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Therapeutic Conversations 23

Sacramento, California
 

Narrative Therapy...unplugged
October 23rd - 25th, 2025

Image by Geoffroy Hauwen

TC 23 CONFERENCE DAILY SCHEDULE

Daily Schedule: October 23-25th, 2025

(Registration 7:15am - 8:00am)

 

KEYNOTE ADDRESS

8:00am - 8:45am 

 

MORNING TRAINING WORKSHOPS

9:15am – 11:45am

Lunch 11:45am – 1:15pm

AFTERNOON TRAINING WORKSHOPS

1:15pm – 4:00pm

KEYNOTE ADDRESS

4:15pm - 5:00pm 

Day One

First Nation Welcome to the Land.
Conference welcome with Stephen Madigan.


 

MORNING TRAINING WORKSHOP A

9:15am – 11:45am

 

Internalized Other Interviewing + 

Live Couple Therapy Demonstration Interview

Karl Tomm (Canada)

In this workshop Karl outlines a complex and multi-layered therapeutic interviewing framework. It begins when therapists come to view the psychological ‘self’ as constituted by an internalized community. When this theoretical step is taken it becomes coherent to interview any member of that community within the self of the client couple. In so doing, a therapist potentially has access to a significantly wider range of possible therapeutic interventions to enable change. An in person live couple therapy interview is demonstrated.

MORNING TRAINING WORKSHOP B

9:15am – 11:45am
 

Queer Informed Narrative Therapy with Trans Youth and Families

David Rock Nylund (USA)

Rock demonstrates his newly created narrative therapy informed 5-step relational approach to working with trans youth, their families and the communities they live in. The therapeutic process brings together both Wonderfulness interviewing and Internalized Other interviewing as the creative means to move through the relational complexities between the youth, parents and the community. His unique family therapy framework was designed to bring forth parental/caregiver affirmation and ongoing community support of trans youth.

MORNING TRAINING WORKSHOP C

9:15am – 11:45am
 

Narrative 101: Public conversations on everyday narrative practice

Christine Dennstedt (Canada) 

David Marsten (USA)

Within this interactive workshop skills based environment, two veteran narrative therapists share their personal learning experiences and ~ encourage participants to collectively decide what narrative therapy practice ideas and practices they would most like to discuss. Topics may include: surviving in non-narrative therapy environments, developing narrative therapy questions, how to begin interviews, session notes, reauthoring lives and relationships, case consultations and supervision.

LUNCH: 11:45-1:15

AFTERNOON TRAINING WORKSHOP A

1:15 pm – 4:00 pm
 

Couple Therapy: Narrative Therapy Informed Relational interviewing (NIRI) 

Stephen Madigan (Canada) 

 

Working with highly conflicted couple relationships is challenging when conflict helps couple relationships remember to forget the full story and history of their foundational values (respect, caring, kindness etc.). Stephen shows numerous step-by-step NIRI videos that act to dramatically reduce session conflict through remembering relational values; creating relational compassion and care by contextualizing relationship conflict within cultural and socio-economic norms and expectations and, his unique relational style of interviewing and questioning the couple relationship - directly.

AFTERNOON TRAINING WORKSHOP B

1:15 pm – 4:00 pm
 

Responding to Trauma Through Narrative Writing Practices

Julia Gerlitz (Canada)

Sometimes what’s happened to people is unspeakable and deemed not safe enough to say aloud in a group. With diagnoses of PTSD on the rise, viewing trauma through a structuralist/medicalized lens can create problem-saturated identities, which keep people silent and disconnected. Julia responds to these challenges by building communities of concern through the use of therapeutic letters and co-created narrative documents in place of traditional group therapy.

AFTERNOON TRAINING WORKSHOP C

1:15 pm – 4:00 pm

 

Reimagining Identity: From 'Self-

Discovery’ to Subversive Action

Rachel Feldman MA (USA)

Through a blend of theoretical insights, practical exercises, live video sessions and client transcripts, Rachel demonstrates her work supporting clients who identify as polyamorous, non-monogamous, kinky, queer, trans, anti-capitalist, and those who exist on the fringes of normative society. The narrative informed workshop invites participants to reimagine the possibilities for therapeutic dialogue and action in the context of identity by fostering a more liberated and imaginative approach to personal and collective growth.

