Watch Attachment Sessions For Free!
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The Great Attachment Debate:
Session by Session
Session by Session
Session 1, The Case for Attachment Theory
with Alan Sroufe, Ph.D.
12pm EDT Friday, March 23th to 12pm Tuesday, March 27th
Session 2, Are We Too Attached to Attachment Theory?
with Jerome Kagan, Ph.D.
12pm EDT Friday, March 30th to 12pm Tuesday, April 3rd
Session 3, Attachment Theory in Action
with Dan Siegel, M.D.
12pm EDT Friday, April 6th to 12pm Tuesday, April 10th
Session 4, The Perils of Attachment-Based Therapy
with David Schnarch, Ph.D.
12pm EDT Friday, April 13th to 12pm Tuesday, April 17th
Session 5, Attachment Patterns in Couples Relationships
with Susan Johnson, Ed.D.
12pm EDT Friday, April 20th to 12pm Tuesday, April 24th
Session 6, Attachment Theory and the Future of Therapy
with Allan Schore, Ph.D.
12pm EDT Friday, April 27th to 12pm Tuesday, May 1st
Bonus Session, What Therapists Should Know About Human Development
with Ed Tronick, Ph.D.
Available On-Demand To Enhanced Learning Track Participants Only




By Rich Simon As therapists, many of us practice in two different worlds. In the first, we see polite, well-behaved, articulate clients with solid values. They engage fully in therapy, talk cogently about their problems, listen attentively to our responses, make reasonably good-faith efforts to follow our suggestions, and sooner or later get better. No wonder we genuinely like these people!
By Rich Simon A thousand years ago, during the palmy days of generous insurance reimbursement, therapists could maintain the illusion that, since therapy was paid for by an unseen hidden hand, clinical practice was somehow untouched by the tacky subject of money. Even the style of therapy reflected this disjunction: 

