Entrenador
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Dr. Bruno CayounDirector | Entrenador | Investigador
El Dr. Bruno Cayoun es psicólogo clínico y principal desarrollador de la terapia cognitiva conductual integrada en Mindfulness (TCCMi). Es el director del Instituto TCCMi, un proveedor líder de capacitación y desarrollo profesional de TCCMi para servicios de salud mental y asociaciones profesionales a nivel internacional desde 2003.
Bruno tiene una práctica privada en Hobart, Australia, lleva a cabo investigaciones de atención plena en el Instituto TCCMi y supervisa varios estudios en colaboración con varias instituciones, incluidas la Universidad de Monash, la Universidad de Tasmania, la Universidad de Tecnología de Sydney y la Universidad de Massey. Ha practicado la meditación de atención plena y ha recibido un entrenamiento intensivo en Francia, Nepal, India y Australia desde 1989.
Bruno es autor de tres libros, que incluyen Terapia cognitivo-conductual con Mindfulness integrado: Principios y práctica (Wiley, 2011), MiCBT for Wellbeing & Personal Growth: Four Steps to Enhance Inner Calm, Self-Confidence and Relationships (Wiley, 2011). 2015) y coautor de Manual clínico de Terapia Cognitivo Conductual con mindfulness integrado (Wiley, 2018). Sus instrucciones de audio de entrenamiento de atención plena se utilizan en todo el mundo en varios idiomas, y es el principal desarrollador de cuestionarios, incluida la Evaluación de progreso breve y la Escala de autoeficacia basada en la atención plena .
Fecha
- 04 Mar 2023
- Finalizdo!
Hora
Australia / Hobart- 9:30 am - 11:30 am
Your Time
- Zona horaria: America/New_York
- Fecha: 03 Mar 2023
- Hora: 5:30 pm - 7:30 pm
CDP
Localidad
Más Información
MiCBT Masterclass 21: Recognising Stages of Insight during MiCBT

Precio
- AU$60
Overview
Much has been said about the potential “adverse effects” of mindfulness and the importance of using a trauma-informed mindfulness approach. However, the reasons for unpleasant experiences are often poorly understood and the bulk of the literature does not address the mechanisms underlying these effects. Similarly, there is virtually no explanation of the mechanisms underlying the very pleasurable experiences we typically encounter after several weeks of MiCBT or several days in a retreat context. Clinicians who are not trained in Buddhist psychology (Abhidhamma), or have learned about these mechanisms through a Vipassana or MiCBT retreat, may easily catastrophise undesired effects or get overly optimistic about blissful ones. This tends to reduce the deepening of insight and change in clients. It can also reduce the clinician’s initial enthusiasm for using MiCBT or other mindfulness approaches and the continuity of their own growing insight.
This masterclass will describe the expected experiences that meditators encounter as they progress through the well-established “Stages of Insight” (vipassana ñana), expressed in various ways by most respected teachers for more than 2000 years. You will be able to recognise how you have experienced some of these stages during your practice, and will relate to some of your clients’ positive or negative comments about their own. You can also use this information to improve your delivery of MiCBT.
You will learn:
• The typical stages of insight encountered during mindfulness meditation in the insight (Vipassana) traditions
• How MiCBT assists clients in developing stages of insight
• How to differentiate unpleasant experiences brought about by insight from symptoms of psychopathology
• How to normalise the effects of unpleasant experiences arising from insight across disorders
• How and when to explain stages of insight to clients
Q&A
This masterclass will end with a 20-minute online discussion and Q & A with Dr Cayoun. If you are unable to attend the online discussion or prefer not to ask questions publicly, you are encouraged to send any related questions you may have via the registration form. The name of attendees who send questions is kept completely confidential.