Transformative CE On Demand
Choose between 18 or 36 Hours of CE/CME!
Accredited CE/CME.
Accredited CE/CME.
Experience the spirit of our legendary Santa Fe conference, now self-paced, so inspiration and CE/CME credits fit your schedule. Trusted for 43 years, Creativity and Madness blends psychology and art, community and humanity, science and soul; bringing you continuing education that sparks breakthroughs, not boredom.
What You Will Receive
- Most of the 2025 Creativity and Madness program, with bonus presentations and workshops from previous years 
- Up to 36 hours of inspiring CE/CME, including 6 Ethics Hours 
- Immersive, story-driven sessions that bridge science, art, and soul 
- Self-paced modules to spark insight, healing, and new tools for your practice 
- Earn your CE/CME certificate on the spot, after completing post-test questions and an evaluation form 
Why It’s Worth It
- This is not your standard PowerPoint marathon; our speakers are artists, healers, and storytellers who move audiences as much as they inform them. 
- Unlike traditional CE/CME, ours weaves together music performances, theater, indigenous healing, neuroscience, somatics, metabolic health, and much more. 
- Access to our private Facebook group community, and a tradition that has inspired thousands of mental health professionals, artists, and healers for over 40 years. 
- Designed for health care providers, including psychologists, psychiatrists, physicians, naturopaths, nurses, social workers, marriage and family therapists, physician assistants, and more who want continuing education that inspires both their work and soul. 
How It Works:
- Choose between two immersive 18-hour CE/CME programs—or bundle both for 36 hours and save with bundle pricing. Each 18-hour CE/CME program includes a blend of Creativity and Madness presentations, workshops, and three ethics hours each. Get immediate access to all presentations — watch anytime, as often as you like, for one year. 
- After each presentation, complete the post-test questions. 
- Once you’ve finished and filled out the evaluation, download your CE certificate instantly. Please note: we do not send hard copies of certificates. - *If you need help or have further questions, call us at 208-993-4477 or email info@creativityandmadness.com 
The Alchemy of Healing – A 36-Hour Journey Through Creativity and Madness
36 hours CE/CME. 6 ethics hours included.
Module 1: The Artist Within, 18 hours CE/CME, 3 hours of Ethics
Click the presentation title to read the needs and objectives of each presentation.
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      This engaging and interdisciplinary presentation explores the complex and often counterintuitive relationship between brain dysfunction and creative brilliance. Drawing on over 30 years of clinical experience as a neurologist, Dr. Sam Markind brings a rare depth of medical insight and humanistic perspective to this exploration of how neurological conditions can both enhance and inhibit creative expression. Creativity remains one of the least understood yet most vital aspects of human brain function. For psychologists and mental health professionals, expanding our understanding of creativity’s neurological basis is essential—not only for conceptualizing pathology, but for appreciating the full spectrum of cognitive diversity in those we serve. This presentation helps fill an important educational gap by weaving together clinical neurology, cultural history, music, and psychological theory to illuminate the paradoxes of the creative brain. Through two compelling case studies, Erik Satie (1866-1925) and Maurice Ravel (1875-1937), Dr. Markind examines how neurodivergence and neurodegeneration reveal different facets of creativity. Satie, the eccentric French composer active in Montmartre’s bohemian circles, is presented as a historical example of high-functioning autism spectrum disorder (HFASD). While undiagnosed in his lifetime, Satie’s personality traits and sensory sensitivities align with contemporary neuropsychological models of enhanced creativity associated with neurodivergence. His minimalist, anti-romantic musical style is examined both as personal expression and as a reflection of neurological difference. In contrast, Maurice Ravel’s gradual loss of the ability to translate rich internal musical ideas into actual compositions reveals the essential role of motor function in creative output. Likely suffering from frontotemporal dementia or corticobasal degeneration, Ravel’s condition underscores a crucial yet often overlooked aspect of creativity: the motoric dimension. His case provides a powerful example of what Dr. Markind describes as expressive acreativity, the loss of creative expression not due to a deficit of ideas, but to the breakdown of the brain’s motor integration systems. Dr. Sam Markind blends expert clinical commentary with live piano performances of selected compositions by both Satie and Ravel with. This program offers a unique and moving educational experience. Participants will leave with a deeper appreciation for the neurological underpinnings of creativity and how these insights can be applied in both diagnostic and therapeutic settings. Objectives: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: - Discuss the concept of sensory hypersensitivity and how it may enhance creativity in neurodivergent individuals. 
- Describe the cultural zeitgeist in which Satie and Ravel lived. 
- Explain how Ravel’s neurological decline illustrates the motoric dimension of creativity and how loss of motor function can impair creative expression. 
- List two musical works composed by Erik Satie and two by Maurice Ravel. 
 
