NEW WORKBOOK

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The Invitation to Change: A Short Guide is a practical guide to the 9 core topics of the Invitation to Change Approach, the helping approach at the core of everything we do.

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ITC in NYS

support & skills groups

Ogdensburg NY ITC Group

When

Thursdays, 6 - 7:30 pm ET
Starts Oct 17th 2024

Where

Online - Zoom

Cost

Free

Who

This group is only available to residents of New York State. For groups outside of NY please see our Group Directory

Region

St. Lawrence County NY and surrounding areas

Group Leaders

Alexandria Mitchell and Sharon Morehouse, in partnership with Seaway Valley Prevention Council

Description

CMC:Foundation for Change and Seaway Valley Prevention Council are offering a free, 15-week support and skills group  for anyone who has a loved one struggling with substance use. 

In this group, participants will use the Invitation to Change Approach to reflect on what it means to help, reimagine the role that loved ones can play in the change process, and learn evidence-supported strategies for helping a loved one struggling with addiction.

This group is offered in partnership with Seaway Valley Prevention Council.

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This offering is part of our NYS Groups Program, with support from the Mother Cabrini Health Foundation

More New York State groups available on our NYS Groups Page.

Groups outside of NYS available in our ITC Group Directory.

The Invitation to Change Approach is grounded in compassion, connection, and the understanding that families can have a powerful helping impact on those struggling to change. The ITC Approach draws on evidence-based practices also found in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Motivational Interviewing (MI), and the Community Reinforcement and Family Training approach (CRAFT), as well as decades of clinical experience working with families and loved ones.

Built on the three pillars of Understanding, Awareness, and Action, the ITC first illuminates new perspectives on substance use and the process of change; next, it creates a foundation of self-awareness and willingness to engage with emotional pain. Finally, it emphasizes action, teaching communication and behavior skills to promote and support new behaviors in a person struggling with substance use.

The ITC was created with the idea of a waterfall in mind: the evidence-based ideas and strategies you learn will flow from you, to the families you work with, to the loved ones they are desperate to help. Families, clinicians, and those struggling can all take these ideas and methods and put them to use with practice, patience, and self-compassion.