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About Dialogue Therapy

Intimate and other relationships in the 21st century present unique demands in regard to equality, authenticity, reciprocity, and accurate witnessing. All adults who are in equal relationships – spouses, partners, siblings, grown children and parents, friends, co-workers – are stressed by the demands of equity and equality. Leaders, teachers, and managers are also stressed. People in all walks of life want to be seen and heard accurately, instead of being misperceived, due to bias, indifference or stereotypes.

Many people avoid conflicts in these circumstances because they can become so painful and unrewarding as to be emotionally threatening and dangerous. Without effective and respectful conflict, however, decisions and negotiations cannot take place. In intimate relationships, destructive conflict or avoidance of conflict also undermines trust. Transformative and respectful conflict between equals restores trust, and between intimate partners or grown children and their parents, it allows for the deepening of love.

Negotiating differences of desires, styles, opinions, beliefs, and preferences, while remaining emotionally open to Created originally by Polly Young-Eisendrath, Ph.D. and Ed Epstein in the mid-1980s, Polly has continued to develop the method and its meaning. She has published three books about it and a fourth one is in the works. Hags and Heroes (1984), You’re Not What I Expected (1993), and now Love Between Equal: Relationship as a Spiritual Path (2019) help couples and therapists use Dialogue Therapy and benefit from its discoveries.

Imagine the wisdom of a long-term contemplative practitioner woven together with the insights and compassion of a psychoanalytically trained and deeply experienced couples therapist . . .and you’ll get a sense of the tapestry that is [Dialogue Therapy]
— Daniel J. Siegel, MD, founder of the Mindsight Institute

There are two clinical models for Dialogue Therapy: (1) solo therapist with couple and (2) co-therapists with couple. Both models are presented and practiced in detail at the Foundational Training.

VIDEO: Polly Young-Eisendrath, Ph.D. talks about love between equal partners and developing the skills for navigating relationships in the 21st century.

Dialogue Therapy Training: Break Through Projective Identification and Expand Your Skills

Held at the Beautiful Trapp Family Lodge in Stowe, Vermont this three session training is the first step becoming a Certified Dialogue Therapist. This training includes 78 CEs Total for psychologists, social workers, mental health counselors (26 CEs per session)

Through this training you will learn to:

  • Remain mindful during emotional triggering and conflict

  • Use the methods of Dialogue Therapy with couples

  • Facilitate difficult conversations

  • Gain certification as a Dialogue Therapist

  • Increase emotional contact and clarity in pairs 

  •  Recognize the role of differentiation in true love

Dialogue Therapy Weekend Intensive: Changing the Course of Your Relationship

Come to Vermont to change the course of your relationship with Polly Young-Eisendrath, Ph.D. as the therapist, coach, and mentor to your relationship. This intensive dose of Dialogue Therapy in a special weekend format is the perfect choice if you are coming from a long distance, simply want an intensive intervention, or to hone your Dialogue Skills with your partner. Polly’s office is located in the beautiful atmosphere of central Vermont. Stay at a local inn or bed and breakfast and enjoy the breaks between sessions. The cost is $420 per hour for 15-hours of intensive weekend work directly with Polly Young-Eisendrath, Ph.D. Contact Polly to learn more and schedule.

SAMPLE WEEKEND SCHEDULE:

Friday: 3 - 6 pm: Introduction, Evaluation, Relational History

Saturday: 9 am – 12 pm: Continuing Relational History 2 - 5 pm: Working on a Conflict Using Dialogue Skills

Sunday: 9 am - 12 pm: Practicing Skills 2 - 5 pm: Building Empathy for Your Partner and Yourself

Dialogue Therapy: Full Treatment Program

Dialogue Therapy with Polly consists of 13-14 hour (60 minutes) sessions which may be done singly or clustered. The Evaluation process takes place on a weekly basis until it is complete, and then couples come once a month until the Dialogue Therapy process is completed. There is a sixth-month follow-up as part of the therapy. Contact Polly to learn more and schedule.

DIALOGUE THERAPY WITH A SINGLE THERAPIST:

Each numbered session below is 60 minutes, usually held weekly depending on the availability of the therapist. Sessions may be combined into two hours, scheduled weekly, or bi-weekly. Polly’s fee for an intensive weekend will be at least twice her standard fee for Dialogue Therapy. Her fees for intensive weekends vary depending on the dates and arrangements made. Please contact her directly for those arrangements.

