



25.11 | 15:00-20:00 | ZOOM
Led by Yoram Reuveni m.s.w
Many therapists encounter patients who appear cooperative and motivated, yet unconsciously comply, submit, or self-sacrifice to maintain connection. Behind the apparent harmony lies fear — fear of conflict, rejection, or loss of attachment. These dependent patterns, often shaped by maladaptive relationships with caregivers, can create powerful obstacles to authentic emotional work.
In therapy, such dynamics may transform the alliance itself into a quiet repetition of accommodation. The therapist’s empathy or attunement, when not fully conscious, may unintentionally reinforce compliance rather than facilitate change.
While dependent personality traits are relatively uncommon in the general population, they are significantly more prevalent among psychotherapy patients. These clients tend to seek help more frequently and remain in treatment longer, making dependent dynamics a central challenge for most clinicians. Understanding and working effectively with these dynamics is therefore essential for fostering genuine emotional growth and therapeutic progress.
Format: Live online via Zoom | Interactive clinical teaching and video analysis
Organized by: EDT Israel, in collaboration with the International Experiential Dynamic Therapy Association (IEDTA).
Experiential Dynamic Therapy (EDT) places the patient’s direct emotional experience at the center of the therapeutic process. Originating in the pioneering work of Dr. Habib Davanloo, EDT evolved into a family of approaches united by a shared goal: helping patients face avoid emotions, regulate anxiety, and access genuine emotional truth.
Unlike traditional psychodynamic methods, EDT emphasizes moment-to-moment awareness — identifying defenses as they arise, differentiating between anxiety and feeling, and working experientially to restore vitality and authenticity.
In the treatment of dependent patients, EDT offers specific tools for detecting compliance in real time, regulating the anxiety that fuels submission, and inviting the patient to shift from adaptation toward self-assertion and emotional presence.
While EDT has evolved through several distinct voices — some emphasizing pressure and challenge, others highlighting sensitivity, attunement, and support – this workshop seeks to integrate these perspectives into a coherent whole.
By taking the diamonds from each major strand of EDT and bringing them into dialogue, we will explore how an integrative therapeutic stance can hold both firmness and compassion.
The focus will be on helping dependent patients not merely adapt or comply, but gradually rediscover their authentic emotional self within a safe, alive therapeutic relationship.
Participants will engage in an experiential exploration of how to recognize and transform dependent patterns of compliance and submission in clinical work. They will learn to:
• Differentiate genuine cooperation from compliance or self-sacrifice.
• Respond in real time to compliance patterns without reinforcing defenses that block authenticity.
• Maintain clear therapeutic boundaries while working with dependent pulls and attachment needs.
• Regulate and transform the anxiety that arises around setting limits, turning it into a bridge toward genuine emotional experience.
This five-hour clinical workshop integrates theory, live teaching, video-based demonstrations, and experiential practice. Participants will deepen their understanding of dependent dynamics and explore how to translate EDT principles into moment-to-moment therapeutic action.
• Welcome and introduction
• Dependent patients: features and prevalence
• EDT and its diverse voices
• Weaving the colors of EDT: an integrative view of its principles
Break (10 minutes)
• Clinical videos: applying EDT principles with dependent patients
• Presentation of two separate cases:
Patient A: beginning, middle, end, and short discussion
Patient B: beginning, middle, end, and short discussion
• Facing dependent patterns and therapist responses
Break (15 minutes)
• Clinical videos: continued work and the transformation process
• Small-group exercises: practicing interventions
• Group sharing and integrative discussion
• Summary and closing remarks
Certified EDT teacher, psychotherapist, and Director of the Etrrog Moshe Center. He specializes in dynamic‑experiential, psychoanalytic, and CBT approaches, with over 25 years of clinical experience.
Dr. Ferruccio Osimo is a psychiatrist, researcher, and one of the founding figures of Experiential Dynamic Therapy (EDT) worldwide.
He has trained and supervised therapists for more than forty years across Italy, the UK, and the US, and continues to be a central voice in the international EDT community.
For over fourteen years, Dr. Osimo has been mentoring and teaching EDT in Israel, guiding a growing community of clinicians.
This seminar marks a special milestone — the first time that a workshop in this long-standing series is being led in Israel by one of his senior students, under his professional guidance and presence.
🟢 Regular Price: 110.00$ USD
🟢 Group Discount: Available for groups of three or more.
Psychotherapists facing financial hardship are invited to contact us regarding partial scholarships from our dedicated support fund.
📩 For more information contact us: