245 5th Ave #311, New York, NY 10016 / 80 Park St., Montclair, New Jersey 07042
(312)600-3775
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Networking for Mental Health Providers
Coffee, Collaboration, and Connection With Your Favorite Tri-State Mental Health Clinicians
Introducing the Tri-State Clinician Social
Redefining networking for mental health and wellness providers
A FUN & ENGAGING ONLINE NETWORKING SPACE WITH ACCESS TO A CURATED DATABASE OF VERIFIED RESOURCES
YOUR GO-TO PLACE FOR TRUSTED AND VALUED REFERRALS AND CURATED NETWORKING EVENTS
Discover An Easier Way To Connect, Network, & Expand Your Business Opportunities AS A MEMBER OF TSCS, YOU GET…
Experience the future of professional networking with The Tri-State Clinician Social. Our community connects you with a diverse group of mental health and wellness experts, helping you build meaningful connections that fit your needs. Learn from industry leaders, share knowledge, and grow your practice through valuable interactions designed to boost your visibility.
Unlock access to our comprehensive Referral Blackbook, a curated, vetted list of mental health and wellness providers. Say goodbye to endless searches through list serves or social media for qualified referrals. This tool is invaluable for members seeking to share and access trusted recommendations, ensuring all referrals are reliable and well-regarded.
Discover a wealth of valuable resources tailored for mental health providers and clients, from book recommendations and podcasts to helpful websites and tools. Whether you're looking to enhance your own practice or offer additional support to your clients, our platform gives you access to a curated collection shared by trusted professionals. Plus, you can contribute your own favorites to help others!
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Meet Your Hosts
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What type of counseling is best for grief?There are many different types of counseling practices for addressing grief. The choice of modality is specific to the provider, as well as the assessment of client needs, preferences, and the nature of grief. Below are common counseling services typically provided for grief: Existential & Humanistic Therapy: Existential and humanistic therapy are interconnected therapies that focus on self-understanding while confronting limitations to being human, such as death, illness, and demise, responsibilities and freedom to make choices, and what it means to be authentic. The therapies highlight the integration of exploring meaning, purpose, and personal fulfillment while recognizing and challenging the irony of pointlessness and the inevitability of loss. Positive Psychology: Positive psychology has similarities to existential and humanistic therapy, as it focuses on promoting wellness and self-growth despite loss. Positive psychology is more strength-based and relies on personal resiliency, meaningful goals, and gratitude to navigate grief. Art & Expressive Therapy: Expressive therapies include the use of creative art interventions such as drawing, writing, painting, singing, dancing, and acting to process grief and loss. The use of mainstream talk therapy can sometimes be challenging for those who are grieving, and thus resorting to nonverbal forms of expression can be cathartic and supportive. Narrative Therapy: Similar to Expressive therapies and Positive Psychology, Narrative therapy focuses on allowing a person to story and describe their experience of loss. Identifying personal resiliency and noted strengths, narrative therapy further focuses on the re-narrating or re-storying of the loss; It provides an opportunity to notice new perspectives as we move through loss. Mindfulness-Based Therapy: Helpful as an additive to all modalities, especially for those grieving, Mindfulness-Based Therapy focuses on incorporating stress reduction tools, meditation practices, and mindfulness exercises to aid in down-regulating one's heightened nervous system, self-soothe, and ground an individual. Logotherapy: A branch of Existential therapy, Logotherapy is also an additive therapy that focuses specifically on creating meaning. Even in the face of suffering, Logotherapy highlight how we can still choose to create meaning. For unchanging situations, such as after loss, incorporating attitudinal shifts is a primary focus of logotherapy. Transpersonal Psychology & Grief Therapy: Known as a spiritual and holistic form of therapy, Transpersonal psychology focuses on experiences of interconnectedness such as during states of flow, sereneness, and meditation, and while using certain therapeutic substances, such as psychedelics. In the context of grief, this modality can help a person striving for connection with nature, and greater self alignment, and those interested in exploring their spiritual and religious beliefs and connections. Group & Family Therapy: As highlighted above, Group and Family therapy are effective modalities for those looking for greater communal support, collective processing, and learning how to better communicate and connect. Our practice offers a variety of the modalities presented above. If you have questions about a modality that you do not see listed, please contact us and a member of our staff will return your inquiry in 24-48 hours.
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Is group therapy good for grief?Group therapy is a supportive modality for addressing grief, as it provides a space for peer support, communal validation, decreased isolation and loneliness, normalization of certain experiences, and an opportunity to share without fear of judgment. Group therapy encourages the expression of difficult emotions that may be more challenging to have with friends and colleagues, and is a platform for practicing how to advocate for your needs. Our grief therapy group offers a unique opportunity to utilize creative practices to express and address grief, that doesn't solely rely on the use of verbal processing. We have found that grief is often difficult to talk about and that words do not always express our experiences justly. In addition to creative interventions, such as writing, drawing, and painting, our incorporation of mindfulness exercises aids in down-regulating your nervous system at the end of group, and are additional tools for you to practice at your leisure when overwhelmed with the distress of grief. If you are interested in learning more about our grief group and whether this might be a good fit for you, reach out by clicking here. A member of our staff will return your inquiry in 24-48 hours.
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How soon should you have bereavement counseling?The timing for starting bereavement therapy is different from person to person. Taking into account the nature of a loss, a person's readiness and interest in therapy, availability of supportive factors and coping skills, and cultural factors can influence when and if a person will seek bereavement counseling. It's important to remember that the healing process is unique for everyone and so there is no right or wrong time to seek therapy and that regardless of when your loss occurred, it is never too late to start grief therapy.

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Join our exclusive community for mental health providers to network, learn from experts, and access trusted resources tailored for your practice. With curated events, referral connections, and a wealth of tools for you and your clients, this is your go-to space for growing your professional network and enhancing your expertise.
Don’t miss out on the chance to connect and thrive—become a member today!
As a mental health provider, your time is valuable, and building a reliable network should be simple, streamlined, and efficient.
Imagine a platform where you can seamlessly find and collaborate with other trusted professionals in your field, without the hassle of complex tools.
Let’s transform the way you connect and collaborate, giving you more time to focus on what truly matters—your clients.
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