Pages

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Help An Author

Wednesday, August 31, 2016
Author Deborah Lott is looking to interview people about the intersection of social media and psychotherapy, specifically women who've felt their therapists' social media presence had some impact on their therapy. She's also looking to interview clinicians who have had issues with their own social media presence and clients or their clients' social media presence.


The interviews are for the second edition of her book  IN SESSION: The Bond Between Women and Their Therapists which she'll be re-issuing as an e-book.

What happens when clients learn too much from their therapists' Facebook pages, and vice versa? Should you google your therapist? Should therapists google their clients? How do therapists preserve a professional relationship with clients if they have personal life information posted on social media?

Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Spotlight on POPS The Club

Tuesday, June 7, 2016



POPS The Club is devoted to enhancing the lives of those students who have been impacted by the pain of the prison system (aka POPS) -- those with incarcerated loved ones and those who have been incarcerated themselves. Spear-headed by Executive Director Amy Friedman, POPS establishes and sustains high-school clubs that offer students community and emotional support as well as opportunities to publish the writings and artwork they create through the club.

Glorious Owens is a soon-to-be-graduating senior at Venice High School where she has participated as a member of POPS The Club. She's from South Central LA and is one of eight kids. As a writer, she recently won first place in the Beverly Hills Literary Society contest, and one of her essays will also be performed at the "Street Angels" gala evening to benefit POPS on Monday, June 13th at The Kirk Douglas Theatre.

Glorious will be attending El Camino College this fall where she'll be studying to become a social worker, and South Central Scholars will be mentoring and guiding her through college and university.

To read her prize-winning essay, click here!

*     *     *     *     *

Karin: What is your relationship to POPS?

Glorious: My relationship to POPS is that my father, my grandmother, my cousins -- almost half of my family, maybe a little bit more -- have been incarcerated at one point or another, on my mom's and my dad's side. And some of them have been affiliated with drug addiction. My mom's side - her dad and her mom were drug addicts. On my dad's side - his dad and his mom were drug addicts. So all my life -- all 18 years -- I saw things. It was like a vision of a movie. You think none of this could happen in someone's life, but it does. It actually happens and what do you do with it?

Like what? What are some of the visuals in your movie?

Basically I have seen people selling drugs, face to face. Somebody in my family getting caught for it and sent to jail. Someone getting beat up, jumped. Seeing my grandma in jail, going to visit her. Going through the process of literally taking almost everything off and getting searched. It feels degrading and makes you never want to go there. And my dad - I had never seen my dad in prison - but every other year it seemed like he would go back for something. He would always clean himself up and then go back. And my parents would say, he was 'on vacation, vacation, vacation' because I was little. But I knew better. I was like, why would he go on vacation for one to two years and not come see his kid?

They didn't take you to see him?

No, because they thought I didn't know!

But you went to see your grandma.

I went to go see my grandma, because we were super close -- we were like two peas in a pod. We always hung out. She was basically my babysitter and I was always with her no matter what the time was. When she went, I was one of the first people to know, because me and my grandma were that close. And she knew I understood what was going on, she knew I wasn't a slow child. And she just told me what happened, 'Okay, I'm going for this, and I'm gonna be gone for a while. Just make sure you send me mail and come see me,' and all of that stuff. So it was one of those traumatizing experiences, 'Now my grandma is going, like what's going on?' And it was continuous blows.

Someone that I love is getting taken from me. Now I have to go back, and someone I love is being taken from me again. I have to keep going, I have to keep pushing.         

Keep pushing what?

Keep pushing like... they want you to succeed. Everybody wants you to succeed. But they keep doing stuff bad, so why do I have to succeed when you can't even do it? It's like, 'What's the point? You guys aren't even gonna be here to see it. So why should I have to do anything?' It was stupid, I don't know why I would think that it was a really good excuse to not do anything.

And then you continue the cycle.

It's like... okay, I have to keep fighting, I have to keep doing homework. I'm gonna be somebody when I grow up. I'm gonna make sure everybody's alright, they don't have to worry about money. It always seemed like we were worrying about money. Anything that had to do with it ended up around money. So it was like... okay, I'm gonna be somebody who can make money and make sure that everybody in my family is okay, everybody's set. I don't have to worry about anything. But it felt like I was always the one who cleaned up the mess. Even though they don't think that, they think they did it on their own. Of course they think that!

