Margalis Fjelstad – Stop Emotionally Manipulative Relationships

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The persecutor/victim/rescuer connection

TREATMENT ISSUES IN WORKING WITH CARETAKERS

Why caretakers can benefit File size: 4.04 GB

Margalis Fjelstad – Stop Emotionally Manipulative Relationships

Help clients extricate themselves from emotionally manipulative relationships

Move clients from other-focused to self-focused

Stop caretakers’ self-sabotage

Challenge self-defeating behaviors, reduce anxiety and teach assertive behaviors

Narcissists and borderlines create emotional havoc in families, but they rarely come into therapy or stay in therapy to do the work that is needed. Emotional caretakers are the clients who come into therapy desperately seeking answers to the dysfunction, confusion and hurt in these families. They are the victims who are attacked, manipulated and controlled by the borderline or narcissist.

Emotional Caretakers are often described as self-sacrificing, self-defeating, enablers, doormats, virtuous masochists and pathological altruists. They are highly vulnerable to being drawn into taking care of the needs of the borderline or narcissist, because their loyalty, endurance, need to please, intense guilt, and ability to placate and take on all blame and responsibility help these relationships function.

Learn how to effectively motivate and create change in clients who typically feel defeated, defenseless and demoralized. Get Caretakers moving from denial and depression to healthy limit setting and self-care. Challenge their self-defeating behaviors, reduce their anxiety, and teach them assertive behaviors that work with the borderline or narcissist. This training will teach techniques that move these clients forward and increase their self-esteem and confidence.

OUTLINE

EMOTIONAL CARETAKERS

Who are the Emotional Caretakers?

15% or more of clients in therapy are caretakers

Are caretakers born or raised?

Strengths and vulnerabilities

Symbiotic relationship to the borderline or narcissist

Five Types of Distortions Caretakers Use

Emotional

Thought

Behavioral

Sense of Self

Relationships

Five Intensity Levels of Caretaking Relationships with the Narcissist or Borderline

Self-defeating

Pathological Altruism

Protesting Colluders

Self-Protectors

Cut Offs

The Drama Triangle of the Caretaker/Narcissist/Borderline Relationship

How and why caretakers get drawn into self-defeating relationships

The persecutor/victim/rescuer connection

TREATMENT ISSUES IN WORKING WITH CARETAKERS

Why caretakers can benefit from therapy and narcissists and borderlines typically don’t

Ten ways caretakers self-sabotage

The seven dysfunctional rules caretakers use in relationships
Get immediately download Margalis Fjelstad – Stop Emotionally Manipulative Relationships

Caretaker issues of exterior locus of control

Passivity, fear, guilt and confusion

How these can sabotage therapy as well as relationships

TREATMENT STRATEGIES

Using CBT to confront the core distortions of caretakers

Why client centered therapy is not as effective

Dispute the caretaker’s dysfunctional relationship rules

Move caretakers out of manipulative interactions into assertive interactions

Repairing client’s sense of self

Challenging negative self-image thoughts

Teach the concept of independent SELF

Develop a clear sense of “I”

Develop an inner locus of control

Challenge caretaker’s pathological shame and guilt

Teach empowered communication techniques

Coach clients out of the Drama Triangle into the Caring Triangle

Assertiveness, conscious choice, accepting SELF-responsibility

Use group therapy to move clients forward more quickly

OBJECTIVES

Identify how to help clients extricate themselves from emotionally manipulative relationships.

Outline how to move clients from other-focused to self-focused.

Recognize and neutralize the seven dysfunctional rules caretakers use in relationships.

Recognize the causes of caretaker behavior.

Illustrate how to coach clients out of the drama triangle of enmeshment with a borderline or narcissist.

Examine various methods to stop caretaker’s self-sabotage

Outline the steps to neutralizing the emotional caretaker’s obsession with the borderline or narcissist.

Communicate to clients how to use attention and awareness to stop being manipulated.

Discuss the necessary steps to get real change happening in families with a borderline or narcissist.

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Margalis Fjelstad, Ph.D., LMFT has had a clinical practice for the past 30 years. She specializes in educating therapists, lawyers, and case workers in the dynamics of relationships that contain a borderline or narcissist.

She has over 150 hours of training in personality disorders and concentrates on working with clients who are in a relationship with a borderline or narcissist. She has conducted over 10,000 hours of counseling with these caretaker clients, led more than 1500 hours of group therapy, and 140 training workshops. As a college professor at California State University, Sacramento, and Regis University in Colorado, she has educated thousands of students in therapeutic techniques and best counseling practices and taught 13,000 hours of graduate classes.

Her book and accompanying workbook, Stop Caretaking the Borderline or Narcissist: How to End the Drama and Get on With Life, outlines specific steps for helping caretakers stop participating in the drama dynamics of these relationships.Using her extensive experience with personality disorders, Margalis is able to take clinical concepts and bring them to life in an organized and imminently useful way. She understands the dysfunctional dynamics of the borderline and narcissist and can explain clear methods to help caretaker clients evade their manipulations and move forward.