Los Angeles Chapter — California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists
Voices — November 2023
Christina “Tina” Cacho Sakai, LMFTPresident, LA-CAMFT
Love Story
It is such a privilege to spotlight LA-CAMFT Leaders - Sponsorship Chair, Darlene Basch LCSW and Past President and Village Elder, Jonathan Flier LMFT! Not only are they prominent leaders of LA-CAMFT, they recently celebrated 7 years of marriage and have a love story intertwined with LA-CAMFT. They first met at a LA-CAMFT event, got to know each other by volunteering in leadership and both share a love for LA-CAMFT.
Darlene Basch, LCSW attended her first LA-CAMFT event in 2013 and met the President at the time, Jonathan Flier, who unbeknownst to her would be her future husband. Darlene regularly attended the Psychology and Spirituality Group and at the 2013 Holiday Party was asked to run the LA-CAMFT Networking Events. Darlene officially joined the LA-CAMFT Board of Directors in 2014 as Networking Chair and held that role for 6 years and describes it being one of her highlights to being a LA-CAMFT Leader. Alongside getting to know, spending time with, and marrying her husband, Jonathan Flier. In 2020, Darlene became the Membership Chair and later the Sponsorship Chair. Darlene has dedicated 9 years as a LA-CAMFT Leader and even though will be stepping down from the Board of Directors the end of this year has offered to be in a supportive role as needed. LA-CAMFT thanks Darlene for her commitment to LA-CAMFT all these years.
Darlene’s “why” to being a LA-CAMFT Leader:
Darlene’s “highlights” to being a LA-CAMFT Leader:
Darlene’s “hopes and dreams” for LA-CAMFT:
Jonathan Flier, LMFT attended his first LA-CAMFT meeting in 2006, became the Newsletter Editor and was struck by the lack of community feel. Looking for other options, he became a board member of Santa Monica-West LA AAMFT where he met Lynne Azpeitia and Karen Wilson, the SM-WLA Founders, who would later assist in revamping LA-CAMFT. In 2008, LA-CAMFT was on a decline due to not having a leader and it’s at this time Jonathan stepped in to be President on the condition that he would not do it alone. Jonathan sent out a notice to all therapists in the Los Angeles area who were CAMFT Members advertising that the Los Angeles Chapter is being reborn and invited them to a meeting to share their ideas of what they would like it to look like. Thirty people showed up, shared their ideas and they broke down seven things they needed to make happen. From there Jonathan and other leaders re-created a board of directors where they held meetings at people’s houses and Factor’s Deli. They found a location at the Beverly Hills Country Club where they held regular Networking Events that included breakfast, presentations, literature table and networking opportunities. Jonathan was LA-CAMFT President for 5 years and continues to be a prominent leader today.
Jonathan’s “why” to being a LA-CAMFT Leader:
Jonathan’s “highlights” to being a LA-CAMFT Leader:
Jonathan’s “hopes and dreams” for LA-CAMFT:
Special thank you to Darlene and Jonathan for sharing your love for LA-CAMFT with the broader LA-CAMFT Community! If you would like to get in contact with either of them you could find them here: https://lacamft.org/Board-of-Directors-2023. If you are interested in leadership opportunities, please email me directly at President@lacamft.org
Hope to connect soon!
Christina “Tina” Cacho Sakai, LMFT
Christina "Tina" Cacho Sakai, LMFT (she/her) is a Latinx (Mexican-American) psychotherapist in private practice and a former community based therapist, clinical supervisor, associate director, and adjunct faculty at CSULA. She provides psychotherapy in a culturally responsive, LGBTQIA+ affirming and social justice-oriented atmosphere. Treatment specializations include healing from trauma, processing grief and loss, exploring creativity, and honoring full intersectional identities. She is currently in the BIPOC Somatic Experiencing Training Certificate Program.
Friday, December 1, 2023 11:00 am-1:00 pm
2 CE Credits
Online Via Zoom
Neurodiversity-Affirming Assessment and Counseling for Kids, Teens, and Adults with ADHD
Dr. Laurie Ferguson, PsyD
Your adult clients may ask if you think they might have ADHD, or a parent may wonder if their child or teen might be an ADHD'er. There has been a massive shift in our understanding of ADHD across the lifespan. Previous approaches focused on "fixing" and "curing," and we found this disease model simply doesn't work, leaving clients and families (and therapists) frustrated. In this presentation, we are shifting to using a client's strengths to develop supports so that clients with ADHD can reach their potential in school, college, work, home, and relationships.
After you register you will be emailed a Zoom link the Thursday before the presentation.
More information and register today by clicking the Register Here button below.
Register Here
Lynne Azpeitia, LMFTVoices Editor
Getting Paid: Are You Spending Enough Time Doing Things To Build Your Practice & Add To Your Income?