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      The concerns over environmental toxins and exposures are not new. Historically, substances like lead in paint and mercury in hat-making were commonly used and resulted in significant health impacts. Heavy metal poisoning from mercury, lead, and arsenic has long been linked to cognitive impairments, mood disorders, and mental health conditions such as depression, anxiety, and psychosis. In the past, many artists, especially during the Renaissance and Romantic periods, were exposed to these toxins, which may have affected their physical health and creativity. These exposures likely contributed to neurological symptoms that influenced both their behavior and artistic expression. Today, environmental medicine is vital for understanding the long-term effects of such toxins, food additives and chemicals on mental and physical health, highlighting the need to assess and mitigate exposures within daily lifestyles to better protect future generations. Imbalances in metabolic and mental health are becoming increasingly recognized as a fundamental challenge contributing to many chronic health issues in the U.S. These challenges often stem from dietary and lifestyle factors. This presentation aims to equip attendees with practical, actionable strategies for improving metabolic and mental health. By incorporating these concepts into their client support and treatment plans, attendees can identify ways to have a meaningful impact on overall health and well-being. Objectives: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: - Identify two famous artists whose ‘toxic’ art supplies impacted their physical and mental health. 
- Discuss potential reasons for increases in rates of depression and anxiety. 
- Identify signs of metabolic imbalance. 
 
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      This program introduces participants to Jungian concepts of the imaginal realm and the transformative potential of embodied active imagination. Drawing on Carl Jung’s personal and professional methods (as seen in The Black Books and The Red Book), this presentation explores how the unconscious, both personal and collective, serves as a wellspring of creativity and healing. Jung referred to the imaginal realm as a vital, living space where the psyche expresses itself through images, archetypes, and symbols. Participants will also gain insight into Jung’s technique of embodied active imagination, a process of engaging with unconscious material through the body and imagination. This presentation draws from Sufi teachings on the mundus imaginalis, Jung’s analytical psychology, and contemporary neuroscience, particularly Iain McGilchrist’s findings on the right and left hemispheres of the brain. These interdisciplinary lenses shed light on how healing can occur when we honor the intuitive, embodied, and relational capacities of the right hemisphere, capacities too often overlooked in conventional therapies. Objectives: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: - Compare the difference between the personal and the collective unconscious. 
- Explain the importance of working creatively with the unconscious in therapy. 
- Describe Jung’s method of embodied active imagination. 
 
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      Trauma is a nearly universal human experience, and while many individuals recover over time, others develop persistent psychological and physiological effects. This program explores the intersection of trauma, memory, and the body, focusing on how traumatic experiences are encoded not only in the brain but throughout the body at a cellular level. Participants will examine current research from neuroscience, epigenetics, and psychobiology to understand how trauma can influence memory storage and retrieval in both the central nervous system and peripheral cellular systems. The program explores how intrusive memories, emotional flashbacks, and somatic symptoms may be linked to cellular mechanisms of memory encoding. Drawing from interdisciplinary sources, including studies on bacteria, flatworms, butterflies, and plants, this course illuminates the evolutionary roots and biological substrates of memory. These comparisons help participants understand how non-human organisms store information about stress, threat, and survival, offering novel insights into how trauma may persist in human physiology even after the external threat has passed. Through this program, clinicians will deepen their understanding of trauma’s impact on the body and learn to conceptualize symptomology from a somatic and cellular perspective. Emphasis is placed on integrating this knowledge into trauma-informed care and psychotherapeutic practices. Objectives: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: - List three key processes involved in the formation and retrieval of memory. 
- Describe cellular mechanisms that contribute to memory encoding and storage. 
- Discuss how bacteria, flatworms, butterflies, and plants store memories. 
 
