Lifelines: The Brain Injury Wellness and Recovery Group
2012 brings the end of an era.
After ten years, Lifelines ends.
Please call Kimberly at 214-289-0286 or email at aikmank@gmail.com with any questions.
Robert Weiner, PhD, CST-D will present information about the Interactive Metronome.
Dr. Weiner is a clinical psychologist with 26 years clinical experience and has several specialties including medical and health psychology, pain and stress management, and treatment of anxiety and phobias. Dr. Weiner received his doctorate in clinical psychology from Texas Tech University in 1983. He has maintained a private practice since 1987 and currently practices in Dallas, Texas. Before entering private practice, he served as the director of behavioral medicine psychology at the Texas Back Institute in Plano, Texas.
Dr. Weiner's website is here.
What is Collage?
The term collage originates from the French word coller, which means “to glue.” The collage is a form of the visual arts and is created by gathering many different pieces or chunks of things. After you’ve gathered a variety of pieces you can then assemble the pieces into one, collective piece of art. This usually achieved by placing the individual pieces and gluing them onto a canvas or piece of paper, for instance, essentially creating a unique piece of artwork.
Read more: http://www.arttherapyblog.com/art-therapy-ideas/get-creative-with-collages/#ixzz0sAU1lg2c
2 Thompson, B., & Andrews, S. (2000). An Historical Commentary on the
Physiological Effects of Music: Tomatis, Mozart and Neuropsychology.
Integrative Physiological and Behavioral Science, 35, 174-188
3 Campbell, D. (1997). The Mozart Effect. New York, NY. Avon Books.
4 Thompson, B., & Andrews, S.
5 Thompson, B., & Andrews, S.
We celebrate our 10th year anniversary in June 2011!!!
Lifelines functions primarily as an educational forum. We also hold group discussions every few months.
Mission Statement Lifelines: The Brain Injury Wellness and Recovery Group strives to address the various issues that arise during the rehabilitation/recovery period through support, information and education. The group serves to educate its members about brain injury, how to improve brain health and the possibility of recovering brain function. Lifelines also provides an open forum where survivors, caregivers and health care professionals may meet and share their experiences. This exchange allows the group to address quality of life issues.
Doing well on IQ tests is no real determinant of how successful you will be or even of how smart you actually are. There is more to intellect than logical, verbal, numerical, and spatial ability. Other, more “hidden” types of intelligence, which are difficult to quantify or qualify, are no less essential to our being able to solve problems and otherwise negotiate the challenges life throws at us.
What is intelligence? In its purest sense, intelligence is understood to be the cognitive ability to understand events or information, then process this information rationally in order to respond appropriately to what is happening around us.
Text from Clare Gordon’s Are You Smarter Than You Think?
Join Lifelines: The Brain Injury Wellness and Recovery Group on August 8th to find out if you ARE smarter than you think.
We will be testing our abilities (with some tests similar to standard neuropsychological ones, so if you are curious as to what these tests look like, here’s your chance to experience them) and then exploring ways to improve our mental functioning. We’ll look at Conceptual Intelligence, Personal Intelligence and Creative Intelligence.
Dr. Genie Bodenhamer-Davis, Ph.D., CRC, BCIA-EEG, is a Licensed Psychologist and an Associate Professor in the Department of Rehabilitation, Social Work & Addictions. She also serves as the Director of the DRSWA Neurotherapy Lab. Her specialization areas are EEG biofeedback, psychosocial and spiritual aspects of rehabilitation, and health psychology.
Dr. Bodenhamer-Davis teaches Psychosocial and Developmental Aspects of Disability and coordinates the graduate practicum and internship in Rehabilitation Counseling. She is currently coordinator of the rehabilitation counseling Master's program.
Richard E. Davis, M.S., LPC, BCN, is a Licensed Professional Counselor in private practice in Denton, TX. He has a Master’s degree in Counseling and Human Development from the University of North Texas (UNT) with a concentration in biofeedback, and he is Board Certified in Neurofeedback by the Biofeedback Certification International Alliance.
He is a former Treasurer and Board Member for the Biofeedback Society of Texas; and is a former two-term Treasurer and now President-Elect of the International Society of Neurofeedback and Research (ISNR), Treasurer for the ISNR Research Foundation, and a former Board Member of the Association for Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback Neurofeedback Division.
What is neurofeedback?
Neurofeedback is a rapidly growing treatment for attention, behavior, and learning disorders. Research has shown it to be as effective as stimulant medication, without the side effects. Also known as EEG biofeedback or brainwave biofeedback, this technique follows a learning or operant conditioning model, rather than a pharmacological one. It can be used as an adjunct to medication or as a gradual replacement for it, depending upon the circumstance of an individual case. All forms of biofeedback involve training people to regulate their own physiology. Much like physical therapy is used to strengthen muscles and extend their range of motion, brainwave biofeedback uses a series of instrument assisted training sessions over several weeks or months to help a person gain greater control and flexibility in the neuroelectrical aspects of their brain functions. This control then permits improvement in their mental and behavioral functions. The neurotherapist acts as a teacher and coach, setting successively higher goals of performance as the trainee progresses.
text courtesy of Richard Davis's website http://www.neurotherapyassociatestx.com/services/neurofeedback/
We celebrate our 10th year anniversary in June 2011!!!
Lifelines functions primarily as an educational forum. We also hold group discussions every few months.
Mission Statement Lifelines: The Brain Injury Wellness and Recovery Group strives to address the various issues that arise during the rehabilitation/recovery period through support, information and education. The group serves to educate its members about brain injury, how to improve brain health and the possibility of recovering brain function. Lifelines also provides an open forum where survivors, caregivers and health care professionals may meet and share their experiences. This exchange allows the group to address quality of life issues.
The Value of a Journey
What is a Journey?
The Merriam Webster Dictionary defines "journey" as both a noun and a verb. In action, journey means to travel over or through. As a noun, a journey is a trip or the traveling from one place to another.