Upcoming Events!
Countertransference in clinical work
In our second June meeting, we’ll move from noticing to using: how we metabolize countertransference ethically, how we bring it to supervision/consultation, and how we decide when (and how) to name relational dynamics in the room. We’ll also focus on repair—because even with the best intentions, misattunements happen. Repair is often where the work becomes most healing (and where we need the most skill).
Bring a case, a stuck point, or a moment you keep replaying—something that felt confusing, charged, avoidant, over-responsible, or ethically complex. That’s usually the doorway.
To prepare (required):
Watch: Dr. Hanna Levenson webinar
Read: DBT skills + countertransference article
Optional materials (if you want extra depth):
APA Monitor article; palliative care piece; “what the experts think”; “developing field awareness”; and any prior refresher resources you’ve used in past years.
Come with one question:
What feels challenging, confusing, or ethically complex about working with these dynamics?
What support (skill, boundary, consultation, personal insight) would strengthen your confidence in navigating and repairing relational ruptures?
Ethical Dilemmas in social work and counseling
Ethical dilemmas rarely arrive as a clean “right vs. wrong.” More often, they show up as competing responsibilities, incomplete information, or a situation where any option carries some risk. This month, we’re going to practice something steadier than gut instinct: using structured ethical decision-making models to slow the moment down, clarify what’s actually being asked of you, and choose a path you can stand behind clinically, ethically, and in your documentation.
In our first July meeting, we’ll orient to three decision-making models and begin applying them to case vignettes—with attention to the differences (and overlaps) between counseling and social work ethics frameworks.
Navigating Ethical Dilemmas
This second July meeting is about practice and repair. We’ll work through additional vignettes using the models, and we’ll make room for the reality that ethical work is often relational: it involves boundaries, communication, consultation, and sometimes a “next best” choice rather than a perfect one.
Bring a situation that’s been living in your head—something unresolved, something gray, something you’re still second-guessing. We’ll use the models to problem-solve in a way that supports both client care and clinician integrity.
Transference and Countertransference
This month we’re turning toward the relational field: the feelings, assumptions, somatic cues, and micro-reactions that arise between client and clinician. This work calls us to prioritize awareness, monitor our internal responses, and hold countertransference not as a “mistake,” but as information—clinical data with the potential to deepen attunement, clarify what’s happening, and support repair.
In our first June meeting, we’ll focus on recognition: learning your early warning signs, tracking patterns, and building enough inner steadiness to stay present when something activates.
To prepare (required):
Watch: Deliberate Practice for Countertransference Reactions — webinar with Dr. Hanna Levenson
Read: Managing Countertransference with DBT Skills: Mindfulness and Emotion Regulation
Come with one reflection:
Which emotions, somatic responses, or reactions tend to signal that transference/countertransference may be occurring for you?
What helps you remain grounded and regulated when you notice a strong internal response?
Boundaries in clinical work
In our second May meeting, we’ll shift from definition to practice: how boundaries are established, maintained, and repaired when they’re tested (by clients, systems, and sometimes our own countertransference). We’ll focus on language you can actually use—consent, transparency, and ongoing check-ins—so boundaries feel less like a wall and more like a steady, compassionate structure.
Bring a moment you’ve been thinking about: a boundary that got blurry, a place you froze, a time you over-explained, a client who pushed, a system that made it hard to do what felt right. This is the work.
To prepare:
The Benefits of Better Boundaries in Clinical Practice (APA)
“How to set boundaries” with therapist Nedra Glover Tawwab
Optional background: Psychodynamic Perspective on Therapeutic Boundaries; Tabula Rasa (Blank Slate)
Come with one question:
How do cultural, social, or systemic factors shape how boundaries are perceived or experienced?
How do you respond when a boundary is tested, blurred, or broken—by a client, a system, or your own countertransference?
Group EMDR Consultation
You don’t have to do EMDR work in a vacuum. This monthly virtual consultation group offers a steady space to bring questions, stuck points, and real cases for thoughtful support. Together, we’ll refine your use of EMDR, strengthen resourcing and target sequencing, and build clarity in complex presentations—while also creating the kind of professional community that helps you stay grounded in this work.
Boundaries as clinical counselors and social workers
Come with one reflection:
What does “boundary” mean to you personally—as a therapist and as a person?
