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X-WR-CALNAME:American Psychoanalytic Association
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://apsa.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for American Psychoanalytic Association
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251205T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251205T200000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125206
CREATED:20251008T220546Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251009T153432Z
UID:20000667-1764959400-1764964800@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Sun\, Soil and Rain: Research on Patient Growth in Psychotherapy
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Brin Grenyer\, PhD \nThe Sheila Hafter Gray Memorial Lecture is underwritten by ACPEinc and honors Dr. Gray’s role in advancing the importance of psychoanalytic education. \nThe mechanisms of patient change have been described in detail by prominent psychoanalytic thinkers over the last 130 years. These descriptions form the basis for analytic training and are often grounded in the wisdom learnt from single case studies. Along with these papers on technique is a growing set of empirical research studies demonstrating psychoanalytic psychotherapy across multiple groups of patients is an effective treatment for mental health disorders. In parallel to these traditional therapy descriptions and outcome studies\, has been another form of research: psychotherapy process research. Process-outcome studies aim to discover if patient changes observed in treatment can be understood in more detail using validated research measures applied to empirical data – usually transcripts of audio or video from therapy sessions. This talk overviews 30 years of studies from the author’s and other research groups that includes studies of transference\, attachment\, mastery of self-understanding and self-control\, and emotional and cognitive change. Recent work will be highlighted describing changes in Erikson’s psychosocial maturity conflicts – particularly the resolution of Mistrust and Constraint and growth of Industry and Affiliation studied over 5 years of treatment for patients meeting criteria for Borderline Personality Disorder. A final reflection will be learnings from a subsample of patients who do not improve over time.
URL:https://apsa.org/event/sun-soil-and-rain-research-on-patient-growth-in-psychotherapy/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251204T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251204T190000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125206
CREATED:20251205T142605Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251205T142605Z
UID:20000703-1764874800-1764874800@apsa.org
SUMMARY:A Symbol and Sandplay Presentation: Castles in the Sand and Psyche
DESCRIPTION:Presented by: JoAnn Ponder\, PhD\nThis special presentation will examine castles as historical structures in reality and as symbols that may appear in sandplay therapy with children or adults. Castles are magnificent structures that capture our collective imagination. My own fascination with them began when I was a young child living in Darmstadt\, Germany. From the third-floor balcony of my family’s apartment\, I could see the ruins of Frankenstein’s Castle atop a nearby mountain. There are ruins of these medieval structures all over Europe\, originally built by wealthy barons as fortified residences to defend against attack. While castles are not endemic to the U.S.\, their distinctive architectural features have been revered and copied. As such\, there are even a few castles in Austin\, Texas\, the city where I currently reside. Based on the history and purpose of these structures\, they have come to symbolize power\, protection\, refuge\, wealth\, and status. They also serve as metaphors for the mind\, for example\, its defenses and resources. Not surprisingly\, castles may appear in clients’ sandplay scenes.
URL:https://apsa.org/event/a-symbol-and-sandplay-presentation-castles-in-the-sand-and-psyche/
LOCATION:Virtual
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251202T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251202T220000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125206
CREATED:20250926T222305Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251009T153301Z
UID:20000649-1764705600-1764712800@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Neuroqueering the Psychoanalytic Lens
DESCRIPTION:Diana Moga\, MD\, PhD and Robert Glick\, MD\nThis presentation explores how the framework of neuroqueering—a concept rooted in neurodiversity and queer theory—invites a radical reconsideration of foundational psychoanalytic concepts such as identity\, subjectivity\, normativity\, and development. By centering lived experiences of neurodivergent and queer individuals\, this talk interrogates the implicit assumptions of the analytic frame and challenges psychoanalysis to reexamine its historical investments in normative development\, binary gender theory\, and the medicalization of difference. \nDrawing on clinical material\, literary theory\, and contemporary scholarship\, the speaker will propose a reorientation of psychoanalytic thinking that embraces multiplicity\, nonlinearity\, and neurodivergent epistemologies. The discussant will offer reflections on clinical implications\, including how neuroqueering perspectives may reshape our understanding of transference\, diagnosis\, and therapeutic goals. \nThis session aims to provoke rich interdisciplinary dialogue at the intersection of psychoanalysis\, disability studies\, queer theory\, and contemporary clinical practice.
