Dr. Susan Owre Gelberg, Author, Radical Psychology, Professional Speaker

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"Books encourage you,
support you and help
you find your place in
the world."


SUSAN OWRE GELBERG

BOOKS

AVAILABLE TO BUY TODAY!

A CULTURAL TOOLBOX

Addressing Colonialism, Racial/Ethnic Bias, and White Fragility in the Mental Health Profession

CONTRIBUTORS

Jessica L. Binkley, Norman Colb,
Don Coyhis, Eduardo Duran,
Larry Isaac, Amanda Larson,
Fred Miller, Kim L Nguyen-Finn, Barbara Selwyn

AUTHOR

Dr. Susan Owre Gelberg

 

DESIGNED AND
WRITTEN FOR MENTAL
HEALTH PROFESSIONALS

 

– NEW –

NOW AVAILABLE ONLINE!

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STUCK AT THE STARTING LINE

A young girl's journey out of extreme anxiety

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FOR AGES 13 – 18
AND THE YOUNG AT HEART

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INSIDE THE BOOK

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  • Includes reflective topics &...

    Journaling opportunities, illustrations, clinical anecdotes, essays, extensive resource lists, and photographs that complement the text; and is practical, easy to read, and user-friendly.

  • Is this

    book relevant

    for you?

    This book is most appropriate for  psychologists, counselors, educators, researchers, social workers, substance abuse counselors, administrators,
    students, & mental health agencies.

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ABOUT AUTHOR Dr. Susan Owre Gelberg

INSIDE THE BOOK

  • On their first date...

    ...he tries to persuade her into doing things that go far beyond light kissing. Her anxiety symptoms return after that date and increase over time. She begins to feel hopeless and withdraws
    from dating anyone in her high school.
    She questions whether she

    should even try to see Steven again at Rainy Lake. She also stops seeing any of her friends

    except for Laura, her closest friend. She feels “stuck” about her ability to have a romantic

    relationship with anyone, including Steven.

     

    It's a story that celebrates

    new maturity, self-confidence, and optimism.

  • A toolbox designed to address colonialism, racial/ethnic bias, and white fragility in the mental health profession.

    This is a practical guide to:

     

    • Help mental health professionals conduct in-depth cultural self-assessments in order to identify and address cultural stereotypes, biases, and Western colonizing counseling practices.

     

    • Help avoid Eurocentric practices that can harm clients from other cultures

     

    • Suggest additional client self-assessments and resource materials.

     

    • Help present a variety of cultural viewpoints about culture and mental health through brief chapter contributions by individuals who hold diverse world views.

     

    • Discuss research regarding the impact of cultural violence on mental health providers & their clients.

     

    Includes:

    • Reflective topics

    • Journaling opportunities

    • Illustrations

    • Clinical anecdotes

    • Essays, extensive resource lists

    • Photographs to complement the text

    • A practical, easy-too-read, & user-friendly resource

  • When 16-year-old Diana Campbell...

    ...is spending the summer at her family’s Canadian island cabin on Rainy Lake, she meets Steven, whose family has a cabin on a nearby island. Because she is shy, lacks self-confidence, and has never had a boyfriend, she experiences extreme anxiety whenever she even thinks about spending time with him. Although he seems to enjoy being with her, he is private and quiet, so she is uncertain about how he feels about her until the end of the summer. Before they say goodbye, he tells her how much he cares about her, and they share a first kiss. He is so respectful and affectionate that her anxiety changes into optimism about him and about her upcoming senior year in high school. Shortly after she returns home to Miami, however, she goes out with a
    popular, experienced boy.

  • Is this book for you?

    Are you a self-confident preteen or teenage girl with few worries about entering into your first romantic relationship? If so, this story may not be for you unless you want to understand a friend that may lack self-esteem and worry a lot about them experiencing a happy, healthy romantic relationship

    for the first time.

