Exercising Basic Temperament
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February 11th, 2016
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February 11th, 2016
(This program has been approved for 2.5 CEU’s for MBTI, APA, and NBCC)
Money can buy happiness, but only if it used in ways consistent with our personality type because it is psychological, and not material, satisfaction that we desire. Are you allowing your personality type to orient you towards psychologically satisfying financial decisions? If you are going to be able to manage your money with less stress and more success – and perhaps, less conflict with others – you must have an awareness of your money personality – your preferred patterns of financial behavior.
A key type-related influence on your financial actions is your dominant function. In terms of your own approach to money, many of the differences and likely conflicts you experience with other people can be explained by your dominant personality function.
Understanding how your dominant function influences your financial behavior will provide you with insights into your money personality, including:
About Ray Linder
With proven personal coaching, leadership development, and team building programs and services that help people be themselves with more skill, Ray Linder has worked with over 10,000 individuals across a range of both large and small companies, government and municipal agencies, non-profits and the military.
Ray’s work is internationally recognized and he has conducted hundreds of custom-designed team building and leadership development workshops for clients that include Fortune 100 companies, the U.S. Army and Air Force, government agencies such as the Office of Personnel Management and the Department of Health and Human Services, the District of Columbia, and major universities.
Ray has a B.A. in Economics and an MBA in Finance and Economics from Binghamton University. He is author of three books, including What Will I Do With My Money: How Your Personality Affects Your Financial Behavior, and his many media appearances include a feature story on CNBC, USA Today, the Washington Post, the Boston Herald, Leadership, and The Bulletin of Psychological Type. Ray is associated with several world-class organizational and leadership development firms, is an adjunct faculty member at the Federal Executive Institute, and served on the board of the Association of Psychological Type International. Prior to his current work, Ray’s business experience includes corporate and investment finance, fundraising and development, and private school administration.
Ray, his wife Christine, and children Diandra and Cassandra, live in Sterling, Virginia.
Meeting Location: Binkley Baptist Church, 1712 Willow Drive, Chapel Hill, NC 27514 www.binkleychurch.org
Directions: www.binkleychurch.org/about/directions
Date: Thursday, August 22, 2013
Time: 6:00pm to 9:00 pm
6:00 pm Dinner and Networking
6:45 pm Program
July 8th, 2013
A thought-provoking exploration of the ways American Society simultaneously exhaults, exploits, and marginalizes Artisans (those having both Sensing and Perceiving preferences–SP) throughout their lifespan. Social expectations, ideals, and taboos create institutional barriers and pathways that have significant impact on Artisan individuals, and society as a whole. We will consider the Artisan in the context of several social constructions: education, behavior modification, delinquency, addiction/rehabilitation, higher education, employment, entertainment, insurance/benefits, justice/penal, wellness/aging, and even the Association for Psychological Type. What ways are you unwittingly marginalizing Artisans? How can you become an Artisan advocate?
Presenter:
Stephanie Rogers, ENFJ, started her consulting practice, PurposePoints, in 1996 to serve individuals seeking to reframe issues of identity in order to more effectively integrate identity, purpose, and potential into the many aspects of their daily lives. Stephanie also applies her expertise in support of exasperated parents and harried educators, and she has always maintained a special research interest in the Artisan (SP) temperament. Stephanie began her work in temperament and type over twenty years ago and has served as an associate with Temperament Research Institute and as faculty for the Type Resources MBTI Qualifying Program. In addition to her previous experience as APTi Board Member ’93-’95, Stephanie has served the type and temperament professional community in three APT chapters: Orange County, CA, Indiana Chapter, and now APT/RTP.
New Location: Binkley Baptist Church, 1712 Willow Drive, Chapel Hill, NC 27514 www.binkleychurch.org
Directions: www.binkleychurch.org/about/directions
Date: Thursday, February 21, 2013
Time: 6:00pm to 9:00 pm
6:00 pm Gather and Network
6:45 pm Program
Members $20.00 USD/Guests $25.00 USD
Members may bring guests at the membership rate
(Bring a dish to share, beverages and workshop materials provided.)