Evaluation of the Couple: First 4 -5 meetings
Working on a Conflict: 2-3 Meetings
Practicing and Refining Skills: 2 Meetings
Testing Your Empathy for Partner: 2 Meetings
Using Dialogue Skills: 2 Meetings

DIALOGUE THERAPY WITH CO-THERAPISTS:

Two therapists with the couple. The first session is three hours, all other sessions are two hours, sessions are monthly.

Session 1: Introduction, Evaluation, Relational History
Session 2: First Session of *Dialogue Therapy*: Working on a Conflict
Session 3: Second Session of *Dialogue Therapy*: Practicing Skills
Session 4: Building Empathy for Your Partner and Yourself
Session 5: Using the Skills of *Dialogue Therapy* and Empathy to Repair Trust
Session 6: Final Session: Refining Your Skills
Session 7: Follow-up: Six months Later



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Contact a Certified Dialogue Therapist in Your Area

Polly Young-Eisendrath Ph.D Psychologist and Jungian Analyst • Worcester, Vermont

Jean Pieniadz Ph.D Clinical Psychologist and Psychoanalyst • Burlington, Vermont

Raven Bruce Ph.D Clinical Psychologist • Middlesex, Vermont

Susan Lillich Ph.D Clinical Psychologist, Psychoanalytic Therapist • Williston, Vermont

Stella Marrie PsyD Clinical Psychologist, Psychoanalytic Therapist • Montpelier, Vermont

Helene Nilsen Ph.D Psychologist and Clinical Nurse Practitioner • Morrisville, Vermont

Caroline O’Connor LCMHC Mental Health Counselor and Psychotherapist • Burlington, Vermont

Joel Shapiro LCSW Licensed Clinical Social Worker • Burlington, Vermont

Jeanne Plo M.Ed. M.A. Licensed Clinical Mental Health Counselor • Burlington, Vermont

Margot Parker LMFT Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist • Los Angeles, California

Emily Thurber LCMHC LADC Licensed Mental Health Counselor and Psychotherapist • Middlebury, Vermont

Amber Rickert LCSW MPH Licensed Clinical Social Worker and Psychoanalytic Therapist • Worcester, Vermont & California

Dunja C. Moller Ph.D Medical Anthropologist Therapeutic Cathartic Breath Therapist Certified Kripalu Yoga teacher • Worcester, Vermont

 

Sarah Brodie M.A. Registered Psychotherapist, Art therapist, psychoanalytic child therapist (Dipl. CICAPP) • Burlington, Ontario, Canada

Doris Ferleger Ph.D Clinical Psychologist • Wyncote, Pennsylvania

Lisa Lewis Ph.D Clinical Psychologist, Kings County Mental Health Clinic • Hanford, California

Irene McHenry Ph.D Clinical Psychologist • Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Chelsea Wakefield Ph.D LCSW CST Licensed Clinical Social Worker • Little Rock, Arkansas

Savanna O’Connor M.A. LCMHC Mental Health Counselor and Psychotherapist • Jericho Vermont

Leland Peterson M.A. ATR-BC Art Therapist and Psychotherapist • Montpelier, Vermont

Rosa Maria Rigol Ph.D Bilingual (English/Spanish) Clinical Psychologist • Miami, Florida

Raymond Coppola Ph.D Clinical Psychologist • Albany, New York

Rachel Jadkowski PsyD Clinical Psychologist, Psychoanalytic Therapist • Bolton, Vermont & Massachusetts

Beulah Trey Ph.D Clinical Psychologist • Philidelphia, Pennsylvania

Camilla Nielsen MA Jungian Psychoanalyst • Vienna, Austria


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Praise for Dialogue Therapy for Couples and Real Dialogue for Opposing Sides: Methods Based on Psychoanalysis and Mindfulness by Jean Pieniadz, Ph.D. & Polly Young-Eisendrath, Ph.D.