When was the last time you measured the total number of hours you spent on practice building—income, referral source, client generation, and income generating projects?
Are you spending enough time each week doing things that build your practice, add to your income, and ensure that your practice is sustainable?
I’m sure it won’t surprise you to find out that when the majority of clinicians start their private practice at first they spend A LOT of time, energy, and attention on client, income, and referral source generation.
However, once things are in place, these very same counselors seem to end up spending the bulk of their time doing all those things that keep the practice running—seeing clients, making intake calls, answering the phone, responding to emails and texts, making appointments, writing client notes, doing the books, filing taxes, etc.—and then find that they are only spending a small amount of time on practice building and new income generation—networking, marketing, speaking, being active in their professional association, and more.
While doing these everyday things does keep the practice going, those are hours spent on practice functions not on business and practice building activities. Practice and business building activities and hours are those spent gaining more business opportunities, clients, referral sources, and income.
To be profitable and sustainable, a successful private practice needs both business and practice building hours as well as hours that function to keep the practice going.
As you can see, you’ll won’t ever have the practice you desire if you don’t spend enough time building the next iteration of it.
Think it might be a good time for you to look at your schedule and adjust it in relation to your practice needs and goals?
To do that, ask yourself these two questions:
I encourage you to look at your practice and business building hours and compare them to the hours you spend running and maintaining your practice—the practice function hours–and see if it makes sense to you to make an adjustment.
Lynne Azpeitia, LMFT, AAMFT Approved Supervisor, is in private practice in Santa Monica where she works with Couples and Gifted, Talented, and Creative Adults across the lifespan. Lynne’s been doing business and clinical coaching with mental health professionals for more than 15 years, helping professionals develop even more successful careers and practices. To learn more about her in-person and online services, workshops or monthly no-cost Online Networking & Practice Development Lunch visit www.Gifted-Adults.com or www.LAPracticeDevelopment.com.
LA-CAMFT Therapists of Color Grant Award: Grant Award Registration Open
Registration for the next Therapist of Color Grant Awards is now open and will close on November 4, 2023. The drawing will take place on November 5, 2023.
It is limited to members of LA-CAMFT and limited to once per calendar year.
Description of Grant Stipend
Every 4 months (3x per year), a grant award will be offered to two applicants who meet the following criteria: (1) must be a current LA-CAMFT member, (2) identify as a Therapist of Color, and (3) must be either an Associate, Trainee, or Student still in graduate school.
Grant winners will receive
The $500 award can be used at the recipient’s discretion based on their own individual needs (whether it be for BBS fees, testing materials, memberships, rent, groceries, etc.). Confirmation of the purpose that the money is used will not be required.
Application and Selection Process
Interested members can complete the application on the LA-CAMFT website. The selection process entails using a Randomized Generator of the applicants who met the full qualifying criteria and completed the application online to take out human bias and decrease activation of one's trauma history. The drawing will be recorded via Zoom and posted onto social media along with an announcement naming the grant winners, whom will also be contacted via email directly.
Registration for the next award cycle opened on September 5, 2023, and will close on November 4, 2023. The drawing will take place on November 5, 2023.
Best regards,
The LA-CAMFT TOC Grant Committee
Black Therapist Support Group
First Saturday of this Month
Next Meeting: Saturday, November 4, 2023 12:00 pm-1:30 pm (PT)
A safe place for healing, connection, support and building community. In this group, licensed clinicians, associates and students can come together and process experiences of racism (systemic, social, and internalized), discrimination, implicit bias, and micro-aggressions, along with additional experiences that therapists of African descent encounter in the field of mental health. As the late great Maya Angelou once said, “As soon as healing takes place, go out and heal someone else.” May this space be the support needed to facilitate that journey.
Open to LA-CAMFT Members and Non-Members
First Saturday of Each Month
Location: Zoom Meeting
For more information contact Akiah Robinson Selwa, LMFT at aselwa@sunrisetherapycenter.org.
Event Details:
For:Licensed Therapists, Associates, and Students
Event Details: Saturday, November 4, 2023 12:00 pm-1:30 pm (PT)Time of Check-In: 11:50 am
Where: Online Via Zoom
Once you have registered for the presentation, we will email you a link to Zoom a few days before the presentation.
Cost:
No Charge
Online Registration CLOSES on the date of the event.
(Registration is open and available until the group ends.)
Questions about Registration? Contact Diversity Committee, diversitycommittee@lacamft.org.
David Silverman, LMFT
4 Ways to Deal with Procrastination
David Silverman, LMFT, treats creative and highly sensitive individuals in private practice in LA. Having experienced the rejection, stress, creative blocks, and career reversals over a long career as a writer in Film and TV, he’s uniquely suited to work with gifted, creative and sensitive clients experiencing anxiety, addiction or depression. For more information, visit www.DavidSilvermanLMFT.com.
