Psychotherapy Networker Conference Highlights 2026

Friday night at Networker: Ellyn and Pete connect with Developmental Model Colleagues and Trainees

Reflections from the Psychotherapy Networker Symposium

I’ve just returned from the Psychotherapy Networker Symposium in Washington, D.C. It’s a gathering that continues to be one of the most stimulating and wide-ranging conferences in our field. Each year when I return from this conference, I enjoy sharing a few reflections with you. 

This year I will highlight two keynotes and my own workshop.

What always strikes me is not just the quality of the speakers but taking the time to feel the collective pulse of the profession. I could feel what clinicians are grappling with right now:

How do we work effectively in an age of dysregulation?
How do we hold complexity without collapsing into simplification?
How do we continue to integrate what we know about trauma and the brain into our work?
And perhaps most importantly  how do we help people grow, not just cope?

A Field in Transition

Several keynote speakers spoke to the growing intensity therapists are facing. The world brings more external stress each day.

There was a shared recognition that many clients are arriving more overwhelmed, reactive, and entrenched in polarized ways of thinking. The language may differ – trauma, nervous system activation, attachment injury – but the clinical reality is familiar: high intensity, low differentiation.

One thing I greatly appreciated was the emphasis on presence and authenticity, not just following medical model precepts without thinking. What’s important isn’t technique for technique’s sake, or the perfect intervention. It’s the therapist’s capacity to stay grounded, think clearly, and make intentional authentic choices in the midst of emotional pressure.

That, in many ways, is where real clinical effectiveness lives.

Two keynotes focused significantly on trauma.

Bruce Perry: The Right Kind of Stress

One of these speakers, Dr. Bruce Perry, brought a powerful reminder of something deceptively simple:

Therapy is about the proper use of stress.

He challenged us to think more deeply about how what we know about brain functioning actually translates into what we do in the therapy room.

If the brain develops through repetition, then we have to ask an uncomfortable question: Are 45-minute sessions, once a week, really designed for optimal change?

His answer clearly was no.

Instead, he emphasized that growth comes through patterned, repeated, practiced experiences and more specifically, through a particular kind of stress:

  • Predictable
  • Moderate
  • Controllable

This stands in stark contrast to the kind of stress many of our clients have experienced:

  • Extreme
  • Prolonged
  • Unpredictable

The implication for therapy is significant.

We are not simply trying to reduce stress.
We are trying to reshape a person’s relationship to stress and build new neural pathways in the brain. Our challenge is to help clients take risks without overwhelm. To not just comfort, but to build capacity.

This is deeply aligned with the perspective of The Developmental Model™ and how we at the Couples Institute® encourage practice and repetition in our couples.

We know that development doesn’t occur in the absence of stress. Rather, it occurs through the right kind of stress, experienced over time, in a relational context that supports growth.

Bruce Perry also made a broader call that I found compelling:

To move beyond over-pathologizing – especially when working with children who have experienced trauma – and to expand our thinking toward community-wide approaches to healing.

To teach about trauma.
To normalize adaptive responses.
To create environments – not just therapy sessions­ ­– that support regulation, connection, belonging and growth.

It’s a shift from asking, What’s wrong with this person? to asking, What has this person adapted to – and what do they need now to grow?

And perhaps even more importantly: How do we create systems – not just sessions – that make that growth possible?

Bruce Perry’s message was highly aligned with another keynote that stood out for me, the one from Nadine Burke Harris.

Nadine Burke Harris: A Roadmap to Resilience

Dr. Nadine Burke Harris brought both urgency and optimism to the conversation through her work on the ACEs Aware Initiative in California.

Her message was clear, and deeply hopeful:

Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) are not destiny.

What makes the difference is not simply what a child has been exposed to, but what happens next.

With early detection and effective intervention, children with dysregulated stress responses can move toward healing and resilience instead of being on an unavoidable course towards anxiety, depression, substance abuse, or physical illness.

But that requires a shift in how we think about care. The move towards healing and resilience doesn’t happen only 1-1 inside a therapy office. Instead, it is something that is embedded in systems and communities.

She outlined a clear roadmap:

  • Screen early
  • Intervene effectively
  • Connect quickly to supportive networks
1. Early Detection

Screening for ACEs and stress-related symptoms early, before patterns become deeply entrenched is critical. As a society we cannot afford to wait until problems become crises.

2. Effective Intervention

There are effective treatments. Children’s stress-response systems are malleable. With the right interventions, we can help recalibrate dysregulated systems and support healthier development.

3. Connected Systems of Care

Perhaps most compelling was her emphasis on rapid connection to community networks. Healing does not happen in isolation.

Children need buffering relationships and supportive environments in families, schools, and neighborhoods. She emphasized the coordinated systemic networks of care that have been built in California. She is now reaching to other states to build these networks that work together to provide stability, predictability, and care.

Nadine Burke Harris emphasizes that resilience is not an individual trait. It is built in relationship. It is supported by systems. And it is strengthened over time through repeated, positive experiences. You can learn more at https://www.acesaware.org/

Ellyn Bader: When Only One Person Is in the Room

In my workshop – Healing Relationships in Individual Therapy: When Only One Partner Is in the Room – I focused on how some of these same stress-related principles apply in everyday  practice with individual clients.