     

    Stuck at the Starting Line

    is dedicated to girls who have yet to realize their full potential in life … girls with so much to offer others but have not yet

    realized their own strengths.

     

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RADICAL PSYCHOLOGY

Multicultural and Social Justice Decolonization Initiatives

INSIDE THE BOOK

ABOUT

AUTHOR Dr. Susan Owre Gelberg

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  • Provides a challenging balance...
    ...between research and professional reflections to appeal to readers with different cultural backgrounds and different learning styles. The diversity of the contributors underscores the emphasis on the need to include cultural experts as side-by-side colleagues, consultants, and supervisors to help Western psychologists expand their professional cultural paradigms and world views.
  • Radical Psychology: Multicultural 
and Social Justice Decolonization Initiatives discusses...
    ...psychological factors that shape multicultural competency and social justice effectiveness, such as implicit and explicit biases, difficulties in accurate self-assessment of cultural competency and social justice skills, and the historical colonial biases that still shape Western psychological training and practice.
  • Is this book relevant for you?
    This book is relevant to psychologists, counselors, educators, researchers, social workers, substance abuse counselors, administrators, students, and mental health agencies.

 

MORE ON PUBLISHERS WEBSITE

ORDER ON AMAZON

AVAILABLE FOR KINDLE PAPERBACK
AND HARDCOVER 
(See Amazon for current pricing
and availability)

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I have recently retired from my clinical, teaching, consulting, supervising, and professional speaking activities. I am now focusing on writing fiction and nonfiction for adults, young adults, and children. It has been a life-long goal to write for the general public, and
I am delighted to now be able to write full-time at my New Hampshire home in the forest by a beautiful lake. My husband of 50+ years, Howard, and I enjoy walking our dogs in the woods and visiting with our two children and five grandchildren.

 – Dr. Susan Owre Gelberg

Psychologist, Author,

Consultant, and

Professional Speaker

ABOUT

 

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EXPANDED BOOK

SUMMARIES

  • Consulting and Publishing

    • Consulted locally and nationally on

             cultural competency issues and

             multicultural counseling.

     

    • Presented at local, state, and national professional conferences

     

    • Published books and articles on

             mental health, culture, and

             career issues.

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  • Education

    • Ph.D. in Counseling Psychology from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

     

    • M.A. in Speech and Language Pathology from Ithaca College. Ithaca, NY

     

    • B.A. in Psychology from Cornell University. Ithaca, NY

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  • A family legacy of writers

    Dr. Gelberg’s ancestors used their writing skills to fight for social justice, celebrate diversity, and advocate for the underserved. Her great-grandfather, Jacob Riis, is viewed as America’s first photojournalist and documented poor living and working conditions in NYC. His photographs and books (e.g., How the Other Half Lives) led to federal laws to improve the living and working conditions of the poor. Her great uncle, Alfred Owre, advocated for universal free dental care, as documented in a book written by his colleagues about him: Alfred Owre – Dentistry’s Militant Educator. Her father, J. Riis Owre, a Professor of Spanish Literature, wrote a Spanish textbook and translated Generales y Doctores – A Novel of Cuban Life by Carlos Loviera.

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  • A lifetime of experience

    As a college student, Dr. Gelberg worked as a volunteer for a migrant child care program. After earning her MA, she was a speech and language pathologist in a public school for the deaf. During her doctoral training, she was a hospice volunteer and was also nominated as an “Outstanding Instructor” for her activities as a teaching assistant, where she taught an undergraduate course entitled, “Child Development for Elementary School Teachers

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  • 30 years of helping others

    In her work as a multicultural psychologist, she helped people cope with depression, anxiety disorders, trauma (including complex trauma and intergenerational trauma), life threatening illnesses, job concerns, relationship problems, adjustment issues, life planning, and substance use issues. She has worked in private practices, community mental health clinics, hospitals, universities, substance abuse centers, penitentiaries, employee assistance programs, and a state psychiatric hospital.

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