4.4 • 131 Ratings
🗓️ 26 March 2025
⏱️ 35 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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For many mental health professionals, exploration into a client’s relationship with spirituality is often left out or actively avoided. Could honest and open discussions about a client’s spiritual perspective help them reconnect to themselves and others while also alleviating their symptoms of stress, anxiety, and depression?
On this episode of Transforming Trauma, host Emily Ruth is honored to welcome Harvard psychologist, author, and educator David Rosmarin, PhD., to explore the connection between spirituality and mental health, modern psychology’s aversion to the topic, and the ancient Jewish wisdom behind the connections paradigm.Â
About David Rosmarin:
Dr. David H. Rosmarin is the director of the Spirituality and Mental Health Program at McLean Hospital and an associate professor of psychology in the Department of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. He earned his PhD in clinical psychology from Bowling Green State University, completed a predoctoral internship, and then pursued a postdoctoral fellowship at Harvard Medical School and McLean Hospital. Dr. Rosmarin studies the relevance of spirituality to mental health, and he innovates methods for clinicians to address this area of life. He has published over a hundred manuscripts, editorials, and chapters and served as co-editor of the Handbook of Spirituality, Religion, and Mental Health. Dr. Rosmarin's work is regularly featured by the media and has appeared on CNN, NPR, Scientific American, the Boston Globe, the Wall Street Journal, and the New York Times.
Learn More:
To read the full show notes and discover more resources, visit https://complextraumatrainingcenter.com/transformingtrauma
SPACE:
SPACE is an Inner Development Program of Support and Self-Discovery for Therapists on the Personal, Interpersonal, and Transpersonal Levels offered by the Complex Trauma Training Center. This experiential learning program offers an immersive group experience designed to cultivate space for self-care, community support, and deepening vitality in our professional role as therapists. Learn more about how to join.
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The Complex Trauma Training Center:
https://complextraumatrainingcenter.com
View upcoming trainings:
https://complextraumatrainingcenter.com/schedule/
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The Complex Trauma Training Center (CTTC) is a professional organization providing clinical training, education, consultation, and mentorship for psychotherapists and mental health professionals working with individuals and communities impacted by Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and Complex Trauma (C-PTSD).
CTTC provides NARM® Therapist and NARM® Master Therapist Training programs, as well as ongoing monthly groups in support of those learning NARM. CTTC offers a depth-oriented professional community for those seeking a supportive network of therapists focused on three levels of shared human experience: personal, interpersonal & transpersonal.Â
The Transforming Trauma podcast embodies the spirit of CTTC – best described by its three keywords: depth, connection, and heart - and offers guidance to those interested in effective, transformational trauma-informed care.
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0:00.0 | Welcome to the Transforming Trauma podcast. |
0:07.9 | Transforming Trauma is presented by the Complex Trauma Training Center. |
0:11.7 | I'm your host, Emily Ruth, and I'm so glad you've joined us today. |
0:16.0 | Are you a licensed mental health professional looking to deepen your clinical expertise in healing complex trauma? |
0:22.3 | We are thrilled to announce our summer 2025 NARM Therapist Training offering, designed to equip you with the transformative power of the neuro-effective relational model. |
0:32.3 | The summer online cohort for the NARM Therapist's training runs from May to December 2025. |
0:38.7 | Through this advanced clinical training, you'll learn how to confidently and compassionately heal the impact of |
0:43.8 | adverse childhood experiences, complex trauma, and CPDSD. You'll gain specialized trauma-informed |
0:50.1 | training that supports the resolution of attachment, developmental, relational, cultural, and |
0:55.5 | intergenerational trauma. Join us and experience the integration of the neurobiologically informed |
1:01.3 | clinical approach that promotes post-traumatic growth, become part of a community where mindfulness |
1:06.5 | meets clinical expertise, and embody professional and personal growth with a catalyst for transformation |
1:12.0 | in your practice and community. Visit Complex Trauma Training Center.com to register for the |
1:18.0 | summer 2025 NARM Therapist Training. Enrollment is open to licensed psychotherapists, counselors, |
1:24.2 | social workers, and other licensed mental health professionals, as well as graduate |
1:27.8 | trainees and interns working toward licensure. And now for our interview. Dr. David H. Rosmarin is the |
1:38.2 | director of the spirituality and mental health program at McLean Hospital and an associate |
1:42.9 | professor of psychology in the |
1:44.6 | Department of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. He received his PhD in clinical psychology |
1:49.9 | from Bowling Green State University, and he completed a pre-doctoral internship and a post-doctoral |
1:55.5 | fellowship at Harvard Medical School and McLean Hospital. Dr. Rosmarin studies the relevance of spirituality to mental health, |
2:02.8 | and he innovates methods for clinicians to address this area of life. He has published over 100 |
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