URL:https://apsa.org/event/neuroqueering-the-psychoanalytic-lens-2/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
ORGANIZER;CN="The Association for Psychoanalytic Medicine (APM) (NY)":MAILTO:admin@theapmnewyork.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251202T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251202T220000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125206
CREATED:20250902T151851Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250902T170218Z
UID:20000638-1764705600-1764712800@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Neuroqueering the Psychoanalytic Lens
DESCRIPTION:This presentation explores how the framework of neuroqueering—a concept rooted in neurodiversity and queer theory—invites a radical reconsideration of foundational psychoanalytic concepts such as identity\, subjectivity\, normativity\, and development. By centering lived experiences of neurodivergent and queer individuals\, this talk interrogates the implicit assumptions of the analytic frame and challenges psychoanalysis to reexamine its historical investments in normative development\, binary gender theory\, and the medicalization of difference. \nDrawing on clinical material\, literary theory\, and contemporary scholarship\, the speaker will propose a reorientation of psychoanalytic thinking that embraces multiplicity\, nonlinearity\, and neurodivergent epistemologies. The discussant will offer reflections on clinical implications\, including how neuroqueering perspectives may reshape our understanding of transference\, diagnosis\, and therapeutic goals. \nThis session aims to provoke rich interdisciplinary dialogue at the intersection of psychoanalysis\, disability studies\, queer theory\, and contemporary clinical practice. \nCE
URL:https://apsa.org/event/neuroqueering-the-psychoanalytic-lens/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
ORGANIZER;CN="The Association for Psychoanalytic Medicine (APM) (NY)":MAILTO:admin@theapmnewyork.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251122T114500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251122T114500
DTSTAMP:20260711T125206
CREATED:20251205T142608Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251205T142608Z
UID:20000708-1763811900-1763811900@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Sadomasochism; Understanding and Working  ?with the Self-Defeating Patient
DESCRIPTION:Self-defeating behaviors are present to some degree in every psychodynamic treatment. We will explore ways in which sadomasochism manifests\, particularly in the transference/countertransference arena. The developmental roots and psychodynamic underpinnings will be illuminated through clinical examples. A contemporary understanding via Neuropsychoanalysis will explore self-defeating behavior as a problem with the PLAY instinct\, leading to impairment in the ability to collaborate. The goal will be to fortify practitioners for what are often long and difficult treatments.
URL:https://apsa.org/event/sadomasochism-understanding-and-working-with-the-self-defeating-patient-2/
LOCATION:Virtual
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251122T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251122T130000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125206
CREATED:20250918T200147Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250918T211814Z
UID:20000644-1763805600-1763816400@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Cultural Competence Conference: Misogyny Then and Now: Implications for Psychoanalytic Perspectives
DESCRIPTION:Please join WBCP with COWAP North America (Committee on Women and Psychoanalysis\, International Psychoanalytical Association (IPA)) for: \nMisogyny Then and Now: Implications for Psychoanalytic Perspectives \nPresented by:\nSpecial Guest\, filmmaker\, Jennifer Reeves\, Margarita Cereijido\, PhD\,\nPaula Ellman\, PhD\, David Joseph\, MD\, Janice Lieberman\, PhD \nSaturday\, November 22\, 2025\n10:00 am – 1:00 pm (3 CME/CE)\nPresentation and Discussion via Zoom \nPresentation:\nNotions of the feminine and misogyny have changed significantly since the 1960s. These changes are reflected in how women perceive themselves and how they are understood and positioned in society. \nIn this conference\, we discuss and compare the unconscious gender ideals and prejudices of the 1960s with those of today. We explore the evolution of the ethical treatment of women as well as developments in psychotherapy and psychoanalytic technique. \nOur discussion is framed by the classic documentary Approaches to Psychotherapy (1964) which has recently been reimagined in a new film\, The Gloria of My Imagination (2025)\, by the talented award-winning film-director Jennifer Reeves. In her film\, Reeves explores the social context of Gloria’s life. \nThe original film captured the work of three renowned figures—Carl Rogers\, Fritz Perls\, and Albert Ellis—in their sessions with Gloria\, a newly divorced patient. For decades\, it served as a cornerstone in the training of psychology students worldwide. \nAlong with Reeves’ reflections on her film through screening selected clips\, Margarita Cereijido\, Paula Ellman\, Janice Lieberman and David Joseph present and discuss changing perspectives on femininity\, misogyny\, and psychoanalytic theory and technique followed by engagement with the audience. \nAttendees will have access to the complete film 2 weeks prior to the conference. \nRegistration Link: https://wbcp.memberclicks.net/reg_cultural_competence_11-22-25#/ \nFor more information view the full program flyer: https://wbcp.memberclicks.net/assets/docs/PR/25-26/Cultural%20Competence%20with%20COWAP%20flier%2011-22-25%28No%29.pdf
URL:https://apsa.org/event/cultural-competence-conference-misogyny-then-and-now-implications-for-psychoanalytic-perspectives/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251121T125000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251121T135000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125206
CREATED:20251008T220546Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251009T153058Z
UID:20000666-1763729400-1763733000@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Working with Infertility Patients through a Psychoanalytic Lens
DESCRIPTION:Presenters: Golzar Naghshineh\, MS\, LP\, CGP\, and Nancy Kaufman\, LCSW\, LP – While addressing behavioral needs and surface level fears and anxieties is crucial in helping patients who struggle with infertility\, it is also crucial that we help patients process their deeper unconscious (and often conflicting) feelings around treatment\, failure\, loss\, inadequacy\, and successful pregnancy. This presentation will address (i) the important role the unconscious plays in infertility patients’ mental health (and how the therapy needs to be a safe place for the patient to say everything without restraint); (ii) new theories that explore how infertility\, Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART) and loss impact the psyche of this specific population; (iii) the role transference and countertransference play in helping our patients explore all of their feelings around ART and how the therapist can be helped to tolerate those feelings. Case presentation will be used to illustrate seven psychoanalytic concepts in practice with ART patients.
