Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
Somatics
Narrative therapy
Anti-colonial therapy
Trauma informed care/healing centered engagement
100

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) origin

  1. What is a stolen ancestral medicine? – storytelling on complex aspects of our lives and experiences as a way to integrate, make meaning with and build skills for coping with emotions and managing our behaviors in our daily lives 

100

This exercise to slow down heart rate and decrease feelings of fight or flight has increments of holding, inhaling, and exhaling.

What is box breathing/square breathing

100

This is the core idea of narrative therapy: clients are not the problem, the problem is the ____?

What is the problem? 

100

This type of trauma results from mass displacement, cultural erasure, and systemic violence across generations. (two correct answers)

What is Historical/Intergenerational Trauma

100

When our client’s stories remind us of our own personal and collective histories

What is transference?

200

Why is CBT not a treatment?  

What is an intervention for harmful thoughts, feelings and behaviors? -Unless we have a very clear and well understood diagnosis (like prozac for anxiety) then there is nothing to treat.

200

Somatic therapy focuses on the connection between the mind and the ___? 

What is the body?

200

In narrative therapy, the process of separating the person from their problem is called _____?

What is externalization? 

200

This process involves challenging Western notions of “normal” and centering community knowledge

What is decolonization

200

Well-being for family members and recovery for the addicted person are goals of what therapeutic approach?

What is CRAFT?

300

Instead of “helping clients cope” better with oppressive systems, our role as clients is to be strength based and justice oriented. So how do we use CBT with clients in a way that is aligned with our code of ethics?

What is utilizing consent based story telling to help them understand how these systems impact them and what power they hold within themselves and by their community to survive and thrive?

300

Somatic therapy helps clients regulate their emotions by tracking the sensations inside their body, a practice known as _____? 

What is body awareness?

300

Naming how colonization pathologizes clients is part of this narrative practice.

What is deconstruction

300

Anti-colonial therapists critique and adapt these tools, which were created using predominantly white, Western research samples.

What are standardized assessments

300

These two comorbid disorders increase the risk of adolescent substance use

What are ADHD and depression?

400

What are the 5 steps of initial engagement utilized in CBT?

  1. What is Introduce, Elicit, Ask about, Inquire about, and Give?

    1. Introduce yourself and your role 

    2. Elicit client’s concerns and why they are seeking help or why they are in front of your today

    3. Ask about beliefs and past experiences with counseling

    4. Inquire about barriers (practice & concrete) and actively problem solve

    5. Give client information about treatment approach/programs your organization provides (enough, but not too much)

400

In somatic therapy, clients practice shifting from a “stressed state” to a “calm state”. These two states belong to the ____ nervous system.

what is autonomic?

400

Narrative therapy pays close attention to these—because small shifts can reshape a client’s entire story

What are words or language?

400

This term refers to knowledge passed down through generations, often excluded by Western clinical models (two correct answers)

What is Indigenous or ancestral knowledge

400

CRAFT is a therapeutic approach often used in substance abuse treatment. What does the acronym CRAFT stand for?

What is Community Reinforcement and Family Training?

500

What are types of therapies used for anticolonial CBT

  1. What is Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)? –accept difficult thoughts and feelings instead of fighting them. Increasing psychological and psychic protection-strengthening one's sense of inner safety and staying grounded while re-centering Indigenous knowledge systems, community practices, and relational ways of living. I.e. land based healing and returning to ecological interdependence.

  2. What is Dialectical Behavioral Therapy? –

    1. Mindfulness – noticing thoughts/body without judgment

    2. Distress tolerance – surviving emotional pain without making things worse 

    3. Emotion regulation – understanding and transforming emotional patterns

    4. Interpersonal effectiveness – setting boundaries, communicating needs

    5. Psychoeducation for anti-racist mental health practice with self and others; How have we internalized stories of harm to survive? Are those sacred survival skills still serving us well enough? DBT helps people notice these internal narratives with mindfulness and compassion, rather than shame.

500

Somatic therapy teaches that calming the body (through breath, grounding or movement) can also calm the _____?

What is the mind?

500

This creative technique uses art, drawings, or symbols to represent preferred identities

What is visual storying?

500

Many Asian refugees and younger generations experience trauma from this event, connected to the U.S. military, involving multiple countries in Southeast Asia.

What is the Vietnam War?

500

This theory of change SUD model braids relevant models together with the family and client, and has emphasis on harm reduction

What is the Humanizing Model? 

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