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      In just a single generation, the societal view of aging has undergone a profound transformation. As advancements in healthcare and longevity have extended the average lifespan, and have allowed for meaningful productivity, a growing number of individuals are entering the second half of life with vitality, creativity, and a desire for continued growth and new adventures. This course explores how aging can be reframed not as a period of decline, being marginalized, rather a time of expansive psychological development and renewed purpose. Drawing on the groundbreaking work of Dr. Gene Cohen, this presentation examines the Awakening the Human Potential model, which expands upon Erik Erikson’s final developmental stage. Cohen's research highlights the interplay between age, brain plasticity, and life experience, and proposes a framework for understanding how creativity, purpose, and emotional resilience can flourish in later adulthood. His work is supported by Mary Catherine Bateson who spent significant time working with Erik Erikson and found meaning to the expansion of Erikson's Stage of Integrity vs. Despair. This program will also explore the evolving identity and mental health needs of today’s aging population, with an emphasis on supporting older adults through clinical interventions that validate their continued capacity for insight, contribution, and meaning making. Participants will gain practical tools to help clients in midlife and beyond navigate transitions with optimism, curiosity, and psychological flexibility. Objectives: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: - Identify how Dr. Gene Cohen expanded upon Erik Erikson’s theory of psychosocial development in older adulthood. 
- Describe the key components of Dr. Cohen’s Awakening the Human Potential model for the second half of life. 
- Identify Mary Catherine Bateson's input supporting Cohen's work 
- Discuss strategies for fostering resilience, creativity, and continued personal development in aging clients. 
 
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      In this presentation, Dr. Lewis Mehl-Madrona, Barbara Mainguy, MA, draw on decades of clinical and cross-cultural experience to introduce a paradigm that emphasizes interconnectedness, narrative identity, and community-based healing, inviting participants to reimagine psychological practice through the lens of Indigenous worldviews. Instead of locating problems solely within the individual, Indigenous approaches understand suffering as arising from disruptions in relationship, with self, others, land, spirit, and community. In this framework, people are seen as embedded in a living system, not isolated objects of diagnosis. This shift is supported by replacing static nouns with dynamic verbs and seeing identity as emergent and fluid rather than fixed and pathological. Participants will explore foundational Indigenous concepts such as nagi (soul or vital essence), Nagila (the visible expression of the spirit), and autopoietic emergence, to explore how selfhood arises in context. These ideas align with and deepen modern therapeutic approaches such as Internal Family Systems (IFS), narrative therapy, and dialogical self-theory. The presentation will also examine non-ordinary states of consciousness as valid and often healing experiences, as well as the importance of land, story, and community in mental well-being. Mental health care in the Western world has increasingly become industrialized, standardized, and distanced from the very human relationships that promote healing. In 1973, Ivan Illich warned that the medicalization of life and the professional monopolization of care would erode the conviviality essential to health. Today, this concern remains urgent. As mental health challenges rise globally, clinicians are seeking more culturally relevant, relational, and spiritually grounded models of care. This program meets that need by offering an alternative foundation for practice, one that is deeply informed by Indigenous philosophy and wisdom traditions. It addresses how political and economic systems shape the structure of mental health care and explores how practitioners can ethically and meaningfully integrate Indigenous knowledge into contemporary practice. Objectives: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: - Identify three examples of how replacing nouns with verbs transforms our understanding of people and mental health. 
- Compare and contrast Indigenous versus mainstream ideas regarding the origin human emotional problems 
- Discuss how political and economic systems shape the practice of mental health and its outcomes. 
 
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      This program is designed for clinicians who work with individuals navigating anxiety, depression, traumatic stress, and moral injury—often tied to major life stressors or unresolved grief. The session provides practical tools grounded in trauma-informed theory, case studies, and emerging research to help therapists support clients in transforming pain into purpose and cultivating resilience. By drawing from scientific literature, global narratives (including post-conflict Rwanda and urban America), and a mind-body integrative approach, the presenters illuminate forgiveness as a pathway to emotional well-being and post-traumatic growth. Megan Feldman Bettencourt has presented nationally at healthcare systems, school districts, and faith-based organizations, including Norton Healthcare, the Tucson Unified School District, and NAMIC. Dr. Feldman has been a recurring speaker for Creativity and Madness and other international programs focused on healing through creative and psychological insight. Objectives: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: - Discuss core components of forgiveness. 
- Identify the three core practices common among individuals who have forgiven extreme offenses—grief, boundaries, and spirituality. 
- Describe the differences between forgiveness and reconciliation. 
- List four qualities of those who are resilient: optimism, empathy, emotion regulation, and self-efficacy. 
 
