Healing Intergenerational Wounds

An Integrative Relational-Neurobiological Approach to Transform Family Relationships

 Earn 3 CE Contact Hours Old wounds and resentments from the family of origin can negatively impact adults in their current relationships with parents, spouse, or children. Dr. Fishbane will explore ways to facilitate healing and dialogue in distressed relationships between adults and their families of origin, especially parents. Utilizing a resilience-based view and an […]

Curious mother-in-law secretly listening woman whispering secret on husband ear

 Earn 3 CE Contact Hours


Old wounds and resentments from the family of origin can negatively impact adults in their current relationships with parents, spouse, or children. Dr. Fishbane will explore ways to facilitate healing and dialogue in distressed relationships between adults and their families of origin, especially parents.

Utilizing a resilience-based view and an integrative relational-neurobiological approach, Dr. Fishbane addresses family legacies and loyalties, resentment and blame, cutoffs, differentiation, boundaries, guilt, forgiveness, and repair. Cultural and gender-based beliefs that affect intergenerational relationships will inform the discussion.

The neurobiology underlying emotional reactivity will be explored, along with interventions to facilitate emotional intelligence and compassion between the generations. Dr. Fishbane will combine theory with case illustrations to facilitate intergenerational repair, promoting positive interactions and legacies into the future.

Learning Objectives:

By the end of this workshop, participants will be able to:

  • Identify problematic reactive interactional patterns between adults and their families of origin, and ways to intervene to facilitate change in the intergenerational family.
  • Help clients “grow up” their views of and current relationships with parents, seeing parents as real people on their own life journey.
  • Help clients become more relationally empowered in their intergenerational relationships, increasing emotion regulation, compassion, connection, and generosity in the family

Who Should Attend:

Mental health professionals, therapists, social workers, counselors, and clinicians who work with individuals, couples, and families. This workshop is especially relevant for those seeking to deepen their work with family-of-origin dynamics, intergenerational conflict, and relational repair, and for clinicians looking to integrate relational and neurobiological approaches into their practice.


Meet Dr. Mona Fishbane:

Mona FishbaneMona D. Fishbane, Ph.D., clinical psychologist in New Jersey, is former Director of Couple Therapy Training, Chicago Center for Family Health. Mona lectures nationally and internationally; she has published numerous articles on couple therapy, intergenerational relationships, and interpersonal neurobiology. Mona received the 2017 Family Psychologist of the Year Award from The American Psychological Association (Society for Couple & Family Psychology); and the 2023 Distinguished Contribution to Family Therapy Award from AFTA (American Family Therapy Academy). Mona’s book, Loving with the Brain in Mind: Neurobiology & Couple Therapy (2013), is part of the Norton Series on Interpersonal Neurobiology. Mona’s website: www.monafishbane.com

  • Healing Intergenerational Wounds
     September 18, 2026
     10:00 am - 1:00 pm

Mona Fishbane, PhD

3 CE Credit Hours

Online

Online events are held in Eastern Standard Time (ET). A link will be emailed 1 day before the event.

Details Price Qty
Tuition $125.00 USD  

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