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The Marin County Chapter of the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists publishes profiles of our members, who are licensed and pre-licensed therapists providing therapy to children, teens, adults, couples, and families in Marin and other Bay Area counties. All information on this page is the responsibility of the listed therapist.

Pamela Rosin, ReParentive Therapy

Oakland

5102146507

 

Member profile details

First name
Pamela
Last name
Rosin
Pronouns
She/her
Organization
ReParentive Therapy
Photo
Office Phone
5102146507
 

License & Education

Clinical License Type
  • Licensed Marriage & Family Therapist
License number
115547
Degree(s)
  • M.A.
 

Office Locations

Sessions offered via:
  • Teletherapy
  • In-person therapy
County(s) office located
  • East Bay
Other City
Oakland
Office Address
46th St
Office City
Oakland
Office State
CA
Office Zip
94608
 

Description

Populations
  • Adults
  • Groups
Areas of Interest
  • Adults Abused as Children
  • Child Abuse/Neglect
  • Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual/Queer+
  • Group Therapy
  • Personality Disorders
  • Trauma Resolution
Orientation
  • Attachment
  • Body-Oriented Psychotherapy
  • Mindfulness Buddhist Psychology
Short Description
Pamela is the founder of ReParentive™ Therapy. She offers trainings for therapists and groups for people who grew up in invalidating environments, such as with a loved one with Borderline Personality Disorder.
Description of Practice
Pamela utilizes experientially based modalities and a synergy of Buddhist and Somatic psychologies to cultivate healing. She integrates her professional acting background, a decade as a bodyworker, and years of teaching Shakespeare in prison.
Pamela draws from a multitude of experience in various educational and therapeutic arenas. She embodies the precepts of ReParentive Therapy; bringing relational, loving presence to support learning. Pamela’s creativity, ability to personalize the material, and emphasis on nervous system regulation, supports students’ access and integration of this sensitive and challenging topic.
A graduate of the Integral Counseling Psychology program at the California Institute of Integral Studies, Pamela’s therapeutic orientation has been influenced by the Eastern/Western blend provided at CIIS, traditional Freudian, psychodynamic, and transpersonal approaches, and by the many wise mentors and guides with whom she has traveled.
ReParentive Therapy is an intergenerational trauma healing model that encompasses three main elements:
1. An emphasis on the therapeutic relationship
2. An emphasis on providing the group member/client with a missing experience, and
3. The use of the therapist’s own stable, regulated nervous system as an interactive, dyadic regulator of the group member/client’s nervous system, which supports the experience of secure attachment.
The term ReParentive is a hybrid of two therapeutic concepts: reparative (adj) and reparent (v) and includes the concept of reparations. This approach has roots in therapeutic modalities that prioritize embodiment, mindfulness, liberation, and social justice; it is non-hierarchical and non-pathologizing.
ReParentive Therapy is an active process of making up for past wrongs. The therapist aims to be a predictable and reliable source of support and to effectively, consistently, and non-defensively show up for relational interactions and provide repair.
While offering relational reparations to the client’s child self, the therapist encourages the adult to take in the available, safe nourishment so that they can begin to shift their internal sense of what is possible, and let the new options impact their sense of self.
Next training for therapists September 2024 visit www.ReParentiveTherapy.com
Additional photo
 

Finances

Credit Cards Accepted
Yes
Insurance
  • - Will provide superbill for PPO insurance
Sliding Scale/Low Fee
  • For a limited number of clients I charge on a sliding scale
 

Therapy Groups Offered

Group Description
Growing up with a parent with Borderline Personality Disorder can be both difficult and isolating. Many children of parents with BPD never experienced the emotional stability, security and support they needed.
 

Therapist Identities (optional and voluntarily self-disclosed)

gender
cis female
sexuality
queer
race/ethnicity
white/European American/Caucasian
religion/spirituality/atheism
Jewish