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      This advanced-level program is designed for licensed psychologists and other mental health professionals seeking to deepen their clinical skills in Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), a well-researched and empirically supported approach to treating relational distress. Rooted in attachment theory and affective science, EFT offers a structured framework for helping couples recognize and shift the negative interaction cycles that erode emotional connection. The program includes a compelling and clinically rich live demonstration of a couple’s therapy session, conducted by three experienced EFT therapists who collaborate to portray the therapeutic process in real time. Through this live enactment, participants will observe a couple in crisis as they begin their journey in therapy. The session will illustrate how the therapist creates a safe therapeutic alliance, identifies the couple’s negative interactional pattern, and helps each partner access and express their underlying primary emotions. This portrayal offers a powerful prelude to the live therapy session, giving context to the couple’s emotional disconnection and highlighting the attachment injuries that fuel their conflict. As the live therapy session unfolds on stage, participants will witness how EFT techniques are used in the moment to: · De-escalate high emotional reactivity and defensiveness · Access and validate vulnerable emotional states · Restructure interactions to promote responsiveness and secure bonding · Move couples from conflict to connection by fostering empathy and emotional engagement Through this integrated format, combining didactic presentation, film clips and live clinical demonstration, participants will gain a more profound understanding of EFT in action. The program provides clear teaching on the stages and steps of EFT, the use of emotionally focused interventions, and the therapeutic stance required to work effectively with couples. This program is grounded in established research in adult attachment, couples therapy, and emotion-focused clinical practice. It offers clinicians a unique opportunity to enhance their clinical competence through direct observation of expert-led, experiential therapy. Objectives: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: - Describe Emotion Focused Therapy (EFT) 
- Identify how attachment-based couple’s therapy can generate deeper connections. 
- Apply EFT concepts to clinical work 
 
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      This presentation explores the rich intersection of art, poetry, and psychology through the visionary works of William Blake (1757–1827). Although Blake is often recognized for his mystical and symbolic illuminated books, his work also offers profound insights into human psychology, many of which prefigure modern theories of the unconscious mind. Participants will be introduced to Blake’s poetic and artistic vocabulary, and how these works illuminate states of consciousness, the nature of perception, and the integration of shadow and light within the psyche. Blake’s portrayal of visionary experience, often misunderstood or labeled as madness, will be explored in relation to both historical context and contemporary psychological theory, including parallels to the later work of Carl Jung. This program provides an accessible yet intellectually rich opportunity for psychologists and other mental health professionals to explore how visionary art and poetry can inform our understanding of consciousness, creativity, and psychological transformation. Objectives: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: - Identify the behaviors that led some to regard William Blake as mentally unstable and accuse him of madness. 
- Discuss William Blake's theory of Psychology how it parallels later developments in depth psychology. 
- Recite and interpret selected lines from Blake’s major poetic works that reflect psychological and existential themes. 
 
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      Creativity, once attributed solely to genius or divine inspiration, is now understood as a skill that can be nurtured, taught, and applied across disciplines. In today’s rapidly evolving mental health landscape, creative thinking is essential for clinicians who must navigate complex, ambiguous, and often imperfect systems. This one-hour continuing education presentation explores the psychological and neurobiological foundations of creativity and innovation, emphasizing their relevance in clinical and institutional settings. Central to this program are five key forces that influence creative breakthroughs: chance, curiosity, collaboration, crisis, and convergence. These forces are illustrated through the compelling story of Drs. Robin Warren and Barry Marshall, whose curiosity and unconventional methods led to the groundbreaking discovery of Helicobacter pylori as the cause of peptic ulcer disease. Dr. John draws on insights from neuroscience—specifically the default mode network, top-down control mechanisms, and insight-related processes—as well as the field of convergence sciences, which bridges multiple disciplines to address multifaceted societal challenges. Attendees will be encouraged to reflect on their own creative processes and professional experiences through this five-forces framework, gaining tools to foster innovation in clinical practice, education, and organizational leadership. Objectives: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: - Describe the serendipitous discoveries that have significantly influenced the field of psychiatry. 
- Discuss individual and institutional factors that promote creative breakthroughs during crises. 
- List five critical forces, chance, curiosity, collaboration, crisis, and convergence, that shape creative outcomes in mental health and medical settings. 
 