We live – politically and psychologically — in a world of deaf ears, isolated silos, and grotesque caricature. For democracy to survive, we need to find ways to listen deeply, see others’ points of view, respect differences, and generate creative dialogue. In this exciting and ground-breaking book, Pieniadz and Young-Eisendrath describe the conceptual and practical tools this requires. Elegantly eclectic, they integrate ideas from psychoanalysis, feminism, psychodrama, attachment theory, and Buddhism. Central to their practice are attentive witnessing, dialogic space, and validation of autonomy. Real Dialogue has implications that extend far beyond couple therapy to conflict resolution and political change. Beautifully and accessibly written, it will appeal to a wide audience of both professional and lay readers.
— Prof Jeremy Holmes, MD, University of Exeter, UK
This ambitious, beautifully written text represents decades of accumulated clinical wisdom. Integrating feminism, Buddhism, psychoanalysis, and empirical scholarship, the authors show how to help antagonistic parties to listen respectfully, grow in self-knowledge and autonomy, and appreciate the equal humanity of the other. Their work is both inspiring and quintessentially practical. I recommend this book to all therapists who work with couples as well as to professionals in the fields of coaching, consulting, and conflict resolution.
— Nancy McWilliams, Ph.D., author of Psychoanalytic Diagnosis; Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy
Drs. Pieniadz and Young-Eisendrath are on the pioneering edge with their elegant and highly effective model of Dialogue Therapy and Real Dialogue. As someone who has worked for years to help heal the broken-hearted and offers hope to those who steadfastly believe in love despite their many bumps and bruises along the way, I’m thrilled to discover this graceful, heartfelt, compellingly simple, yet brilliantly deep work to awaken our ability to grow greater levels of compassion and care between us. These two superb luminaries are my new relationship gurus.
— Katherine Woodward Thomas, M.A., MFT, author of Conscious Uncoupling: 5 Steps to Living Happily Ever After & Calling in “The One:” 7 Weeks to Attract the Love of Your Life
Responsibility for understanding others starts with the individual, and this book shines a light on tools to help in healing the rifts in communication, whether between couples or in the society as a whole.

The authors reflect on the important need for a new understanding between partners, given evolving ideas about modern relationships as equal partnerships. In using Dialogue Therapy, Dr. Pieniadz and Dr. Young-Eisendrath avail themselves of multiple perspectives, including Buddhism and psychoanalysis, to help couples fulfill their needs for love, but also the need for their own individual growth.

The authors’ knowledge of psychoanalytic ideas of projection and projective identification describes how outmoded and unconscious ways of relating, “rooted in early family life,” can obstruct real communication. Achieving true intimacy in relationships remains a challenge for many couples, but the authors provide a necessary space here to work on meeting that challenge.
— Dr. Annie Reiner, Ph.D., Psy.D., Los Angeles. Psychoanalytic Center of California
A case could be made that Mindfulness Skills are central for achieving happiness independent of conditions—extraordinary happiness. The case could also be made that successful Communication Skills are key for happiness that depends on conditions, i.e., what people ordinarily call happiness. Bring those two skills together, and you have an effective new way to deal with pernicious old problems. Drs. Pieniadz and Young-Eisendrath invite you to a deep dive in a bracing pool.
— Shinzen Young, author of The Science of Enlightenment and Co-director of SEMA Lab, University of Arizona
It is well known that Dialogue Therapy— since its creation four decades ago by Polly Young-Eisendrath—has helped lift countless intimate partners out of deadening emotional ruts. This book describes and develops the model which makes brilliant use of psychoanalysis, mindfulness, and psychodrama. Couple therapists of all schools of thought will benefit from the authors’ description of a method that goes beyond interpretation and transference cures. It will be essential reading for those who aspire to see love “as a form of psychological and spiritual development.
— Deborah Anna Luepnitz, Ph.D., author of Schopenhauer's Porcupines: Intimacy and Its Dilemmas
A real therapy for the human heart cannot start with a directive for improvement but must thoroughly understand and transform the reasons why the default outcome of human interaction is usually a failure of joy and connection. This real therapy requires a breadth and depth of philosophical vision crystallized into a program of concrete action. Dialogue Therapy for Couples and Real Dialogue for Opposing Sides: Methods Based on Psychoanalysis and Mindfulness has just that magical formula. The authors of this book bring an incredible range of spiritual practice, depth psychology, and couples therapy knowledge to the ongoing, felt, and ailing interactions between people. In lucid description, this book outlines the primary mechanisms of relationship problems, as well as a stepwise and robust way out. Their unique incorporation of centuries of wisdom about the human condition with practical application can give practitioners and anyone in any relationship a distinct method for creating connections that are sustainable and vibrant.
— Beth Jacobs, Ph.D., author of The Original Buddhist Psychology and Long Shadows of Practice
In Dialogue Therapy for Couples and Real Dialogue for Opposing Sides: Methods Based on Psychoanalysis and Mindfulness, Polly Young-Eisendrath and Jean Pieniadz offer a powerful framework for working with and within couples and relationships as a whole. Building on the foundations of Dialogue Therapy, incorporating key new insights, such as those regarding “projective identification,” and amplifying the fruits of incorporating the clarity and present attention of Buddhist-based meditation, the authors show that therapeutic practices must evolve with the rapidly changing nature of relationships themselves, relationships that promise new possibilities but also bear greater responsibility for each person. A must-read for anyone engaged in clinical practice but also those generally seeking to deepen close relationships.
— Mark Unno, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Religious Studies, University of Oregon