Beth Hartman McGilley, Ph.D., FAED, CEDS-S
- The Relationship Is The Secret Sauce
- How feeling fat, dumb and ugly can teach us
- Find a supervisor, find a therapist who will help you stay attuned to the relationship in which that healing is happening.
- Insight isn’t curative but it’s essential
- Saw myself in the textbook - At least 30% of us in the field with lived experience with ED- it was RADICAL to talk about it
- How privilege informs our experience, understanding intersectionality, how it impacts us as professionals
- “I marvel at what younger therapists are learning”
- Recognize our limitation – it’s ok to have 2 therapists or transfer to those who specialize in the work most needed.
Beth’s Seasonings:
- Understand issues of power and shame
- Margo Maine, PhD – Body Wars, Pursuing Perfection, Father Hunger
- Killing Us Softly – Jean Kilbourne
- Cynthia Bulik
- Bio, Psycho, Social and SPIRITUAL
- Dan Siegel and neurobiology
- Polyvagal theory
- Susan Wooley
- Dr. Michael Barrett
- Research practice gap book
- “If I had to impart any wisdom to younger people in the field, what I see missing in the training is learning how to source the therapeutic relationship in the service of healing”
Bio:
Beth Hartman McGilley, Ph.D., FAED, CEDS-S is a psychologist in private practice, specializing in the treatment of eating disorders, athletes, trauma, and grief. Her practice is informed by feminist, HAES, and social justice perspectives. A Fellow of the AED, and a Certified Eating Disorders Specialist/Supervisor, she has practiced psychotherapy for over 35 years, in addition to writing, lecturing, and supervising. She is the co-editor of the book: Treatment of Eating Disorders: Bridging the Research/Practice Gap.
With your host Beth Harrell
IG @beth.harrell.cedss
Supervision Freebies