But you always have someone who helped you get somewhere, even though you worked toward it yourself. Somebody helped you along the way to get where you are. Somebody who told you to get your life together... somebody who helps you, literally sits you down right there as you do your work. Or a passerby who happens to give you a hello that gonna make you smile for the rest of your day. It was always one of those things -- always being positive, always knowing how to help somebody. You never know what somebody's going to be going through.

So that's basically how I was, always a smile. There's no reason not to have a smile! Even if you're sad.

What gave you the motivation to rise above?

I didn't want to be like them, at all. I know jail is not for me. I know that I don't want to be on the streets. I know I don't want any type of pain to be inflicted on my family -- emotional, mental -- I don't want any of that. What I have to go through, I don't want them to ever have to go through. I don't want to have to add on to anything. It's already enough.

When it comes to POPS, how has it helped you?

It gave me a voice to whatever I'm thinking. Like how I'm talking to you now... I couldn't do this last year, at all. I don't tell anybody my business. I used to never even speak about anything. And then I came to Mr. Danziger's class and he told me about POPS, and he had us write stories about our lives. And that's when I was like, 'I actually get to tell my story? Are you sure?' And he was like, 'Yeah, you get to tell your own story. Write down everything that happened in your head and everything that you know happened.' And not be judged for it. Not have somebody tell you, 'Are you sure that actually happened to you? Are you positive? That's not how it went.'

Everybody has their own story to tell, and everybody has their own perspective on it. But it was my perspective. This is what I felt; this is what happened when I see it. And people get to read that and understand. And you have people in POPS who understand what you went through because they have gone through the same situation. And so that's why it was a very good experience for me.

Was there anything challenging about it?

Just writing the story. And actually telling people my story, that was the hard part. Because it was like, 'I don't want people to really know about me. That's none of their business. This was my story, but do I really want to put it out there?' That was the main thing. I've never been big on talking about myself but now I get to talk about myself full force. So what do I do? I was like, 'Okay, I'll give you a little bit.' And Mr. Danziger was like, 'No, I want more. I want you to actually put your whole life on the paper.' And that's what I did. It was my life and other peoples' lives. My mom would tell me stories about how her and my dad met, or how they would play basketball together,

I was playing basketball from elementary school all the way up to my freshman year, and I still play with my dad. Sports was the main affiliation with our family. In order for you to go somewhere you have to do a sport. And so this was something that I didn't have to do a sport for! I didn't have to work out. I can actually do this and get noticed for it -- besides having to do volleyball or basketball or run track. So it was a big eye-opener for me. I didn't expect this. I didn't even really expect anyone to notice me. I've always been a team player, all these team sports, team, team, team. I was always doing something for somebody. I was always fighting for somebody - for something, for your school, for a friend. You want to win because it's what all of us want. And this was something that was just for me. Even though it's technically for somebody - it's for POPS. They helped me. So I'm giving something back.

But it's your story.

So what did you realize after the fact, in writing down your story, that you didn't know before?

There's always gonna be one or two people who have gone through the same thing and don't know what to do. If they're in that situation in that moment and they see my story, they might go the opposite direction. Instead of doing what their friends or somebody else told them to do, they'll take the right road. I want people to understand that they're not alone in whatever they're going through. They're not alone. Even though they may think, 'You'll never understand my story.' Everyone has a different story, but there's always going to be a similarity to your story.

What about the personal aspect?

It's still one of things, like, I don't like you knowing! Because now when people see me, you see my story, not me. It's like, 'That's how you are, how can you change that fast? How can you be so positive? You're faking it.' That's how I feel like people see me. I can tell you my story, but I'm a completely different person from my story. I'll do my best to help anybody in need in every possible way that I can. It's like, 'How can you go from this background to this?' I don't know how to tell people the transition; I just tell you my story.