URL:https://apsa.org/event/working-with-infertility-patients-through-a-psychoanalytic-lens/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251120T203000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251120T220000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125206
CREATED:20250820T175907Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250820T192755Z
UID:20000619-1763670600-1763676000@apsa.org
SUMMARY:When the risk of targeted violence enters the psychotherapeutic relationship
DESCRIPTION:Presented by: J. Reid Meloy\, PhD \nAlthough criminal violence in the United States has been incrementally decreasing for the past forty years\, the incidence of targeted mass attacks has been increasing during the past decade. How can the psychoanalyst or psychotherapist assess the risk of such an attack by their patient–or when should the patient be referred for an evaluation–in the course of treatment? In this presentation\, Dr. Meloy will teach the proximal warning behaviors for targeted attacks that he and his group have been researching for the past 15 years\, and are now widely used by both members of law enforcement and mental health communities within North America\, Europe\, and Australia. Research has validated these efforts\, and such proximal warning behaviors reflect both the importance of empiricism and psychodynamic formulations in the assessment of such risks. \nCE.
URL:https://apsa.org/event/when-the-risk-of-targeted-violence-enters-the-psychotherapeutic-relationship/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251120T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251120T190000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125206
CREATED:20251024T182542Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251024T182542Z
UID:20000686-1763665200-1763665200@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Journey: Race Riot 1919-Racial Enactment 2006-Racial Reparations Beginning 2023
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Therese Ragen\, PhD  \nThis lecture will present the journey of a descendant of one of the leaders of the 1919 Chicago race riot in which dozens of people were killed\, hundreds wounded and some thousand homes of Black people were burned down. The journey traced in the presentation is from the 1919 race riot to a racial enactment between a White psychologist/psychoanalyst and a Black patient in 2006 to the presenter’s involvement (since 2023) in racial reparations in the Chicago neighborhood in which the riot occurred. \nRegistration is required. Event will not be recorded.
URL:https://apsa.org/event/journey-race-riot-1919-racial-enactment-2006-racial-reparations-beginning-2023/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251118T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251118T190000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20251024T182524Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251024T182524Z
UID:20000674-1763492400-1763492400@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Ryan Nolen
DESCRIPTION:An Introduction to Applications of Psychodynamic Psychotherapy in Medical Settings: The Successful Resolution of a Conversion Symptom by Psychoanalytic Technique in the ER Presented by Micah Knobles
URL:https://apsa.org/event/ryan-nolen/
LOCATION:CA
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251115T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251115T140000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20251024T182527Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251031T205129Z
UID:20000682-1763208000-1763215200@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Stephen Seligman\, MD - Holding and Containing
DESCRIPTION:“Holding and Containing: The Metaphor of the Baby in Winnicott\, Bion\, and Klein
URL:https://apsa.org/event/stephen-seligman-md/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251115T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251115T140000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20251008T220532Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251009T145748Z
UID:20000661-1763208000-1763215200@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Psychoanalysis Creativity and the Arts: Session 2: “Creativity and Resiliency”
DESCRIPTION:Session 2 of 3 \n“Creativity and Resiliency” \nPresented by\nRosa Aurora Chavez\, MD\, PhD\, FABP \nSaturday\, November 15\, 2025\,\n12:00 – 2:00pm (2 CME/CE)\nPresentation and Discussion via Zoom \nPresentation:\nIn this seminar (in English) we will discuss the evolutionary relevance of creativity for resiliency form psychodynamic and neuropsychoanalytic perspectives. \nRegistration Link: https://wbcp.memberclicks.net/reg_psy_creativity_arts_25-26#/ \nFlyer: https://wbcp.memberclicks.net/assets/docs/PR/25-26/Psychoanalysis%20Creativity%20and%20the%20Arts%202025_26%20flier%20Multi-Session%20program%20%28B%29.pdf
URL:https://apsa.org/event/psychoanalysis-creativity-and-the-arts-session-2-creativity-and-resiliency/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251115T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251115T100000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20250926T222305Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251009T145549Z
UID:20000647-1763200800-1763200800@apsa.org
SUMMARY:The Body Keeps the Score: Trauma\, Attachment\, and Neuroscience
DESCRIPTION:with Dr. Bessel van der Kolk
URL:https://apsa.org/event/the-body-keeps-the-score-trauma-attachment-and-neuroscience/