Where do you notice boundary confusion show up (in session, between sessions, or in your own life)?
Psychedelic Assisted Psychotherapy
n April, we’ll be joined by a guest speaker connected to Synthesis Institute for a conversation about psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy and the emerging landscape of training, ethics, and clinical application. Synthesis describes its training as interdisciplinary and trauma-informed, with emphasis on preparation, support/facilitation, and integration, and it offers a Colorado-specific licensure pathway that includes didactic education plus supervised components.
This is a topic that tends to bring up both hope and caution—and both belong here. Our goal is discernment: clinical responsibility, cultural humility, and thoughtful engagement with what’s changing in the field.
Group EMDR Consultation
A collaborative monthly consultation space for EMDR clinicians to deepen skills, consult on cases, and build confidence with EMDR treatment planning and troubleshooting—while staying connected to a supportive professional community.
Social Media & Mental Health
For our second March meeting, we’ll get more practical and clinically specific: how we assess social media’s impact, how we support clients in building boundaries that are values-based (not fear-based), and how we stay ethically grounded in a world built to pull us out of presence. We’ll also make room for the bigger layers—algorithms, online identity, parasocial dynamics, and the ways “always online” can echo collective trauma and disconnection.
Bring a client pattern you’re seeing, or your own—either one counts.
Group EMDR Consutlation
This monthly virtual EMDR consultation group focuses on sharpening clinical decision-making and increasing comfort with EMDR across phases of treatment. Consultations may include case conceptualization, readiness and resourcing, target selection, blocking beliefs, interweaves, and addressing common challenges in reprocessing. The group format offers both expert guidance and peer learning in a structured, supportive setting.
Social Media & Mental Health
Social media is one of those forces that’s so constant we can forget it’s shaping us. It impacts attention, identity, nervous systems, relationships, and meaning-making—and our clients are trying to heal inside that reality. In our first March meeting, we’ll explore social media as both a mirror and a magnifier: reflecting what’s already there while intensifying anxiety, comparison, performance, and validation-seeking.
If you’re willing, let’s hold this with compassion—because none of us are immune.
Bring one question to group:
How does social media influence your sense of attention, self, or connection?
What patterns of comparison, performance, or validation do you notice (in you or your clients)?
How do you talk about social media use without shaming the coping?
Power, Privilege, and Oppression in Mental Health
For our second February meeting, we’ll move from insight to practice. It’s one thing to understand power and oppression conceptually; it’s another to translate that understanding into clinical skill—especially in moments of rupture, mismatch, or when a client’s reality challenges our frameworks. This session is about building capacity: humility without collapse, accountability without defensiveness, and a steadier ability to name what’s happening in the room.
Group EMDR Consultation
You don’t have to do EMDR work in a vacuum. This monthly virtual consultation group offers a steady space to bring questions, stuck points, and real cases for thoughtful support. Together, we’ll refine your use of EMDR, strengthen resourcing and target sequencing, and build clarity in complex presentations—while also creating the kind of professional community that helps you stay grounded in this work.
Power Privilege and Oppression in Mental Health
Therapy is shaped by systems—historical, political, cultural—that influence who holds power, whose experiences are believed, and whose distress gets labeled as “pathology.” For our first February meeting, we’ll focus on self-location: noticing where we carry privilege, where we carry harm, and how that shows up (quietly or loudly) in our clinical instincts, our language, and our treatment planning.
Group Consultation: Jane Reagan
For our January session (Monday 12, 2026), we are honored to host Jane Reagan, who works with families and youth experiencing eating disorders.
EMDR Group Consultation
Join a supportive, clinician-centered EMDR consultation group designed to strengthen your clinical skills, deepen case conceptualization, and build confidence with EMDR treatment planning. Each monthly virtual meeting includes case consultation, troubleshooting, and practical strategies you can apply immediately—whether you’re working toward EMDRIA Certification or simply wanting high-quality consultation and community. This group is collaborative, paced, and grounded in ethical, trauma-informed practice.
EMDR Group Consultation
This ongoing monthly EMDR consultation group is designed for therapists who are trained in EMDR and are seeking a supportive, collaborative space to deepen their practice.
Trauma-Focused Clinical Consultation: Attachment & Relationally Attuned Work
This monthly consultation group is for therapists who want to deepen their clinical lens through the framework of attachment theory, moving beyond the basics and into nuanced, relationally attuned work. Together, we’ll explore how early attachment patterns shape adult relational dynamics and how to bring this understanding into the therapy room with clarity, compassion, and cultural awareness.