Because even in individual therapy, we are always working with a relational system.

And when we lose sight of that, our therapy can unintentionally lead to disconnection, destabilization, and keeping our clients stuck.

Where Individual Therapy Can Go Off Track

Common pitfalls include:

  • Overly empathizing and validating our client without asking them to be more accountable
  • Overemphasizing what the partner/spouse is doing wrong
  • Casting the absent partner as “the problem”
  • Promoting harmony rather than helping clients learn to work with their differences

These approaches may feel supportive in the moment, but they often increase polarization, reinforce reactivity, and limit growth.

Shifting Toward Capacity and Accountability

A relational lens asks something different:

How is this client functioning within their relationships? And what needs to change and develop first inside of them?

In the workshop, I introduced several Developmental Model™ tools designed to move therapy from insight into action, including:

  • Stepping Stones to Intimacy
  • Ineffective vs. Effective Behaviors
  • The Three-Circle Vulnerability Exercise
  • Conversation Catch
  • Autonomous Goals

At the center of this work is helping clients take ownership of their role in relational patterns without blame, but with clarity.

Autonomous Goals: Change That Starts Within

Autonomous goals are particularly powerful in individual therapy because they shift the focus from changing others to changing oneself.

A strong goal is:

  • Clear   
  • Behavioral
  • Actionable

Effective goals are built on understanding the vulnerability and self-protections driving ineffective patterns of defensiveness, withdrawal, and hostility and then translating that awareness into concrete behavioral changes.

This process involves:

  • Self-reflection – Clarifying values and intentions
  • Self-confrontation – Recognizing what isn’t working
  • Self-activation – Choosing and repeating new actions

As clients begin to function differently, the relational system around them begins to shift because someone showed up differently.

A Clear Direction for the Field

What struck me most across these presentations is how aligned they are, even coming from different domains – neuroscience, public health, and clinical practice.

They point to a shared truth:

Change is not created through insight alone.

Change is not just a 1-person endeavor. Change is created through repeated, relational experiences with ongoing support that build capacity over time.

  • Bruce Perry reminds us that the brain changes through patterned, regulated stress.
  • Nadine Burke Harris shows us that resilience is built through early, systemic, relational support within Networks.
  • And in my workshop, we see that growth in therapy happens when clients are challenged to take responsibility and function differently in important relationships in their lives.

This is a shift for our field. We move from…

  • Reducing symptoms → building capacity
  • Validating experience → developing new functioning
  • Focusing on the individual → working within and always considering relational systems

And perhaps most importantly:

From helping people feel immediately better…

to helping them become more capable human beings.

What We Are Really Offering

At its best, psychotherapy is not just a place for relief. It is a place for development. A place where people learn to:

  • Stay present under pressure
  • Tolerate difference without collapsing or attacking
  • Take responsibility for their impact
  • Create relationships that are both more honest and more resilient

Whether we are working with individuals, couples, or communities, the task is the same:

To create the conditions where growth can occur – through challenge, through relationship, and through repeated, intentional supportive action over time.

I hope I have been able to give you a little peek into an outstanding conference. 

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Jolyn Sawatzky
Jolyn Sawatzky

Thanks, Ellyn. This all resonates so much with me. We are building resilience. We are helping our clients hold the differences, standing for their needs and desires in a way that actually builds relationship. And, my take away, we are being curious with our clients about baby steps they can be practicing daily so that beneficial neuro path ways are being formed.

Jill Dickey
Jill Dickey

Thanks so much for writing this Ellyn. I couldn’t agree more with the concepts you’re highlighting. I’m glad they are being emphasized by other voices in the field. I love the Developmental Model for these reasons. I especially love the focus of your presentation about working with individuals with relational concerns. Such an important topic! Thanks again for sharing your thoughts and what you learned here.

Zane
Zane

Thank you, Ellyn – really appreciate these blogs of yours that inform me of what’s up in the field and let me “sense the temperature”. For someone who’s recently in the field and lives in Latvia – that’s a real bonus!

Lara Hammock
Lara Hammock

Ellyn, it was fun to read your takeaways from the conference. I think the through line of “productive stress” and growth is so important and not always emphasized, which is what makes the topic of your workshop so timely.

Dr. Ellyn Bader

Dr. Ellyn Bader is Co-Founder & Director of The Couples Institute and creator of The Developmental Model of Couples Therapy. Ellyn is widely recognized as an expert in couples therapy, and since 2006 she has led innovative online training programs for therapists. Professionals from around the world connect with her through internet, conference calls and blog discussions to study couples therapy. Ellyn’s first book, "In Quest of the Mythical Mate," won the Clark Vincent Award by the California Association of Marriage & Family Therapists for its outstanding contribution to the field of marital therapy and is now in its 18th printing. She has been featured on over 50 radio and television programs including "The Today Show" and "CBS Early Morning News," and she has been quoted in many publications including "The New York Times," "The Oprah Magazine" and "Cosmopolitan."

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