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      Drawing from her book The Eternal Bond and her qualitative research, Dr. Janet Roseman shares narratives from bereaved daughters who describe para-normal or extra-sensory experiences, dreams, visions, symbolic signs, that brought them deep comfort and a sense of continued connection. These experiences are often dismissed or pathologized in clinical settings, leaving grievers feeling isolated or “crazy” for sharing them. Dr. Roseman offers an alternative, validating framework that recognizes these occurrences as meaningful components of the grief journey. Grief is an intrinsic part of the human experience, yet the grief experienced by adult daughters after the death of their mothers is uniquely profound, particularly among women who served as caregivers during their mothers’ lives. In this deeply compassionate and research-informed presentation, Dr. Roseman explores a less acknowledged yet vital dimension of grief: the metaphysical and intuitive experiences that often accompany the loss of a mother. The presentation challenges the limitations of traditional grief models, including the widely known Kubler-Ross stages, and introduces a new paradigm for understanding the long arc of mother-loss and its enduring emotional and spiritual bonds. Through clinical insights, narrative accounts, and practical tools, Dr. Roseman offers clinicians a broader lens to support the bereaved navigating this profound transition. This program addresses a significant gap in traditional grief counseling models, particularly in recognizing the lived experiences of bereaved daughters and their reports of metaphysical or para-normal experiences during grief. It also responds to the clinical need for alternative frameworks beyond stage-based models of grief, helping mental health professionals avoid inadvertently invalidating clients’ inner experiences. Objectives: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: - Describe the lived experiences of adult daughters grieving the loss of their mothers, including spiritual and metaphysical dimensions. 
- Discuss why the traditional Kubler-Ross model of grief may be outdated and potentially harmful in certain therapeutic contexts. 
- Identify the stigma surrounding para-normal experiences in grief and explain how clinicians can validate these occurrences to support psychological well-being 
 
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      Major depressive disorder affects more than 350 million people worldwide, and a significant portion of those individuals experience limited relief from pharmacological treatments alone. Mental health professionals regularly encounter clients with treatment-resistant depression and are tasked with exploring integrative strategies for support and healing. This presentation uses the life and creative legacy of Leonard Cohen, renowned poet, songwriter, and spiritual seeker, as a lens through which to examine the complexities of living with chronic depression. Despite lifelong struggles with mood disturbances, Cohen remained an active creator and found periods of relief through deep introspection, spiritual discipline, and contemplative practice. Drawing on current research in neuroscience, psychology, and contemplative traditions, this program explores how mindfulness, metacognition, and spiritual engagement may influence depressive symptoms. Particular attention is given to the neurobiological underpinnings of rumination and the activation of the default mode network, which has been closely linked with self-referential thinking and depressive cycles. Participants will gain a deeper understanding of how creative expression and contemplative awareness can serve as powerful adjuncts in the treatment of depression, particularly in clients for whom traditional interventions have been insufficient. Clinical implications for integrating mindfulness and metacognitive strategies into psychotherapy will also be discussed. Objectives: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: - Discuss the concept of metacognition. 
- Describe the process of rumination. 
- List three activities that can activate the Default Mode Network 
- Apply mindfulness and contemplative strategies into clinical work with depressed clients. 
 
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      This interactive workshop explores the complex landscape of moral and ethical decision-making at the end of life, one of the most sensitive and universally relevant issues facing individuals, families, and healthcare professionals today. There are more and more states and countries which legally allow Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID), and there are professionals who both agree and strongly disagree with those options. While many assume that morals and choices stemming from those morals are fixed and universal, and that ethics are externally defined codes of conduct, this course invites participants to critically examine how both morals and ethics are shaped, internalized, and challenged over time. Participants will explore key questions such as: What are the origins of our moral beliefs? How do personal values align, or conflict, with institutional ethics? What happens when ethical codes fail to offer guidance in real-world dilemmas? Through reflective discussion, case examples, and group exercises, attendees will analyze how concepts of self-determination and autonomy, culture, worldview, professional identity, and lived experience influence one’s moral compass, as well as the ethics within which we may work or practice; especially in high-stakes situations involving end-of-life care, patient autonomy, and family decision-making. Grounded in both legal, secular and religious as well as clinical perspectives, this workshop supports mental health professionals in building greater self-awareness, cultural sensitivity, and ethical clarity when navigating the emotionally charged territory of life’s final choices and decisions. Objectives: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: - List three core concepts commonly associated with development of moral and ethical frameworks, and how they impact end of life care and decisions. 
- Discuss the pros and cons in general terms of MAID vs Euthanasia, VS Hospice care 
- Explain how morals and ethical principles develop and evolve over time in response to personal, cultural, and societal influences. 
- Discuss the impact of culture, worldview, personal experience, and professional role on moral decision-making and ethical interpretation in clinical and family contexts. 
- Discuss the general framework of MAID laws, requirements and hurdles for patients and families 
 
Cancellation & Refund Policy
All sales for the Creativity and Madness Enduring Content Program are final.
Because this is a digital continuing education program that provides immediate access to video content, course materials, and CE/CME evaluations upon purchase, we do not offer cancellations, refunds, or exchanges.
Once your order is completed, access to the program is granted instantly, and all related materials become available to you. For this reason, we are unable to issue refunds.
If you experience technical issues accessing your content, please contact us at info@creativityandmadness.com or 208-993-4477 , and we’ll be happy to assist you in resolving the issue.
We appreciate your understanding and commitment to the integrity of our CE/CME programming.
Module 2: The Healer Within, 18 hours CE/CME, 3 hours of Ethics
Click the presentation title to read the needs and objectives of each presentation.
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      Psychedelics have a long history of use in indigenous cultures around the world. These medicines have been employed to access altered states of consciousness, for healing, and as an aid in religious/spiritual ceremonies. More recently, scientists in Europe and the USA have discovered additional benefits of these medicines including neuroplastic changes, cognitive enhancement, and increased creativity. This presentation will explore the use of psychedelic medicines in both indigenous and non-indigenous cultures, as well as recent scientific discoveries regarding these medicines’ neuroplastic mechanisms and their potential activation of silent synapses. OBJECTIVES: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: 1. Describe three Indigenous cultures that employ psychedelic medicines for healing 2. Explain three mechanisms by which psychedelics may result in improvement in psychiatric disorders 3. Define three mechanisms by which psychedelics may enhance creativity 4. Define the term “psychoplastogens” 5. Explore the risks and benefits of psychedelic medicines when used in a therapeutic context and in a recreational context 
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      Psychoanalysis and theater have common roots. Freud drew heavily from playwrights for his ideas (Sophocles and Shakespeare, just two outstanding examples). Both psychoanalysis and theater are engaged in the same enterprise: the study of human nature. In this dramatically told story we will learn about the struggle a young child faces as he does everything NOT to know deeply the powerful feelings of devastating loss, which are ever present in his family. Slowly over time inner and outer forces demand he pay attention to those feelings and we learn about the beneficial consequences that result. OBJECTIVES: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: 1. Present in a dynamic way the struggle that occurs in all human beings between closing oneself off from deep feelings and the contrasting inner demand to find a way to express them. 2. Discover the ways in which storytelling can contribute to understanding and befriending the inner life. 3. Understand the complex similarities and differences that pertain between theater and therapy. 
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      Metabolic dysfunction is recognized as a key driver of chronic disease in the U.S., including its significant impact on mental health conditions such as depression and anxiety. As awareness grows around the roles of obesity, insulin resistance, and inflammation in conditions like diabetes, heart disease, and depression, both patients and practitioners are seeking better tools to prevent and manage these issues. This hands-on workshop bridges the gap between metabolic science and clinical application. Participants will gain practical, evidence-informed tools to assess and support metabolic balance and its role in mental health. Topics include key indicators often available in patient-presented lab results, stages of change, and recommendations for realistic lifestyle changes, and nutritional interventions. In today’s digital health space, where influencers, biohacking trends, and supplement stacks shape public perception, clinicians and wellness professionals must navigate increasingly complex conversations with better-informed, but often misinformed, patients. This workshop provides the clarity and confidence you need to engage in those discussions as an informed participant. Whether you work in mental health, social work, or integrative care, this training will empower you to become a more effective advocate for whole-person health. Objectives: At the end of this workshop, participants will be able to: - Discuss the Stages of Change Model 
- Identify common signs and symptoms of metabolic imbalance. 
- List three impactful lifestyle and dietary changes to improve healthcare outcomes. 
- Discuss three risk factors associated with poor metabolic health: such as obesity, insulin resistance, and inflammation. 
- Apply lifestyle and nutrition strategies to support metabolic and mental health. 
 
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      This engaging, interdisciplinary workshop examines the emerging concept of cellular memory—the idea that information about lived experience, especially trauma, may be encoded, stored, and retrieved not only in the brain but throughout the body at a cellular level. Drawing from neuroscience, epigenetics, psychobiology, and immunology, this program explores how traumatic experiences may leave lasting imprints in both central and peripheral systems, shaping psychological and physiological functioning. Participants will investigate mechanisms such as epigenetic modification, immune cell memory, and neural plasticity to understand how trauma can become biologically embedded. Special attention is given to organ transplantation and the compelling reports from transplant recipients who describe unexpected memories, personality shifts, or behavioral changes following surgery, raising important questions about the ways memory and identity may be encoded in cells beyond the brain. The course also explores compelling parallels in the natural world—how organisms such as bacteria, flatworms, butterflies, and plants encode and transmit information essential for survival. These examples highlight the biological foundations of cellular memory and deepen our understanding of how trauma may be recorded in human physiology even long after the initial threat has passed. Designed for mental health professionals, this workshop integrates cutting-edge science with clinical application. Emphasis is placed on how understanding cellular memory can inform trauma-informed care, enhance somatic and mind-body interventions, and deepen our grasp of complex symptomology. Objectives: At the end of this workshop, participants will be able to: - Explain the concept of cellular memory and its mechanisms, including encoding, storing, and retrieving information 
- Discuss the implications of cellular memory in trauma healing, transplantation medicine. 
- Discuss the reported experiences of organ transplant recipients and their relevance to theories of cellular memory. 
- Describe how organisms such as bacteria, flatworms, butterflies, and plants store and transmit memory-related information. 
- Analyze key research findings including epigenetic modifications, immune cell memory, and neural plasticity. 
 