January 12th, 2013
The Therapist’s Journey to Hogwarts, Oz and Wonderland
Presented by:
Gary Williams
Licensed Professional Counselor(LPC)
APTi Psychotherapy and Counseling Interest Area Coordinator
Chair of the Alabama Board of Examiners in Counseling
Friday, August 10, 2012
6:00 pm to 9:00 pm
6 pm – Dinner & Networking, 6:45 – Program
American Underground Classroom
American Tobacco Campus
Cost: $15.00 per person (member rate) | |
Cost: $20.00 per person for non-members |
Members may bring guests at the membership rate
(Bring a dish to share, beverages and workshop materials provided.)
Special opportunity
All the way from Alabama! We are so pleased that our guest presenter offered to make our chapter meeting part of his business trip to NC. This ENTP is eager to share his unique approach, expertise, and his love of type.
Program:
The Hero’s Journey is the template upon which all of the world’s great stories, movies, and myths are based. Participants will learn how to utilize the elements of the Hero’s Journey and an overlay template, The Client’s Journey which is a far more therapeutic lens, to motivate, inspire, and facilitate change for their clients and themselves. Using these stories and the lens of Jungian personality type as a framework, the session will conclude with an opportunity for participants to apply the Hero’s Journey metaphor to their own lives and professional practice. This program is for therapists, life coaches, school counselors, HR professionals and anyone interested in facilitating growth, positive change, and understanding the universal challenges we ALL encounter in our Journeys. This workshop, with real-life stories, lively visuals from famous movies, and group exercises, makes theory come alive!
Goals for this program:
Presenter:
Gary is a Licensed Professional Counselor(LPC) and is the sole proprietor of Counseling & Consulting Professionals, a private counseling and consulting practice in Birmingham, Alabama. He offers clinical counseling for individuals, couples and families, and delivers team building, leadership development, training, and employee retention services for organizations. Gary currently serves as the APTi Psychotherapy and Counseling Interest Area Coordinator and he is Chair of the Alabama Board of Examiners in Counseling. He is Past-President of the Alabama Mental Health Counselor Association and Past-President of the Alabama chapter of APTi. He is a Licensed Supervising Counselor, Certified Rehabilitation Counselor, National Certified Counselor and MBTI® Master Practitioner. Gary completed his MA in Rehabilitation Counseling in 1997 and his Ed.S. in Agency Counseling in 2001, both at the University of Alabama-Birmingham. Gary was honored as the 2009 Mental Health Counselor of the Year by the American Mental Health Counselor’s Association.
NEW MEETING LOCATION – Directions to American Underground meeting room
Watch for posted APT ribbons marking the path to the meeting room. On foot, exit the South Parking Garage in the NE corner via the steps or the elevator, Level C. The meeting is in the Strickland Building on the other side of the water feature (take the brick stairway or follow the ramp in front of Tyler’s Tap Room to the bridge over the water feature). We have been asked to use the farthest entrance, adjacent to the giant water tower and next to the Cuban Revolution restaurant. Once you enter the Strickland Building, on the left there is a staircase to the lower level marked American Underground, take the stairway or the elevator straight ahead. There is a security desk in the lobby if you require assistance. On the lower level pass the glass conference room and continue past the computer offices to the middle of the hallway. On the left you will see a break room and on the right will be Classroom 1, our destination. The area is heavily patrolled and quite safe, particularly on game nights. Accessibility without stairs: elevators and ramps are readily available from the parking garage to the meeting room.
Link to Printable American Tobacco Campus Map
http://www.americantobaccocampus.com/presentation/v1/pdf/AT_Parking_Map_2012_w_AU_Ford_Kia.pdf
CAUTION: NEW PARKING DECK
Driving Directions to American Tobacco South Parking Garage – No Parking Pass Needed This Time!