LOCATION:In-Person: North Carolina State University\, Raleigh\, NC\, Raleigh\, NC\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251114T230000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251115T003000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20251024T182942Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251031T204040Z
UID:20000697-1763161200-1763166600@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Film & Mind: Nickel Boys
DESCRIPTION:RaMell Ross’s Nickel Boys (2024) is based on Colson Whitehead’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about two African-American boys sent to an abusive reform school in 1960s Florida. Shot entirely from first-person perspective\, the film explores institutional trauma\, systemic racism\, friendship\, resilience\, and the long-term psychological effects of childhood abuse. The story is inspired by the real Dozier School for Boys\, where extensive abuse occurred for over a century. \nThe film vividly portrays the brutality and dehumanization experienced by Black boys at Nickel Academy\, a fictional institution inspired by real-life abuses in reform schools in the Jim Crow South. This experience reflects a pervasive and ongoing racial trauma that continues to impact individuals and communities. Examining the psychological toll on the main characters can help in understanding how systemic racism inflicts lasting wounds on the psyche\, impacting development\, interpersonal relationships\, and a sense of self and belonging. \nThe narrative also highlights contrasting approaches to surviving and resisting oppression. Analyzing their individual and combined journeys helps recognize the diverse ways individuals navigate trauma and maintain self-worth amidst systemic injustice. \nFinally\, the Nickel Academy operates as a microcosm of larger societal structures\, revealing how power can be wielded to perpetuate racial hierarchies and maintain secrecy around abuse. Examining these power dynamics sheds light on the interplay between individual experiences and the broader societal forces that shape them. \nDiscussants:\nDebra J. Myers\, MD is a graduate of Harvard Medical School. She has a private practice in psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy in West Los Angeles\, serving adults and adolescents. She was a biology major at Stanford University and did a residency in Internal Medicine at Stanford Medical Center. Her training in Pulmonary Disease and Critical Care Medicine was at UCSF. While on the faculty at Wayne State University School of Medicine\, she earned an MS in Biostatistics and Clinical Research Design at the University of Michigan School of Public Health. She trained in Psychoanalysis at the Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis in Los Angeles. There she combined medical training with her humanistic interests and lifelong interest in the human mind. During her psychoanalytic training\, she spent five years as a volunteer telephone counselor at the Didi Hirsch Suicide Crisis Line. She spent two years as an intern therapist at the Valley Community Clinic\, a facility serving the underserved. \nChauncey K. Robinson is an award-winning journalist and film critic. Born and raised in Newark\, New Jersey\, she has a strong love for storytelling and history. She believes narrative greatly influences the way we see the world\, which is why she’s all about dissecting and analyzing stories and culture to help inform and empower the people. \nCE
URL:https://apsa.org/event/film-mind-nickel-boys-2/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251114T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251114T203000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20251008T220546Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251009T145313Z
UID:20000665-1763143200-1763152200@apsa.org
SUMMARY:The Pseudo-Self
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Gila Ashtor\, PhD\, LP – There is a type of patient who haunts psychoanalysis from the margins\, never settling into existing diagnostic categories but never completely disappearing either. Variously referred to as “normotic” (Bollas\, 1987\, McDougall\, 1978\, 1985)\, “false self” (Winnicott\, 1960)\, and the “as if” personality (Deutsch\, 1942)\, this patient confounds conventional classificatory schemas because while ostensibly high-functioning\, verbal\, cooperative\, with reality-testing intact and not necessarily any major trauma history\, it eventually emerges that something fundamental – the capacity to feel their feelings – is missing\, dysfunctional\, non-existent. It can be nearly impossible to detect the problem\, not least because an “absence” is its defining feature\, but also because the patient rarely complains about the problem (of not feeling their feelings) either. Whereas under ordinary circumstances\, the patient’s emotional dissatisfactions are the engine propelling treatment forward\, however ambivalently and inconsistently (Freud\, 1937)\, in these cases\, the patient suffers from a mechanical problem of precisely this kind – a disconnection from authentic feelings – that makes the awareness of dissatisfaction elusive and unlikely. \nIn what follows\, I focus on the “pseudo-self” – a particular variation of dissociative organization in which normality and functionality camouflage the absence of emotional authenticity. I explore the connection between this unique personality organization and today’s neoliberal regime where disconnection\, speed\, and efficiency are hailed as the optimal features of successful personhood. Our field’s continued inability to reckon with the pervasive problems of the “pseudo-self” makes us complicit with a damaged culture that is dehumanizing and disconnected.
URL:https://apsa.org/event/the-pseudo-self/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251114T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251114T173000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20250926T222305Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251009T144220Z
UID:20000651-1763136000-1763141400@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Psychoanalytic Takes On Cinema: Session 1 of 3: Discussion of the film “The Thing”
DESCRIPTION:Session 1 of 3 \n*** Film must be viewed prior to event. *** \nDiscussion of the film “The Thing” \nFriday\, November 14\, 2025\n4:00 pm – 5:30 pm\nVia Zoom \n1982 (109 min)\nDirector: John Carpenter\nDiscussant: Alex Smith\, Psy.D. \nA research team in Antarctica is hunted by a shape-shifting alien that assumes the appearance of its victims. \nPresentation: At surface level fantastical\, appalling\, and occasionally comical\, horror renders that which is unthinkable or unspeakable into inhuman\, slimy\, or spectral forms\, presenting the taboo or the overwhelming at a safe\, controllable distance from the self. In horror\, unthinkable and unspeakable aspects of the “self” can be experienced as the monstrous “other” and exorcised with flamethrowers. The horror movie generates credibility through performance\, photography\, and effects that ground the viewer in a “reality” that can then become credibly unreal. This magical reality evokes archaic experiences of the self as unbounded and vulnerable\, taking on challenging\, unsettling thoughts and feelings while allowing for the suspension of the neatly boundaried “I” of the viewer. \nJohn Carpenter’s The Thing belongs to a rich tradition of paranoia and body horror in the uncanny narrative and horror cinema. The self\, here under the condition of isolation and environmental confusion\, becomes vulnerable to external corruption. The un-integrable impulse is cast off\, producing a disintegrated state. Then\, in the presence of an alien “other”\, the once familiar body is usurped. The mind is subsumed. The “me” becomes a “me” copy that is at once terrifying and terrified\, its sole purpose being to consume additional “others.” The Thing is an allegory for the mental mechanisms of unbounded consciousness: not only the body\, but also the psychological boundaries constituting the self\, are at risk. \nIn working on this allegory\, we will briefly touch on horror cinema’s enduring interest in paranoia and the unbounded consciousness. We will consider Clara Keane’s clairvoyant work on existential permeability and Andre Green’s psychic envelopes as regards their explanatory power for experiences of unbounded consciousness\, paranoia\, and uncanny encounters. We will see how The Thing\, as an apex of creeptastic cinema\, resonates with our own experiences—both archaic and present-day—of the fragility of our distinct\, boundaried sense of a “me”\, and why it matters. \nDiscussant: Alex Smith\, PsyD\, is the Director of the Psychology Department at the Psychiatric Institute of Washington. He completed his MFA at the New School for Social Research\, his PsyD at the George Washington University\, and his internship and postdoctoral fellowship at the New York Psychoanalytic Society and Institute. Alex is the author of the novella HIVE\, and his stories and poems have appeared in various small publications and anthologies\, the most recent being The New Flesh: A Literary Tribute to David Cronenberg. \nPre-registration is required via the WBCP website at http://wbcp.org. If you do not have an account on the WBCP website\, you will need to create a “guest account” to register and view/print your CME/CE credit certificate after the seminar. For registration assistance\, contact the WBCP at 301-470-3635/ 410-792-8060 / 202-237-1854 or admin@wbcp.org \nRegistration Link: https://wbcp.memberclicks.net/reg_psy_cinema_25-26 \nFull Program Link: https://wbcp.memberclicks.net/assets/docs/PR/25-26/11-14-25%20Psychoanalytic%20Takes%20on%20the%20Cinema%20-%20The%20Thing.pdf
URL:https://apsa.org/event/psychoanalytic-takes-on-cinema-session-1-of-3-discussion-of-the-film-the-thing/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251113T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251113T190000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20251205T142605Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251205T142605Z
UID:20000701-1763060400-1763060400@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Borderline Personality Disorder: The Biography of a Personality Disorder
DESCRIPTION:In this book discussion\, we will discuss Borderline: The Biography of a Personality Disorder (Beacon Press\, 2024)\, authored by Alexander Kriss\, PhD. The presentation will consist of a conversation between the author and J. Christopher Fowler\, PhD. Drawing on psychoanalytic theory\, patient narratives\, and shifts in psychiatric authority from antiquity to present day\, the book explores how BPD emerged as a diagnostic concept and what its persistence reveals about the changing boundaries of identity\, suffering\, and care. The discussion will reflect on the tensions between diagnosis and personhood\, the role of psychoanalysis in shaping and responding to BPD\, and the ethical stakes of treating a condition so often marginalized—even within mental health systems.
URL:https://apsa.org/event/borderline-personality-disorder-the-biography-of-a-personality-disorder/
LOCATION:Virtual
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251108T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251108T140000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20251024T181838Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251024T181939Z
UID:20000673-1762603200-1762610400@apsa.org
SUMMARY:APsA Candidates' Council Seminar: The Power of Music in "Peter and the Wolf"
DESCRIPTION:Instructor: Julie Jaffee Nagel\, Ph.D.\, psychologist\, psychoanalyst & musician \nThe Power of Music as Heard in Peter’s Psychological Development in “Peter and the Wolf” (Sergei Prokofiev\, Composer) \nThis presentation will emphasize through both words and music the power of music in our lives by discussing both words and music about how Prokofiev told a story about a young boy developing into a late confident adolescent. It includes a performance of Prokofiev’s beloved composition “Peter and the Wolf” as a musical illustration. \nWe will explore how music and psychoanalytic concepts inform and enrich each other and “speak” to all of us about growing up. \nClick to view the Flyer  |  Click to Register \nRegistration is required. Sessions will not be recorded. \nSaturday\, November 8\, 2025\, 12 – 2 PM ET \nThe Candidates Online Seminar Series events are a benefit of APsA Membership for its In-Training Members.\nNot an APsA In-Training Member? To learn more & join\, visit apsa.org/in-training \n 
URL:https://apsa.org/event/apsa-candidates-council-seminar-the-power-of-music-in-peter-and-the-wolf/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251107T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251107T143000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20251024T182524Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251024T201556Z
UID:20000675-1762520400-1762525800@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Alumni Group Roundtable Discussion - Child Analysis
DESCRIPTION:Child Analysis
URL:https://apsa.org/event/alumni-group-roundtable-discussion-child-analysis/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251104T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251104T213000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20251008T220601Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251009T142557Z
UID:20000669-1762286400-1762291800@apsa.org
SUMMARY:How the Sense of Self Breaks Down and Recovers in Neurosis and Psychosis with Andrew Lotterman\, MD
DESCRIPTION:In this presentation Dr. Lotterman documents the extensive overlap between the symptoms and psychology of neurotic and psychotic patients. He portrays the way the sense of self falls apart\, and its possible recovery in psychological therapy. Areas of convergence between neurosis and psychosis include: the fragmenting of the sense of self\, the sense of aloneness in the world\, the loss of identity\, the presence of an internal and often hostile inner figure and the creation of a camouflaged surrogate self to draw the fire of attackers. Dr. Lotterman also highlights the essential supports of the self’s resilience: the acceptance by caregivers of what is genuine about the self\, and the appreciation of the value of the love given by the self. He discusses Winnicott’s and Fairbairn’s contributions to these ideas. He also describes paranoid psychology in terms of a fear of being seduced into the experience of annihilation. Finally\, he emphasizes that understanding the areas of common psychology shared by both neurosis and psychosis can lead to better informed treatments of each.
URL:https://apsa.org/event/how-the-sense-of-self-breaks-down-and-recovers-in-neurosis-and-psychosis-with-andrew-lotterman-md/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
ORGANIZER;CN="The Association for Psychoanalytic Medicine (APM) (NY)":MAILTO:admin@theapmnewyork.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251101T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251101T200000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20251024T182743Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251024T201145Z
UID:20000693-1762016400-1762027200@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Model Minority and Its Discontents: Understanding the Asian American Experience
DESCRIPTION:Model Minority and Its Discontents: Understanding the Asian American Experience\nThis presentation offers a psychoanalytic exploration of the Asian American experience.? Asian Americans comprise 7% of the total US population; yet\, they remain largely invisible and unknown to Americans and American psychoanalysis\, except for being perceived as a Model Minority. ?The Model Minority myth leads to the illusion that Asian Americans are successfully folded into the American national fabric.? \nWe will examine how this illusion of inclusion obscures the othering of Asian Americans and explore the psychological effects of dissociating from experiences of othering. \nWe will discuss the trauma origins of the Model Minority position\, from anti-Asian racism\, past and present (i.e.\,?the incarceration of 120\,000 Japanese American individuals during WWII)\, to the unresolved historical and cultural traumas (i.e.\, genocides\, wars\, poverty\, authoritarian governments) carried by immigrants from Asia and intergenerationally transmitted to their Asian American children. Some immigrants unconsciously attempt to resolve their historic traumas carried from Asia by a manic pursuit of the American Dream.? \nThe presentation concludes with a discussion of the legacy of cultural dissociation among the psychoanalytic founders on contemporary racial minority patients\, including Asian Americans. \nKris Yi\, PhD\, PsyD is a psychoanalyst and a clinical psychologist in Pasadena\, California\, with over thirty years of clinical\, teaching\, and supervisory experience. She is a faculty member and training/supervising analyst at the Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis and the Newport Psychoanalytic Institute. Her scholarship focuses on the intersections of psychoanalysis\, race\, and culture\, with particular attention to Asian American subjectivity and racial trauma. Dr. Yi is a frequently invited speaker at national conferences and a committed advocate for culturally responsive psychoanalysis. She serves as an Associate Editor of The Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association (JAPA). Under her initiative\, JAPA is publishing a special issue on Asian American experiences\, due out in December of 2025. As a Korean American who immigrated to America in her teens\, she is pleased to be part of an emerging discourse in Asian American experiences within American psychoanalysis. \nDiscussant:\nTina Nguyen\, MD is currently an Advanced Clinical Associate at the New Center for Psychoanalysis. Graduating from Temple University at the early age of 18\, she continued at Temple University School of Medicine to obtain her medical degree. Dr. Nguyen completed residency in General Psychiatry at Mount Sinai Beth Israel in New York City\, where she was actively involved in research\, receiving state-wide recognition for her work as a resident. She then completed her Child & Adolescent Psychiatry fellowship at SUNY Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn\, NY\, and had the honor of serving as a chief resident. Dr. Nguyen has had faculty appointments at 2 academic institutions\, including Mount Sinai Beth Israel and USC Keck School of Medicine.
URL:https://apsa.org/event/model-minority-and-its-discontents-understanding-the-asian-american-experience/
LOCATION:Hybrid (Virtual & Inperson: New Center for Psychoanalysis – LA)\, 2014 Sawtelle Bvld\, Los Angeles\, CA\, 90025\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251101T084500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251101T164500
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20250926T222305Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251009T140055Z
UID:20000650-1761986700-1762015500@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Observational Studies Program Conference: Exploring the Links: Moving from Observation to Transformative Interventions – Jeanne Magagna\, PhD
DESCRIPTION:Exploring the Links: Moving from Observation to Transformative Interventions \nWe are excited to announce our upcoming conference with\nJeanne Magagna\, PhD\,\nTavistock Centre-trained Child\, Adolescent and Adult Psychotherapist\nLondon\, UK \nSaturday\, November 1\, 2025\nGeorge Washington University Hospital Auditorium\n8:45 am – 4:45 pm ET\n6 CME/CE \nDr. Magagna’s work emphasizes the transformative power of observing babies\, a skill she has taught worldwide based on the Tavistock Clinic model. This approach has profound implications for enhancing our understanding of children and their families\, illustrating how early observation can deepen parents’ comprehension of their children. Her commitment to this method led to the development of a specialized nursery in Rome. She teaches and publishes internationally. Jeanne is the Joint Editor of various books including Intimate Transformations: Babies with their Families\, Psychotherapy with Families\, Being Present for Your Nursery Age Child and The Silent Child: Communication without Words\, Creativity and Psychotic States and Contemporary Child Psychotherapy. She is also the author of The Psychotherapeutic Understanding of Children and Adolescents with Eating Difficulties. \nHer most impactful work\, “The Silent Child: Communication Without Words\,” explores the challenges of treating 19 comatose non-verbal children in talking therapies. Magagna’s approach to psychotherapy is grounded in her early life experiences and the inspiration she drew from Esther Bick\, the originator of infant observation. Her journey from learning the craft under Bick’s tutelage to becoming a globally recognized educator and clinician underscores her passion and dedication to child mental health. \nClick the link for a personal invitation from Dr. Magagna and learn more about the upcoming conference: https://youtu.be/WIaCjK9V1ag \nRegistration Link: https://wbcp.memberclicks.net/reg_osp_conference_11-1-25 \nProgram Flyer: https://wbcp.memberclicks.net/assets/docs/PR/25-26/OSP%20Conference%2011-1-25.pdf
URL:https://apsa.org/event/observational-studies-program-conference-exploring-the-links-moving-from-observation-to-transformative-interventions-jeanne-magagna-phd/
LOCATION:In Person; George Washington Hospital Auditorium: 900 23rd St NW\, Washington\, DC 20037\, 900 23rd St NW\, Washington\, DC\, 20037\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251027T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251027T213000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20250820T175907Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250820T185652Z
UID:20000618-1761595200-1761600600@apsa.org
SUMMARY:The Persistence of Patriarchy: How Did We Get Here?
DESCRIPTION:Presented by: Carol Gilligan\, PhD \nIn a special presentation for HPS\, renowned social psychologist and feminist Carol Gilligan\, PhD will explore the roots of patriarchy and its persistence in contemporary American political and social life. She is best known for her groundbreaking book\, In a Different Voice\, published in 1982 and described by Harvard University Press as “the little book that started a revolution.” The book challenged traditional views of moral development\, asserting that women tend to prioritize an “ethic of care” focusing on relationships and responsibility\, whereas men typically favor an “ethic of justice” based on rights and rules. In subsequent publications\, Gilligan connected her developmental research with Bowlby’s studies of attachment to describe how gender roles of patriarchal masculinity and femininity are internalized and upheld (Gilligan & Snider\, 2017). She asserted that females sacrificed their voices as the price of maintaining relationships\, and their silence and men’s violence perpetuated a patriarchal order (Gilligan\, 2018). Forty years after the publication of In a Different Voice\, its gendered assumptions seem outdated. Gilligan subsequently revised her ideas\, presented in her new book In a Human Voice (2023). She asserts that the gender binary and its construction of human capacities as either masculine or feminine is a distortion of reality that is foundational to patriarchy. Though care ethics were initially construed as feminine\, Gilligan now views them as a human voice of resistance to patriarchy and an act of liberation. \nCE.
URL:https://apsa.org/event/the-persistence-of-patriarchy-how-did-we-get-here/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251027T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251027T133000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20250902T151835Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250902T165934Z
UID:20000631-1761566400-1761571800@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Writing Workshop - Poets\, Artists\, and Analysts
DESCRIPTION:6 Mondays | Oct 27 – Dec 8 | Presented by: Erica Ehrenberg\, Licensed Psychoanalyst\, MFA \nIn this course we will discuss\, respond to\, and write together from the work of artists\, writers\, and analysts in order to explore the connections between their work\, and the creative forces behind psychic change. What does it mean to gain insight— into the world\, into ourselves—and what happens after the insight is articulated\, in therapy\, and in everyday life? How do we translate insight into transformation\, how do we find insight through transformation\, and how might the creative process be a way to make space for these questions? How might the imaginative terrain provide a key to accessing the unconscious and to understanding how change is enacted? Poets\, artists\, and analysts we will consider include Philip Guston\, Louise Bourgeois\, Christopher Bollas\, Joyce McDougall\, Francesca Woodman\, Agnes Martin\, Emily Dickinson\, and Sigmund Freud. \nCE
URL:https://apsa.org/event/writing-workshop-poets-artists-and-analysts/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251025T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251025T160000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20251008T220527Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251009T135611Z
UID:20000653-1761400800-1761408000@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Can Psychoanalysts Listen to Each Other?