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      This three-hour workshop explores how clinicians can support older adults in navigating this expanded landscape of opportunity, identity, and psychological development. With longer lifespans, improved health, and greater financial freedom, many individuals in their 50s, 60s, and beyond are redefining what it means to live a purposeful life. The presentation builds on the work of developmental theorists like Erik Erikson, Gene Cohen, and Mary Catherine Bateson to explore how aging can be reframed as a time of creativity, resilience, and contribution. Participants will examine the psychological and emotional shifts that come with the transition out of traditional work roles, including the potential for boredom, loss of identity, a feeling of being marginalized, and the drive to remain engaged and productive. Through case examples, interactive discussion, and research-based frameworks, clinicians will learn how to help clients consciously craft the next chapter of their lives—whether through revisiting old passions, exploring new vocations, or deepening their legacy. This program also offers clinicians tools to reflect on their own experiences of aging and resilience, equipping them to support both clients and them-selves in embracing the second half of life with curiosity, clarity, and intention. Objectives: At the end of this workshop, participants will be able to: - Discuss the differences between traditional concepts of retirement and contemporary views of post-career life. 
- Discuss the work of Mary Catherine Bateson, corroborating the work of Gene Cohen 
- Identify at least one concrete clinical strategy for supporting the emotional, cognitive, or other identity needs of aging clients. 
- Apply workshop content to help clients (and clinicians themselves) cultivate meaning, purpose, and psychological flexibility in later life. 
 
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      In this interdisciplinary workshop, Michael Uebel introduces equanimity as a perceptual and relational stance that supports deeper therapeutic presence, psychological flexibility, and a more fluid engagement with lived experience. Drawing from Eastern contemplative traditions—including Zen Buddhism—as well as Western philosophy (e.g., Goethe, Merleau-Ponty, Alva Noë), this course challenges the dominance of rationalism and abstraction in psychotherapy and proposes an alternative: equanimity as a mode of knowing that is embodied, responsive, and relational. Too often, clinicians and clients alike become constrained by fixed identity narratives, cognitive rigidity, or mindfulness practices that inadvertently reinforce self-focus. Uebel explores how equanimity, unlike detachment or neutrality, involves a full presence to the shifting world—without clinging or resistance. It enables the therapist to hold space for unfolding experience rather than rushing to interpret, categorize, or resolve. This stance is particularly relevant in working with trauma, anxiety, depression, and identity-based distress, where inflexibility and ego-preoccupation are central. This program addresses key clinical practice gaps: the need for greater flexibility in how patients and clinicians perceive themselves and their challenges, and the limitations of treatment models that rely heavily on static interpretations or conceptual frameworks. Equanimity invites clinicians into a more embodied, holistic, and moment-to-moment therapeutic process. Objectives: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: - Apply principles of equanimous awareness to clinical situations, particularly those involving trauma, identity conflict, or psychological rigidity. 
- Discuss the implications of equanimity for patient and personal mental health and how to implement it in everyday life. 
- Identify how conventional mindfulness practices may inadvertently reinforce self-focus and explore how equanimity offers an alternative therapeutic pathway. 
- Integrate Eastern philosophical and contemplative approaches with Western psychotherapeutic models to enhance clinical insight and effectiveness. 
 
