There are several issues. An intern’s early perception and experience with one population will have no comparative basis for grasping important differences with other populations and problems; lack of a well-informed foundation gives ways to bias and assumptions about the purpose and process for using sand; open-ended permission from clinical authority (supervisors, licensing agencies, clinical directors) can leave the impression that use of sand without significant training is acceptable and efficacious. Permission once given to encourage intern exploration without authorial stipulations to obtain real grounding in the use of sand leaves open the door to use sand in future practice with no challenge to clinician suppositions and clinical habits. We’ve set a precedent for potential misuse.
Besides nomenclature and misjudgment of authority another gap to address is the practice of continuing education. Clinicians, pressed with an exhausting schedule, intense cases, and little self-care must organize their quite limited time to obtain required credits toward their license. The rich array of offerings in conferences and local trainings are a great support for continued growth. It all makes sense if we don’t look too closely at the implications. Continuing education courses, online and face-to-face, are supposed to support professional development within certain parameters. The ideal centers on therapists learning new interventions, ethics and best practices, obtain needed credits, and leave the experience rejuvenated. Presenters have an opportunity to offer emerging ideas, and professional associations bring in a financial base to continue. Everyone should be happy. But there is a gap in this process when it comes to sand therapy. A one-day conference presentation or workshop can be an excellent introduction. However, time is simply not available to present critical aspects of theory, ethics, complex practice skills, and a safe private in-depth experience of their own. When using sand therapy much more is involved, and essential to support clinician competency and his/her capacity to conceptualize, comprehend, and respond to clients and their sand scenes.
Sand and symbols opens the way for representations trauma, of client grief and loss, especially those experiences most difficult to share with others; the experience and emotions for which one is unable to speak. The client places images in the sand tray while the facilitator keeps a mostly silent, safe, mindful presence, a highly tuned resonance with the emerging images and the client. If the client chooses to share parts of his/her sand scene the facilitator must be a trusted witness, listen with care for layers of meaning, remain in the present, honing immediacy to resonate more fully -- in a stillness that attends to the tone and tenor of the sand scene and client story. The clinician is witness and guardian, acknowledging the deeply felt experience of the client – and ways they themselves are moved. The process is empowering, honoring grief and layers of loss as well as the client’s special strengths and unique story. We are the gatekeepers for the integrity and safety of this process. It is through our own immersion we gain insight, the ability to resonate with client and sand scene, strengthen our boundaries, and validate the healer within.
Dee Preston-Dillon, Ph.D.
The Center for Culture and Sandplay, Brandywine Studio
dee@thecreativeclinician.com
The Center for Culture and Sandplay Brandywine Studio
A Space Created for clinicians . . . .
Staff Retreats . . . . Small Cohort Group Training . . . . Self-Care Consultations . . . Private and On-Site Consultations . . . . Graduate Student Groups
©Dee Preston-Dillon, Ph.D. All Rights Reserved.
To share article, please use a link directly to this site. Other sharing prohibited.
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