238: What Happened In the first Feeling Great Book Club?

Published: April 19, 2021, 8 a.m.

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238: Feeling Great Book Club Featuring Drs. Sharon Batista and Robert Schacter

In today\'s podcast, Drs. Sharon Batista and Robert Schacter describe their visionary 16-week Feeling Great Book Club for mental health professionals that we mentioned in a podcast several months ago. The group was a great success, and I am super thankful to them for creating it!

Sharon described how the group came into being. She\\u2019d been looking forward to Feeling Great and ordered the hardbound and the audio version as well. But she found, like so many mental health professionals, that it is difficult to keep up with career and family, and sent out a post to colleagues suggesting a possible book group to make the process of learning easier. Bob wrote back and said, \\u201cWhat a brilliant idea! Let\\u2019s do it!\\u201d

Sharon and Bob reported that the more than 40 therapists signed up for the Book Club, which consisted of 90-minute sessions every other week. The participants ranged in experience from Level 1 to Level 4 certification in TEAM-CBT. Sharon explained that

\\u201cPeople liked learning the parts of TEAM piece by piece. Being assigned to read 1 chapter per week gave them enough time to read and digest the material in small chunks. And people had a myriad of questions at every group.\\u201d

Sharon and Bob graciously said that \\u201ca highlight for the group was the time David attended and generously gave us over two hours for Q and A.\\u201d For me (David) it was also a peak experience. Due, in part, to my narcissism, I just love answering questions, and they asked tons of really good ones!

The other phenomenon they described was that

\\u201cwe became a group. It was comforting to see each other every two weeks with a common purpose and sense of community. People felt the group was relaxed and said they gained more understanding than from the training groups they\\u2019d been in. People were relieved to discover that they weren\\u2019t the only ones who thought TEAM-CBT was very complex.\\u201d

Sharon added;

\\u201cAs therapists, we face lots of challenges and sometimes make mistakes. The participants got a lot of support and engaged in a process that involved learning and personal growth.\\u201d

The questions from book club members began with clarifying the descriptions of the ten Cognitive Distortions. People asked questions like these:

  • What is the difference between Overgeneralization and Mental Filtering?
  • Why is a Should Statement a cognitive distortion?
  • Why do some methods work better than others for various distortions? How do we know which ones to use?
  • What is Unconscious Resistance? Why does the therapist need to become the voice of that resistance?
  • What do you do when nothing seems to be working?
  • Can you explain how the Magic Button leads to the \\u201cSwitch\\u201d that makes someone decide to get better.
  • How do you show empathy to someone who is suicidal?
  • Can you explain the Death of the Ego? (This was a big question)
  • When you are dealing with the spiritual side, how do you take the path of acceptance? What is the path of acceptance?
  • What is the difference between a low-level and high-level solution?
  • How can you be happy if the negative thoughts are true?
  • How can you do TEAM-CBT when only 50-minute sessions are possible?
  • Tell us what Enlightenment is!

A major question was: Why do some people seem to not want to get better? How do you figure out what the resistance is, and how do you work through it?

We shot the breeze about some of these questions in today\\u2019s podcast.

If you would like to start your own Feeling Great Book Club for therapists or for lay people, and need more information, feel free to contact Sharon or Bob.

Sharon M. Batista, M.D., FAPA, FACLP, FAMWA
Medical Director,\\xa0Balanced Psychiatry of New York\\xa0\\xa0(212) 869-0515
drbatista@balancedpsychiatry.com

Rhonda and I want to thank both of them and send them a big virtual hug!

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