Trauma Training

Clinical Competencies in Treating Dissociative Identities

Bridging Lived Experience and Science

Trainer: Jamie Marich, Ph.D., LPCC-S, REAT
On-Demand: Available with lifetime access for asynchronous learning. This course was recorded on March 19th, 2026. 

When Dissociation Shows Up, and Your Training Did Not Prepare You

Most therapists were taught that dissociation is rare, extreme, and best left to “specialists.” In real practice, it is everywhere in complex trauma work. Clients “go away” right when you get close to certain memories. They lose time, feel like “different versions” of themselves are taking over, or describe watching life from outside their bodies. You feel the weight of deciding what is ethical, what is actually possible, and how to maintain competency and reduce risk in EMDR when dissociation is part of the picture.

Most clinicians were given very little real training on dissociation:

  • Minimal coverage in graduate programs.
  • The sense that dissociation is rare, extreme, or “for specialists only.”
  • Conflicting messages about whether EMDR is appropriate at all.

So you are left with understandable questions:

  • Is this dissociation, something else, or both?
  • How do I assess it in a way that actually guides treatment?
  • Will I destabilize this client if I move forward with EMDR?
  • How do I adapt the eight phases without abandoning fidelity or myself as a clinician?

Your hesitation is not avoidance. It is an ethical clinical responsibility when you have not been given enough support.

This course is designed to help you get there, and you will:

  • Develop confidence in assessment, case conceptualization, and EMDR adaptation with dissociative clients.
  • Integrate EMDR thoughtfully, ethically, and with competency to reduce risk when working with dissociation.
  • Practice “assessment before activation” and remember that “competence includes pacing.”
  • Bridge scientific models and lived experience so your work reflects both what research says and what clients actually report.

This is not a generic overview of dissociation, and it is not meant for every clinician. It is a fit for EMDR and trauma therapists who are ready to move from hesitation to informed, thoughtful action with dissociative clients.

Jamie Marich

Built for Learning. Designed for Belonging.

Shame-Free Space for Learning™

Because the best learning happens when you feel safe. Ask freely, show up fully, and learn in a relational, non-judgmental environment built for practitioners like you.

Expert Clinical Training

Expect real case examples, clear guidance, and a teaching style that makes even complex topics feel approachable so you can confidently use what you learn in session right away.

Where Learning Meets Community

Join a community of clinicians learning side by side, sharing real case insights and peer support so you can grow your skills with confidence alongside your peers in meaningful connection.

Practical Interventions You Will Learn

  • Assess dissociative experiences using clinical inquiry and formal screening tools
  • Identify adaptive and maladaptive dissociation through lived experience
  • Differentiate dissociation from emotional regulation challenges
  • Map a client’s dissociative profile using the Window of Tolerance framework
  • Conceptualize dissociation as a protective survival response
  • Identify parts, selves, or dissociative states without pathologizing or forcing integration
  • Honor the client's language and meaning-making as a form of clinical inquiry
  • Modify grounding and stabilization strategies to reduce dissociative drift
  • Reduce clinician fear, bias, and misinformation related to dissociation
  • Apply dissociation-sensitive approaches to containment, resourcing, and competency‑based risk reduction
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What You'll Learn

By the end of this training, you will be able to:

  • Understand dissociation across the spectrum
    Define and distinguish dissociation from other trauma responses, and recognize when it is adaptive, maladaptive, or both.
  • Assess and conceptualize dissociation with confidence
    Use dissociation‑informed assessment and case conceptualization
  • Bridge lived and learned experience in your clinical practice
    Integrate phenomenology, client narratives, and research to challenge myths and reduce stigma in dissociation work.
  • Practice ethical, scope‑aware dissociation care
    Normalize your own hesitation, clarify scope and referral decisions, and use stigma‑free, client‑centered language that aligns with client goals.

What's Waiting for You Inside This Dissociation Training

On-demand training, real case examples, and a community of practitioners who get the work you're doing.

Attachement Focused EMDR

Dissociation assessment skills

Use clinical inquiry and screening tools to assess dissociative experiences with confidence.

Stigma-free clinical language

Honor client language and meaning-making without pathologizing or forcing integration.

Case conceptualization framework

Map dissociative profiles using the Window of Tolerance and adaptive/maladaptive lens.

Q&A and chat

Submit questions and connect with peers through the on-demand course community.

Grounding and stabilization adaptations

Modify grounding strategies to reduce dissociative drift and support nervous system regulation.

Learn on your schedule

On-demand access means you go at your own pace. Lifetime access is included, so you can return whenever you need it.

Expert clinical insight

Case-grounded teaching from a leading voice in dissociation, EMDR, and trauma, and author of Dissociation Made Simple.

Free community membership

Join TTI's shame-free community of practitioners for ongoing conversations, support, and resources. No cost, no catch.

Who Is This Training For?