Isn't part of your story how you changed -- how you grew through it -- how you've transformed and become the person that you are? Or is that still evolving in terms of what you've written?

I feel like it's still evolving because all that stuff is still me. I feel like they see that part, and that's the bad part. That's still me. But I'm still pushing forward to that other me, the one I want to be.

That's a beautiful story, I'd love to read that.


One of Glorious's pieces will be read at the gala evening "Street Angels" to benefit POPS The Club at the Kirk Douglas Theatre on Monday, June 13th. Read below for full details.

*     *     *     *     *

A Gala Evening to Benefit
POPS The Club

"Street Angels"

Monday, June 13th
6:30-9:30 p.m.

The Kirk Douglas Theatre
9820 W. Washington Blvd.
Culver City 90232


This special storytelling evening features a group of professional actors performing a sampling of the stories and poems by the students of POPS the Club. Celebrity readers include Amy Landecker (Transparent), Adina Porter, (The Newsroom/True Blood), Stephen Bishop (Moneyball), Ana Ortiz (Ugly Betty/Devious Maids), Veronica Falcon (Queen of the South), and Maximiliano Hernandez (Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.).

The event begins at 6:30 for wine and hors d'oeuvres as well as the opportunity to meet the students of POPS, with coffee and dessert served after the performance.


If you can't make the event, please consider offering a donation!

Monday, May 9, 2016

Two Summer Writing Workshops

Monday, May 9, 2016


WRITE YOUR HEALING STORY

July 12 - Sept 6
8 Tuesdays, 10am-1pm
Location: SF Valley (Encino)

For full details, visit:

This 8-week workshop invites you to explore the restorative power of writing as we unravel defining events in our lives and our interpretations of them. Each participant begins by choosing a story to tell. We then devote ourselves to uncovering, deepening and shaping our narratives, giving them structure and infusing them with clarity. The goal is to complete a draft of your healing story, and in the process, also discover the transformative nature of storytelling and bearing witness to the stories of others.

*     *     *     *     *



YOUR HEART PRINT
The Art of Writing Memoir

July 14 - Sept 8
8 Thursdays, 10am-1pm
Location: Santa Monica

For full details, visit:

This 8-week workshop is designed to guide you in developing, writing and completing a short memoir piece or personal essay. Through specific tools and creative techniques, you will learn the building blocks of memoir that will support you in crafting a piece that is mined and sourced from your innermost truth. The small group environment offers a safe, dynamic space where your most transcendent work can emerge.


For the final session, Deborah Lott will be visiting as a guest author and teacher to listen to the completed works and offer her feedback on where they might find a home in the marketplace.

Monday, March 14, 2016

Journal Conference 2016

Monday, March 14, 2016

Journal Conference 2016:
Pioneering the Next 30 Years

May 19-22, 2016

Hendersonville, North Carolina


Kay Adams is celebrating her 30th year as a pioneer in the field of journal therapy and journal writing. The Journal Conference 2016 will gather with the pioneers of the past, present, and future at the beautiful 1300-acre Kanuga Conference Center, a mountain retreat setting near Asheville, North Carolina. 


This Conference is for YOU, if you are a journal writer of any level of experience, or a therapist, coach, facilitator, or helping professional who uses journals with clients, or as someone who is Interested in the use of journal writing for healing, growth, and change.

Thursday, January 7, 2016

Aspen Words

Thursday, January 7, 2016

Aspen Words encourages writers, inspires readers, and connects people through the power of stories.

The summer workshops (June 19-26, 2016) are designed to accommodate both experienced, published writers and promising, emerging writers who have yet to publish their work. The majority of writing workshops are determined by a juried admission process that requires a manuscript submission; however, there is also a Beginning Writing workshop and a Readers' Retreat, which are non-juried and first-come, first-served.

Juried Workshops:
Fiction: Maria Semple, Dean Bakopoulos, Antonya Nelson
Memoir: Darin Strauss, Abigail Thomas
Poetry: Rowan Ricardo Phillips
Young Adult Literature: Deborah Wiles
Novel/Memoir Editing: George Hodgman

Application Deadline: February 26th.

 
Spirit of Story © 2008. Design by Pocket