Day One
AFTERNOON PLENARY
Angel Yuen (Canada)

 

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Rescuing the said from the saying of it: Narrative documentation and reclaiming lives from the effects

of childhood sexual abuse

 

This plenary is dedicated to all who have been subjected to childhood sexual abuse. Many who have suffered several years and some even decades, in silence and secrecy. Special thanks and acknowledgement to Kathy, Mark and Thamini for allowing their stories and ‘rescued’ words, phrases and poems to be shared in hopes of helping others.

 

Please join us for complimentary Beer & Wine following the keynote

Day Two
MORNING PLENARY
Karl Tomm (Canada)

 

An Invitation to Bringforthist Therapy

Bringforthist therapy is a version of systemic therapy that has been inspired by Humberto Maturana’s theory of knowledge (which is grounded in both biology and culture). The basic phenomenon of ‘loving interaction’ is regarded as foundational and serves as a major guide in the therapeutic process.

MORNING TRAINING WORKSHOP A

9:15am – 11:45am
 

Including Physiology in Narrative Conversations: Supporting Preferred Identity States

Jan Ewing (USA)

Narrative informed work is often concerned with supporting person’s changing identities. This workshop will explore how including client’s physiology in our Narrative conversations can support sustained change from one experience of identity to another. Using a concept of “Identity States” an intentional set of practices are proposed whereby we notice, include, name, thicken and depend on physiology to guide and support change.

MORNING TRAINING WORKSHOP B

9:15am – 11:45am
 

Narrative Approaches to Sexualized Violence

Angel Yuen (Canada)

Narrative Therapy approaches assist people in reclaiming their lives from the effects of sexualized violence and suggest that there is always another story. These are often subordinated stories of responses, skills in living, and resistance. What might seem an ever-so-small form of resistance to sexualized violence may not only be significant, but also can elevate personal agency. 

MORNING TRAINING WORKSHOP C

9:15am – 11:45am
 

Understanding Family Stories through the Lens of the ‘IPscope’

Tamara Wilson (Canada) 

Shannon McIntosh (Canada)

 

The workshop demonstrates our systemic and narrative work with families through the lens of the ‘IPscope’ framework practice (IP signifying Interpersonal Patterns). Presenters reveal how they de-centre the problem from the person from an interpersonal lens, and move their practice process towards deliberately looking and listening for the ways in which larger socio-cultural influences are showing up in our therapeutic work with families.

LUNCH: 11:45-1:15

AFTERNOON TRAINING WORKSHOP A

1:15 pm – 4:00 pm

 

Therapeutic Letter Writing + Live Counter-Story Demonstration Interview 

David Rock Nylund (USA)

Rock's practice-based-hands-on workshop explores the historical roots, writing frameworks, therapeutic values, and practices of therapeutic letter writing. As one of narratives world class letter writers he will also conduct a Live counter-story interview demonstration. Participants are then invited to craft a therapeutic letter in response to the interview they have just witnessed.

AFTERNOON TRAINING WORKSHOP B

1:15 pm - 4:00 pm

 

A Narrative Approach to Gender-Based Violence: Live Clinical Supervision.

Rosa Arteaga (Mexico/Canada)

 

Rosa invites a team of women counsellors from diverse backgrounds to the workshop whose work involves counselling and supporting survivors of gender-based violence in their work. She demonstrates a live supervision with these workers, while also inviting a response team to respond back to the counselling team being supervised. The workshop is a beautifully designed live supervision demonstration where the audience is engaged to participate.

AFTERNOON TRAINING WORKSHOP C

1:15 pm – 4:00 pm

 

Narrative Family Therapy: Working with Children and Families.

David Marsten (USA)

 

The workshop highlights the lost art of narrative therapy informed work with children in the context of family therapy. David demonstrates his co-creation of 'wonderfulness interviewing' alongside a rich variety of key narrative therapy questions and practice skills. He guides participants inside the theory and practice of his creative narrative interviewing structure through slides, exercises, and family therapy videos.

Day Two
AFTERNOON PLENARY
Helene Grau Kristensen (Denmark)

 

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Reclaiming our Grief, Reclaiming our Loved Ones

Michael White's paper Reclaiming our stories, reclaiming our lives demonstrates how narrative ideas are applied outside the limited context of the therapy room and - transported directly into the communities that form people’s lives. In this keynote Helene will expand on the possibilities for narrative therapy informed community work related to grief. 

Day Three
MORNING PLENARY
Jennifer White (Canada)

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Sustaining Our Collective Co-existence: Exploring Communal, Creative and Political

Responses to Suicidality

Suicidal thoughts and behaviours are inescapably social and relational phenomena. By recognizing our deep inter-dependence and co-existence with all living things, expressions of suicidality can be a provocation to mutually consider other possible worlds and futures, leading to more communal, creative and political forms of engagement that are aimed at sustaining our collective life.

MORNING TRAINING WORKSHOP A

9:15am – 11:45am
 

Relational Loss and Grief: Letting people no longer breathing guide the living 

 Helene Grau Kristensen (Denmark)

 

Helene has clearly upended traditional grief psychology. Her narrative informed relational practices situates the person no longer breathing as primary guide in navigating the complexities of grief. By remembering and retelling stories about the deceased the relationship with the dead person is rendered visible to what they give value to, and ~ how those values can help those left behind. The workshop demonstrates these narrative informed practices through case transcript examples.

MORNING TRAINING WORKSHOP B

9:15am – 11:45am
 

New Narratives: Darkening landscapes and rich story development

David Marsten (USA)

David's workshop outlines that unless the circumstances people find themselves in are demanding and even impossible there is no call for ethical consideration or origination. There is no need for a protagonist. There is no story. This new ideas skills of practice workshop considers how darkening the landscape in narrative therapy informed interviewing contributes to rich story development, re-authoring thin identity conclusions, and shores up a person’s sense of dignity and agency.

MORNING TRAINING WORKSHOP C

9:15am – 11:45am
 

Questions about Narrative Questions

Live counter-story demonstrations 

Stephen Madigan (Canada)

David Nylund (USA)

This interactive Live-interview supervision workshop is designed to create more meaningful therapeutic questions through understanding the purpose, direction, politic, intention, context, history, and relational meaning of narrative therapy questions. Participants engage with presenters live counter-story interviewing, close up supervision, discussion, and focused support of their questions and therapeutic letter writing. 

LUNCH: 11:45-1:15

AFTERNOON TRAINING WORKSHOP A

1:15 pm – 4:00 pm

Writing Letters of Consultation Directly to a Couple's Relationship

Stephen Madigan (Canada) + guests

 Stephen outlines the post-structural relational framework of ideas, therapeutic questions he asks, and letters of consultation he writes - directly to the relationship itself. Numerous session tapes are shown of couples remembering, reauthoring, reading, and responding to their letters written to the couple from the relationships perspective.

AFTERNOON TRAINING WORKSHOP B

1:15 pm – 4:00 pm

 

Narrative Therapy and Psychedelic Medicines

Christine Dennstedt (Canada)

The workshop highlights Christine's work with psychedelics and narrative therapy. She demonstrates how the two practice frameworks work together as a way to externalize problems and thicken preferred stories in a person's life. This innovative workshop walks participants through the process of preparation, the psychedelic-assisted therapy session and integration, and shows the use of a narrative therapy framework and questions used in each of the three phases of the work.

AFTERNOON TRAINING WORKSHOP C

1:15 pm – 4:00 pm

 

Narrative Practice with Socially Disengaged youth: Stories about perseverance and finding one’s voice

Sharon Leung (Hong Kong/UK)

In achievement-oriented cultures, many young people are considered to be failures because they refuse social engagement or have interests other than academic success. Narrative practice combined with canine companionship can help young people to reconnect with their preferred identity, which helps them persevere in the face of difficulties. This workshop explores how this can be done, drawing on the presenter’s experience in Hong Kong.



Day Three

AFTERNOON PLENARY

Rosa Arteaga (Canada/Mexico) 

 

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Conversations about Trauma and Violence: Re-establishing Relationships with the Body through Re-writing Agreements with Survival Strategies

What do we do as narrative therapists when we witness our consultants' past intruding their present lives while it holds them back from being the person they desire to become? Rosa’s plenary shares a narrative therapy informed approach that supports our consultants to investigate how the past impacts of violence, trauma, and abuse in their present and the possibilities on how to re-negotiate with their survival strategies.

 

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