DESCRIPTION:The 2 recent explosions within the Program Committee and then within the American Psychoanalytic Association are examined\, from an insider’s perspective\, as analysts’ difficulties with listening to each other. Analysts’ anxiety with erotic excitement\, especially with racial erotics\, even when used for self-affirmation\, is discussed. So too is the need for Othering and the need for those who have been Othered to validate themselves\, using anger for self-affirmation. Not primarily psychoanalytic ethics\, ethics for psychoanalysts\, but human ethics\, valuing of the other\, of our relationship with the other\, becomes the pathway for psychoanalysts to listen to the other. Emmanuel Levinas and his psychoanalytic elaborator\, Viviane Chetrit-Vatine\, are seen as triumphing over their own personal Holocaust trauma via their model of ethical behavior with others. Frantz Fanon\, Albert Memmi\, Edward Said\, Mahmoud Darwish\, Judith Butler\, and Stephen Frosh help us get there. The author emphasizes our failures\, including his own.
URL:https://apsa.org/event/can-psychoanalysts-listen-to-each-other/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251025T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251025T140000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20251008T220527Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251009T135304Z
UID:20000655-1761393600-1761400800@apsa.org
SUMMARY:“Case of Infantile Trauma and Resilience" (Nancy Kulish. Ph.D.)
DESCRIPTION:Nancy Kulish Ph.D\nEducational objectives:\n1. Describe how early infantile trauma can be expressed in bodily symptoms or replayed in a person’s behavior.\n2. Identify how the manifestations and symptoms of early infantile trauma appear in the transference and countertransference in psychotherapy or psychoanalysis.\n3. Discuss how to relate to and empathize with traumatized patients. \nCE
URL:https://apsa.org/event/case-of-infantile-trauma-and-resilience-nancy-kulish-ph-d/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251024T125000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251024T135000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20251008T220546Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251009T135043Z
UID:20000664-1761310200-1761313800@apsa.org
SUMMARY:The AI Pharmakon in Psychoanalytic Care: Ambivalence\, Augmentation\, and Psychoanalytic Futures
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Todd Essig\, PhD – The AI revolution is here—and by “here\,” I mean right here in our consulting rooms. Interactive self-help tools are now marketed as AI psychotherapy\, and for many\, they’ve become a viable treatment option. Augmentation technologies for clinicians are readily available\, reshaping aspects of clinical practice in real time. Meanwhile\, patients are forming relationships with AI entities that range from instrumentally useful\, to emotionally resonant and companionable\, to psychologically destabilizing—even destructive. This Grand Rounds will explore the clinical state of play amid these rapidly accelerating developments\, with a focus on how psychoanalytic sensibilities can help us think\, feel\, and act in response.
URL:https://apsa.org/event/the-ai-pharmakon-in-psychoanalytic-care-ambivalence-augmentation-and-psychoanalytic-futures/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251023T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251023T213000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20250902T151828Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250902T165724Z
UID:20000628-1761249600-1761255000@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Book Discussion: Early Women Psychoanalysts and Their Marginalized Legacies
DESCRIPTION:Book Editor: Klara Naszkowska\, PhD | Discussant: Rosemary Balsam\, MD \nThis book discussion is dedicated to filling a hole in the history of women pioneers of psychoanalysis. Their groundbreaking contributions to the nascent field notwithstanding\, their biographies have been largely and systematically erased from the historical narrative. Klara Naszkowska will draw on the anthology that she edited\, Early Women Psychoanalysts: History\, Biography\, and Contemporary Relevance (Routledge\, 2024)\, to provide an introduction to their lives and legacies as a collective force. Her lecture will be illuminated by an in-depth exploration of the story of Sabina Spielrein. The emphasis is on the sociopolitical circumstances and historical developments that affected these women psychoanalyst’s lives\, career choices\, and paths\, centering on the themes of gender\, Jewishness\, women’s education\, the rise of autocracies\, and forced migration. Following the lecture\, commentary will be provided by Rosemary Balsam\, a psychiatrist-psychoanalyst who has written extensively about gender\, early women psychoanalysts\, and their contributions. \nCE
URL:https://apsa.org/event/book-discussion-early-women-psychoanalysts-and-their-marginalized-legacies/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251023T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251023T193000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20250902T151836Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250902T165306Z
UID:20000633-1761242400-1761247800@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Defense Mechanisms: Hierarcy\, Adaptation and Change - Dr. Chris Perry
DESCRIPTION:Defense Mechanisms: Hierarcy\, Adaptation and Change – Dr. Chris Perry
URL:https://apsa.org/event/defense-mechanisms-hierarcy-adaptation-and-change-dr-chris-perry/
LOCATION:Virtual (Click on event title to advance to website and registration page)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251022T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251022T210000
DTSTAMP:20260711T125207
CREATED:20250820T175845Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250820T185505Z
UID:20000607-1761159600-1761166800@apsa.org
SUMMARY:Growing Up Through the Life Cycle: A Revised Psychoanalytic Framework for Adult Development
DESCRIPTION:Please join PCOP in welcoming Dr. Steve Axelrod from NYC to speak about some of the most recent considerations of adult psychological development in our field. \nCE.
URL:https://apsa.org/event/growing-up-through-the-life-cycle-a-revised-psychoanalytic-framework-for-adult-development/
LOCATION:Hybrid (Rockland – East Fairmount Park 3810 Mt Pleasant Dr. Philadelphia\, PA & via Zoom)\, 3810 Mt Pleasant Dr\, Philadelphia\, PA\, 19121\, United States
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR