![]() ![]() This course ( 15 hours | 6 weeks | 15.75 CE / CME Credits) is for Mental Health Practitioners. When you enroll, you will receive o nline forum access with select EFT trainers and a free e-book copy of Attachment Theory in Practice. Sue Johnson and learn how the principles of attachment theory translate into organic, on-target interventions that allow therapists to create significant moments of change in every session. Grounded by 30 years of process and outcome research, Emotionally Focused Therapy takes the attachment perspective out of the research lab and into therapy sessions with individuals, couples, and families. Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) was developed in the 1980s as a form of couples therapy designed to be relatively short-term. Emotionally Focused Therapy for couples is a way of working with the distress that we all can feel in our relationships. Learn more Online Training for Mental Health Professionals ![]() Now, it’s your turn.īring the power of Emotionally Focused Therapy into your home and strengthen your most important relationship today. Our courses are delivered online, in real time. ![]() Grow your therapy skills with our supportive online learning experience. It’s used to treat depression, anxiety, and other mental health. Sue’s bestselling book and Hold Me Tight® workshops. We deliver select courses in Emotionally Focused Therapy, live-online, in English, for North American mental health professionals and students. Emotion focused therapy (EFT) is a type of therapeutic practice that focuses on the role of emotions in psychotherapeutic change. Thousands of couples around the world have benefitted from Dr. EFT is founded on a close and careful analysis of the mean- ings and contributions of emotion to human experience and change in psychotherapy. Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) is a form of short-term therapy that aims to improve couple relationships by rekindling the physical and emotional bond that can get sacrificed to disappointment in a partner and alienation from them, a common dynamic in distressed couples. ![]()
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