EMDR Group Consultation
This ongoing monthly EMDR consultation group is designed for therapists who are trained in EMDR and are seeking a supportive, collaborative space to deepen their practice.
Trauma-Focused Clinical Consultation: Attachment & Relationally Attuned Work
This monthly consultation group is for therapists who want to deepen their clinical lens through the framework of attachment theory, moving beyond the basics and into nuanced, relationally attuned work. Together, we’ll explore how early attachment patterns shape adult relational dynamics and how to bring this understanding into the therapy room with clarity, compassion, and cultural awareness.
Trauma-Focused Clinical Consultation: LGBTQ+ Identities and Mental Health
In honor of Pride Month, our June 2025 professional development session will focus on supporting queer mental health and exploring the intersectionality of queer identity, clinical competency, and the realities of politicized mental health care. This session is open to therapists, social workers, and counselors at all stages of licensure who want to deepen their understanding and practice through an inclusive, justice-informed lens.
We’ll examine how systems of power, oppression, and liberation shape the mental health experiences of LGBTQIA+ clients—and what it truly means to offer queer-affirming, intersectional care. As always, we’ll engage in collaborative discussion, small group work, and reflection to strengthen both awareness and clinical skill.
EMDR Group Consultation
This ongoing monthly EMDR consultation group is designed for therapists who are trained in EMDR and are seeking a supportive, collaborative space to deepen their practice.
Trauma-Focused Clinical Consultation: LGBTQ+ Identities and Mental Health
In honor of Pride Month, our June 2025 professional development session will focus on supporting queer mental health and exploring the intersectionality of queer identity, clinical competency, and the realities of politicized mental health care. This session is open to therapists, social workers, and counselors at all stages of licensure who want to deepen their understanding and practice through an inclusive, justice-informed lens.
We’ll examine how systems of power, oppression, and liberation shape the mental health experiences of LGBTQIA+ clients—and what it truly means to offer queer-affirming, intersectional care. As always, we’ll engage in collaborative discussion, small group work, and reflection to strengthen both awareness and clinical skill.
Trauma-Focused Clinical Consultation: Treatment Planning
This is a great chance to refine your clinical documentation, reconnect with the purpose behind your paperwork, and feel more confident in guiding your clients' therapeutic journeys.
Trauma-Focused Clinical Consultation: Goal Consensus
Goal consensus typically refers to the therapist-client agreement on goals or expectations to be addressed during treatment for Colorado therapists, social workers, counselors
Trauma-Focused Clinical Consultation: Goal Consensus
Goal consensus typically refers to the therapist-client agreement on goals or expectations to be addressed during treatment for Colorado therapists, social workers, counselors
Group Clinical Consultation: Dynamic and Responsive Intake Practices
Join us for an engaging and informative Group Clinical Consultation session exploring dynamic intake practices tailored for counselors and social workers. This session aims to enhance your intake processes, ensuring they are thorough, client-centered, and adaptable to various client needs.
EMDR Group Consultation
Join our monthly EMDR Group Consultation for case reviews & skill enhancement. For trained clinicians nationwide. First Thursdays, 11 AM MST via Zoom.
Group Clinical Consultation: Dynamic and Responsive Intake Practices
Join us for an engaging and informative Group Clinical Consultation session exploring dynamic intake practices tailored for counselors and social workers. This session aims to enhance your intake processes, ensuring they are thorough, client-centered, and adaptable to various client needs.
Webinar: Religious Trauma with Julia Krump, LCSW
This workshop will focus on what constitutes religious and spiritual abuse, the trauma that often remains, and help clients find healing and a sense of freedom.
Participants will gain:
• Understanding the complexities of the experience of religious trauma and client impact
• Understanding the clinical treatment of religious trauma
• Considerations for social workers who encounter religious trauma in clients
EMDR Group Consultation
Join our monthly EMDR Group Consultation for case reviews & skill enhancement. For trained clinicians nationwide. First Thursdays, 11 AM MST via Zoom.
Group Clinical Consultation: Trauma Systems Therapy
Join our specialized Group Clinical Consultation sessions focused on better understanding Trauma Systems Therapy in social work and counseling.