This course is designed for a specific group of clinicians. It may be a strong fit if you are:

  • A clinician (licensed or license‑eligible), often working in addictions, community mental health, or complex trauma settings
  • Regularly encountering dissociative presentations but lacking formal, integrated training on dissociation
  • Unsure how to assess dissociation
  • Concerned about destabilizing or retraumatizing clients if you engage dissociation more directly
  • Frustrated by rigid, dogmatic models that either prohibit engaging parts or demand one‑size‑fits‑all “integration” goals

This course is not designed as an introductory training for brand‑new therapists or those without a trauma foundation. It is for clinicians who already have solid trauma and want to integrate dissociation into what they are already doing, not replace their entire approach.

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Jamie Marich

About Your Trainer, Jamie Marich, Ph.D., LPCC-S, REAT

 Dr. Jamie Marich is an internationally recognized clinician, author, and educator whose work sits at the intersection of trauma therapy, EMDR, expressive arts, and dissociation. She is the founder of the Institute for Creative Mindfulness, the developer of the Dancing Mindfulness approach, and the author of Dissociation Made Simple: A Stigma-Free Guide to Embracing Your Dissociative Mind and Navigating Life, along with the accompanying clinical flipchart. Her other titles include EMDR Made Simple, Trauma Made Simple, and Healing Addiction with EMDR Therapy, and her contributions to the field have been recognized with the EMDR International Association's 2019 Advocacy in EMDR Award. She brings both clinical depth and lived experience to her teaching on dissociative identities. 

Additional Information

Agenda

  • 10:00 am - 10:10 am: Welcome, objectives, and presenter introduction
  • 10:10 am - 11:00 am: Dissociation fundamentals and core definitions
  • 11:00 am - 11:10 am: Break
  • 11:10 am - 12:10 pm: Neuroscience and polyvagal perspectives on dissociation
  • 12:10 pm - 12:20 pm: Break
  • 12:20 pm - 1:20 pm: Mapping dissociation through language, metaphor, and meaning
  • 1:20 pm - 1:30 pm: Break
  • 1:30 pm - 2:15 pm: Media portrayals, myths, and clinical bias in dissociation
  • 2:15 pm - 2:30 pm: Wrap-up, key takeaways, and Q&A

Learning Objectives

  • To discuss the principles of phenomenology and the lived experience movement in mental health and work with dissociative identities, paying particular attention to the points of tension with scientific models of understanding trauma and dissociation.
  • To implement treatment strategies and plans in the care of trauma-based dissociation that bridge the gap between lived experience inquiry and scientific understanding, leading to a more integral approach to healing
  • To discuss the various definitions of dissociation that originated from Pierre Janet’s original development of the concept
  • To apply Shapiro’s concepts of adaptive and maladaptive in evaluating how dissociation shows up in clinical presentations and in daily life
  • To adjust how we teach on grounding, safety, and even the core concepts of trauma healing to accommodate various dissociative expressions
  • To discuss best practices for honoring dissociative minds in the delivery of EMDR Therapy, challenging many of the myths and misconceptions that have abounded in the EMDR community for decades
  • To critically evaluate how media portrayals of dissociation and other biases in the field of psychology and EMDR Therapy might be getting in the way of your clinical effectiveness
  • To describe how dissociation is conceptualized within polyvagal theory and several other neuroscientific models

Prerequisites

This is not an EMDR training.

  • None! While this course was designed with therapists in mind, many professionals can benefit including but not limited to:
    • Mental Health Professionals
    • Teachers and Educators
    • Healers
    • Yoga Teachers
    • Healthcare Professionals
    • First Responders
    • Lawyers and Law Professionals

Continuing Education

Day 1: 4 CEs are available upon completion of all course material.

Trauma Therapist Institute is an approved continuing education provider. ACE and NBCC CEs are available for this course. This course is not approved for APA or EMDRIA CEs.

Participants must complete the full training to receive credit.

ACE Approved Provider

Trauma Therapist Institute, #1869, is approved as an ACE provider to offer social work continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) Approved Continuing Education (ACE) program. Regulatory boards are the final authority on courses accepted for continuing education credit. ACE provider approval period: 1/16/25 - 1/16/28. Social workers completing this course receive 6 clinical continuing education credits.

NBCC Approved Provider

Trauma Therapist Institute has been approved by NBCC as an Approved Continuing Education Provider, ACEP No. 7033. Programs that do not qualify for NBCC credit are clearly identified. Kase & CO is solely responsible for all aspects of the programs.

Course Completion

To receive a CE certificate, participants must complete the entire course, complete the post-test with a score of 80% or above, and complete the course evaluation. You may retake the post-test as needed. Once completed, a CE certificate will auto-populate to your online account.

Cancellation Policy

Please reference our cancellation policy here (bottom section of this page).

Price: $97

  • 4 CEs
  • Lifetime access to the course - Refresh your skills anytime at your own pace. Get on-demand access after the live date.
  • Immediate clinical application - Walk away with tools you can use in your next session.
  • CEs - Earn ASWB and NBCC CEs.
Dissociation-Informed Grounding Exercises TTI