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      Many of us believe that morals are concrete and universal, and know that ethics or ethical codes are something that are developed by self and/or others; that many must follow in their various institutions and/or professions. This is a workshop and as a result we will be working, thinking, talking about morals, their origins, their existence, their strengths; and ethics; are they followed, and if not, what? 
 How do morals and ethics change over time?OBJECTIVES: At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: 1. List three universal concepts that apply to morals and ethics 2. Explain how morals and ethics develop and change over time 3. Discuss how culture, world view, personal perspective, and experience impact one’s moral compass 
Accreditation
Our programs are accredited/approved by APA, ACCME, ASWB, and NBCC. Each state/licensing board has its own rules for how CE hours can be earned (e.g., live vs. on-demand/enduring), and your board is the final authority on acceptance. We recommend confirming directly with them.
In support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by Amedco LLC and Creativity and Madness (CAM). Amedco LLC is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team. Amedco Joint Accreditation #4008163. Professions in scope for this activity are listed below.
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      Amedco LLC designates this enduring material for a maximum of 31.00 ANCC contact hours. 
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      This course is co-sponsored by Amedco and Creativity and Madness (CAM). Amedco is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Amedco maintains responsibility for this program and its content. 31.00 hours. The following state boards accept courses from APA providers for Psychologists/Counselors: AK, AR, AZ, CA, CT, DC, DE, FL, GA, HI, IA, ID, IL, IN, IO, KS, MA (LEP ONLY), ME, MO, NC, ND, NH, NE, NJ, NM, NV, OK*, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VA, WI, WY The following state boards accept courses approved by any other state for Psychologists/Counselors: CO, MD MI: No CE requirements. *OK: Accepts APA credit for live, in-person activities but not for ethics and/or online courses. The following state boards accept courses from APA providers for MFTs: AK, AR, AZ, CA, CO, CT, DE, FL, GA, IA, ID, IN, KS, MD, ME, MO, NE, NC, NH, NJ, NM, NV, OK*, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VA, WA, WDC, WI, WY AL MFTs: Credits authorized by NBCC or any other state licensing agency will be accepted. MA MFTs: Participants can self-submit courses not approved by the MAMFT board for review. The following state boards accept courses from APA providers for Addictions Professionals: AK, AR, CO, CT, DC, DE, GA, IA, IN, KS, LA, MD, MO, MT, NC, ND, NE, NJ, NM, NY (held outside NY ONLY), OK*, OR, SC, UT, WA, WI, WY The following state boards accept courses from APA providers for Social Workers: AK, AR, AZ, CA, CO, DE, FL, GA, ID, IN, KY, ME, MN, MO, NE, NH, NM, OR, PA, VT, WI, WY 
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      Amedco is recognized by the New York State Education Department’s State Board for Psychology as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed psychologists #PSY-0031. 31.00 hours. 
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      As a Jointly Accredited Organization, Amedco is approved to offer social work continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) Approved Continuing Education (ACE) program. Organizations, not individual courses, are approved under this program. State and provincial regulatory boards have the final authority to determine whether an individual course may be accepted for continuing education credit. Amedco maintains responsibility for this course. ASWB Learner Level: Intermediate. Social Workers completing this course receive 31.00 GENERAL continuing education credits. The following state boards accept courses offering ASWB ACE credit for Social Workers: AK, AL, AR, AZ, CA, CO, CT, DC, DE, FL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NC, ND, NE, NH, NM, NV, OH, OK*, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, VA, WA, WI, WV*, WY OK: Accepts ASWB ACE for live, in-person activities but not for ethics and/or online courses. WV: Accepts ASWB ACE unless activity is held live in West Virginia. The following state boards accept courses offering ASWB ACE credit for Counselors: AK, AR, AZ, CA, CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, IA, ID, IL, IN, KS, MA, MD, ME, MO, ND, NE, NM, NH, NV, OK*, OR, PA, TN, TX, UT, VA, WI, WY MI: No CE requirement for licensed counselors. The following state boards accept courses offering ASWB ACE credit for MFTs: AK, AR, AZ, CA, CO, FL, IA, ID, IN, KS, MD, ME, MO, NC, NE, NH, NM, NV, OK*, OR, PA, RI, TN, TX, UT, VA, WI, WY AL MFTs: Credits authorized by NBCC or any other state licensing agency will be accepted. MA MFTs: Participants can self-submit courses not approved by the MAMFT board for review. MI: No CE requirement for licensed MFTs. The following state boards accept ASWB ACE credit for Addictions Professionals: AK, CA, CO, CT, GA, IA, IN, KS, LA, MO, MT, ND, NM, NV, OK, OR, SC, WA, WI, WV, WY 
What is Enduring Content?
Enduring content refers to recorded, on-demand CE/CME sessions that can be viewed anytime within your access period. It’s the same programming as our live events—just recorded and available at your own pace.
Note: Accreditation rules vary. Please check with your professional licensing board to confirm that enduring or home-study CE credits are accepted for your specific license or certification requirements.


 
            
              
            
            
          
               
            
              
            
            
          
               
            
              
            
            
          
              