The Durham Bulls are out of town, and our program starts two hours before the DPAC show so we do not require parking passes and parking in South Deck is always FREE.
From I-85 (US 70):
Exit Downtown Durham (Mangum Street). Continue on Mangum through downtown, 2 miles. Follow parking signs to ballpark. The South Deck is just past the Stadium on the corner of Willard/Jackie Robinson and Carr Streets.
From I-40:
Take I-40 West to the Durham Freeway-147 (Exit 279B) to the Mangum/Roxboro Street Exit (Exit 12B). Keep straight up the hill for about 2 blocks (Willard St./Jackie Robinson) Ballpark Stadium is on the right. South Parking Deck just past Stadium on right. Corner of Willard/Jackie Robinson and Carr.
From 15-501 North Bypass:
Exit Durham Freeway South-147. Exit Mangum/Roxboro Street (12). Cross Mangum Street. Go Left on Roxboro. Follow signs for Durham Freeway North (stay to right). Cross Mangum Street again. Ballpark is on the right. You will see the South Parking Deck on the corner of Willard/Jackie Robinson and Carr Streets.
From I-540:
Take I-540 south to the I-40 exit. Take I-40 West until you reach the Durham Freeway-147 (Exit 279B) to the Mangum/Roxboro Street Exit (Exit 12B). Keep straight up the hill for about 2 blocks (Willard St./Jackie Robinson) Ballpark Stadium is on the right and just past the Stadium is the South Parking Deck on the corner of Willard/Jackie Robinson and Carr Streets.
July 27th, 2012
Presented by:
Master Practitioners of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator®
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
6:00pm to 9:00 pm
Diamond View Room
DurhamBulls Athletic Park
Directions given at registration
Cost: $15.00 per person (member rate) | |
Cost: $20.00 per person for non-members |
Members may bring guests at the membership rate.
(Bring your favorite main or side dish to share. Salad, dessert, beverages and workshop materials provided.)
Harry Houdini, David Copperfield—magicians who amaze us by escaping from underwater tombs and making buildings disappear—but what is magic?
In this third presentation on “The Red Book” we will explore the magic of Carl Jung. Jung meets his various personalities in Liber Secundus (the second part of the Red Book), who help him to understand who he is and what he must confront in his quest to be an authentic human being. In chapter twenty-one, “The Magician,” Jung searches for a magician who will show him the way. He knows himself but how is he to move forward with this knowledge? What is the magic that will steer the wagon of his life?
April 29th, 2012
Presented by:
Master Practitioners of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator®
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
6:00pm to 9:00 pm
6 p.m. – Dinner & Networking, 6:45 p.m. – Program
American Underground Room
Durham Bulls Athletic Park
Cost: $15.00 per person (member rate) | |
Cost: $20.00 per person for non-members |
(Members may bring guests at the membership rate.)
When Carl Jung started writing The Red Book in 1913, he was deeply depressed. His relationship with Freud had ended acrimoniously, he questioned the value of his work, and he thought he was having a psychological breakdown. The book is an account of his self-psychoanalysis. In this workshop, we will explore the second part of The Red Book, Liber Secundus, in which Jung encounters and carries on a conversation with the various parts of himself. We will meet the Red Man, the Lowly, the Castle, the Anchorite, and others as we come to a deeper understanding of how the various and opposite parts of his personality helped Jung to become a major force in the psychoanalytic movement.
March 18th, 2012
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
6:00 pm to 9:00 pm
6 pm – Dinner & Networking, 6:45 – Program
Diamond View Room
512 Mangum St. (Adjacent to the Durham Bulls Athletic Park)
Members may bring guests at the membership rate
(Bring your favorite main or side dish to share. Salad,
dessert, beverages, and workshop materials provided.)
Cost: $15.00 per person (member rate) |
Cost: $20.00 per person for non-members |
Topics:
Presenters:
August 28th, 2011
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