LA-CAMFT Diversity Committee Presents:
Asian American Pacific Islander+ Therapists Circle
Third Friday of Every Month
Via Zoom
A safe and empowering place for therapists of the Asian diaspora to experience healing, renewal, and belonging. We will collectively process experiences of racism and internalized oppression. We will also explore the coexistence of privilege and marginalization along with invisibility and hypervigilance. This space will help us appreciate and reclaim what we have in common while honoring our differences. Grace Lee Boggs notes, “The only way to survive is by taking care of one another.” May this circle embody her words.
Third Friday of this Month Location: Zoom Meeting
For more information contact Rachell Alger, rachellalgermft@gmail.com.
For: Licensed Therapists, Associates, and Students
Event Details: Friday, November 17, 2023, 1:30 pm-3:00 pm (PT) Time of Check-In: 1:20 pm
Where: Online Via Zoom Once you have registered for the presentation, we will email you a link to Zoom a few days before the presentation.
Cost: No Charge
Online Registration CLOSES on the date of the event. (Registration closes 1.5 hours prior to the meeting.)
Questions about Registration? Contact Akiah Robinson Selwa at diversitycommitee@lacamft.org.
Chellie Campbell,Financial StressReduction Expert
The Wealthy Spirit: The Rule Of Three
"Yesterday is a canceled check; tomorrow is a promissory note; today is ready cash—use it.”
— Kay Lyons
I had just received a large cash settlement from an auto accident I had been involved in. Gleefully, I held the $12,000 check in my hand. I thought about what I should do with all this money. At the time, I had debts, so I considered using it all to pay down my debt. That felt good, but not great—I wouldn’t have anything fun to show for my good fortune. Then I thought, I could save all the money, but here again, I wouldn’t have any enjoyment of the money right now.
What I really wanted to do was spend all the money on fun and extravagance. But that didn’t feel very responsible. I wrestled with the problem a while, then called a friend of mine, Gale Johnston, a certified financial planner.
When I confessed my dilemma, Gale laughed and told me about the “Rule of Three.” This is what she told me to do:
I did as she suggested, and felt responsible, and had fun at the same time.
I’m praying you receive a large windfall soon, so you can try this out for yourself!
Today’s Affirmation: “I am successful, generous, and happy!”
I love feeling responsible. Makes me feel like I am a good citizen, a proper role-model, smart, savvy, and together. I’m taking care of the future, storing my nuts for the winter like the squirrel in my backyard.
But then I love throwing caution to the winds, escaping the bonds of frugality, and splurging on fun, excitement, travel, poker, and fine dining! I don’t see any critters in my backyard doing that, though…they are all devoted to searching for food, building a nest, attracting a mate.
Except sometimes, it seems the birds just sit in the trees and sing, apparently for no reason except to revel in the sound of their song.
I think the life lesson of that is: When you’ve stored some nuts, be sure to take some time off to sing!
Chellie Campbell, Financial Stress Reduction Expert, is the author of bestselling books The Wealthy Spirit, Zero to Zillionaire, and From Worry to Wealthy: A Woman’s Guide to Financial Success Without the Stress. She has been treating Money Disorders like Spending Bulimia and Income Anorexia in her Financial Stress Reduction® Workshops for over 25 years and is still speaking, writing, and teaching workshops—now as Zoom classes and The Wealthy Spirit Group on Facebook—with participants from all over the world. Website: www.chellie.com.
Middle Eastern North African (MENA) Therapists Community Group
Next Meeting:
Monday, November 3, 2023 9:30 am-10:30 am (PT)
Free Registration
The MENA Therapists Community Group is a safe place across the Middle Eastern and North African therapist diaspora to build community and a sense of belonging. We hold an inclusive space to process the impact of cultural biases experienced by people of MENA descent and the effect it may have on our work as mental health professionals. Within the process, we will strive to create healing, support, and empowerment. We will collaboratively exchange ideas, experiences and resources while acknowledging cultural differences and shared similarities. As the poet Khalil Gibran states — “The reality of the other person lies not in what he reveals to you, but what he cannot reveal to you.” — our community will create a place to be seen, heard, and understood.
For more information contact the Diversity Committee, diversitycommittee@lacamft.org.
Event Details: Monday, November 3, 2023, 9:30 am-10:30 am (PT)Time of Check-In: 9:30 am
Where: Online Via Zoom Upon registration for the presentation, you will receive a confirmation email that includes a link to our Zoom meeting.
Registration is open and available until the group begins.
Questions about Registration? Contact Tyana Tavakol, Perla Hollow, & Tania Osipof at DiversityCommittee@lacamft.org.
Joanna Poppink, LMFT
Toxic Friendship: How To Recognize A Friend Who Is Not Good For You
Friendship: recognizing a toxic friendship If you have or had an eating disorder or PTSD other condition that affects or affected your perceptions and your self-worth, recognizing the potential for a genuine friendship can be a challenge. You may choose friendship based on your low self-esteem, your weak sense of self-worth. You may accept other people’s standards of behavior because you haven’t learned to establish boundaries based on your own values. You also may not appreciate the qualities of a good friend and your responsibilities to maintain that friendship.
When you feel pain you may believe you deserve it or you are being “too sensitive” or making up something negative about the other person or just plain being wrong in feeling what you feel. When you are recovering, or don’t know you are in recovery, from distorted perceptions about your own value you may discount your uncomfortable or painful response to other people’s actions.
You may need a criteria to use as a standard to help you evaluate the possibility of being with a toxic friend.
Friendship plays a crucial role in our lives, enhancing our well-being through social and emotional support, companionship, and positive mood. Maintaining healthy friendships can have a significant impact on our overall health, leading to a longer and happier life.
However, not all friendships are beneficial. Sometimes a friendship can be toxic and stressful, resulting in mental and emotional exhaustion and an overall sense of well-being decline. Research indicates that negative or excessively aggressive social interactions can even cause increased inflammation in the body.
Qualities of toxic friendsEssentially, a toxic friend is someone who causes stress and drains your energy when you're around them.
They may exhibit the following characteristics:
It's important to remember that humans aren't perfect, and friendship can have its ups and downs. However, when the negative interactions with a friend become overwhelming, it's likely that you're dealing with a toxic friend.
While it can be disappointing to admit that you have a toxic friend, there are steps you can take to move forward. Recognizing the types of toxic friendships and the signs of toxicity, as well as taking action to distance yourself from such relationships, will contribute to your improved health and well-being.
A toxic friendship can have different qualities, each with its own detrimental effects on your emotional well-being.
Here are a few examples: The Selfish FriendThis friend only reaches out when it benefits them, leaving you feeling used and disappointed in most situations.
The Overly Critical FriendThis friend constantly puts you down, shares personal stories without permission, and lacks a healthy filter.
The Overstepping FriendThis friend means well but tends to invade your personal boundaries by involving themselves in conversations or issues without invitation.
The Competitive FriendThis friend becomes passive-aggressive or resentful when you achieve success, unable to genuinely celebrate your accomplishments.
The VictimThis friend constantly seeks attention and sympathy, draining your capacity for compassion and making the friendship one-sided.
To identify a toxic friend, it's essential to recognize consistent patterns of toxic behavior.
Some signs that your friendship may be damaging:
DistrustIf you find yourself lacking trust in your friend or feeling uneasy and disliking them, it may be time to consider distancing yourself or parting ways.
AbuseRecognizing abusive behavior in someone you love or trust can be challenging. Any form of abuse, whether physical, mental, emotional, or otherwise, is a clear indication that the friendship should end, and professional help should be sought if necessary.
Malicious BehaviorIf your friend intentionally speaks or calls you names to hurt your feelings, it's a sign of a toxic friendship. Malicious behavior can manifest as rudeness, giving you the cold shoulder, or overt meanness.
Bad InfluenceEncouraging criminal or dangerous behavior is one of the most evident signs of a toxic friend.
If you find yourself in a toxic friendship, it's important to act. Here are some steps you can take to address the situation:
Fade AwayConfronting the person or going into discussions about your discomfort in the relationship is not necessarily the best choice. You may arouse even more of the treatment you already don’t want. If abuse is involved you may be putting yourself in danger.
Distancing yourself, becoming busy, unavailable, involved in new projects may be an effective way of fading out of the friendship. Becoming boring, not contributing anything of interest, being polite but silent may cause your toxic friend to lose interest in you.
That is often a high-quality way for you to be out of a toxic relationship. You avoid anger and more abuse if the other does not feel rejected. The other person is leaving you. That’s a win for you.
End the Friendship ImmediatelyIf abuse is not involved, if your friendship consistently brings you a sense of lack of value and discouragement, it may be time to let go and move on.
Cultivate New RelationshipsSurrounding yourself with positive and meaningful relationships is essential for your well-being. If you're feeling discouraged, you can meet new people by attending events, volunteering, accepting invitations, pursuing new hobbies, joining communities, or simply taking a walk.
You have the power to give yourself permission to make your own mental health and well-being the top priority in your life by distancing yourself from a toxic friendship. Building a supportive network of friends who uplift and empower you will contribute to your overall happiness and fulfillment in life.
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