Managing Chronic Anxiety with Mindfulness
Video
with
Ronald D. Siegel, PsyD
Video

Managing Chronic Anxiety with Mindfulness

Watch Ron Siegel utilize the somatic elements of mindfulness in session with a client suffering from anxiety, and discover a tool that you can easily use to help your clients with a broad range of issues. Video Length: 29m
Buy a Membership
COURSE DETAILS

Overview

Most therapists are familiar with the general concept of mindfulness, but don’t know how to effectively use it in their sessions with clients. Watch Ron Siegel, a longtime mindfulness-oriented psychotherapist and expert in the approach, incorporate mindfulness in his first session with Julia, a woman in her 20s grieving multiple deaths who is suffering from anxiety and negative “what if” thoughts that run through many areas of her life.

This demonstration will provide you with the tools you need to introduce your clients to mindfulness concepts and lead them through exercises designed to relieve anxiety. You will see how teaching Julia to track her moment-to-moment physical experience with acceptance—rather than aversion—helps her reframe her anxiety as physical tension that she can begin to release with mindful awareness. This versatile technique can be used to help clients with issues ranging from anxiety, chronic pain, trauma and more.

About the Experts

Ronald D. Siegel, PsyD
Expert

Ronald D. Siegel, PsyD

Ronald D. Siegel, PsyD, is assistant professor of psychology at Harvard Medical School, where he has taught for over 30 years. He is a long-time student of mindfulness meditation and serves on the board of directors and faculty of The Institute for Meditation and Psychotherapy. He is the coauthor of Back Sense: A Revolutionary Approach to Halting the Cycle of Chronic Back Pain, which integrates Western and Eastern approaches for treating chronic back pain, coeditor of the acclaimed books for professionals, Mindfulness and Psychotherapy and Wisdom and…

View full profile

Disclosures

Ronald D. Siegel was compensated for his contribution. None of his books or additional offerings are required for any of the Psychotherapy.net content. Should such materials be referenced, it is as an additional resource.

This Disclosure Statement has been designed to meet accreditation standards; Psychotherapy.net does its best to mitigate potential conflicts of interest and eliminate bias in all areas of content. Psychotherapy.net offers training for cost but has no financial or other relationships to disclose. Additionally, there is no commercial support for this activity. None of the planners or any employee at Psychotherapy.net who has worked on this educational activity has relevant financial relationship(s) to disclose with ineligible companies.

Psychotherapy.net defines ineligible companies as those whose primary business is producing, marketing, selling, re-selling, or distributing healthcare products used by or on patients. There is no minimum financial threshold; individuals must disclose all financial relationships, regardless of the amount, with ineligible companies. We ask that all contributors disclose any and all financial relationships they have with any ineligible companies whether the individual views them as relevant to the education or not. Each experts’ specific disclosures can be found in their biography.

Creative Healing in Mental Health
  • Video

Creative Healing in Mental Health

How to Decrease Conflict and Increase Connection in Couples Sessions
  • Video

How to Decrease Conflict and Increase Connection in Couples Sessions

Sesame Drama & Movement Therapy
  • Video

Sesame Drama & Movement Therapy

Exploring Macro Systems
  • Video

Exploring Macro Systems

Mindfulness-Based Relapse Prevention for Addictions: Volume I
  • Video

Mindfulness-Based Relapse Prevention for Addictions: Volume I