Well, the time has come for me to wrap up my time at Trinity International University. On Wednesday, I had my final class. No papers due, no exams, nothing dramatic. I walked into my class, met with students and a faculty member for some clinical supervision, and then walked out with every last requirement completed before my official graduation on May 10. As is usually the case with these sorts of things, there is a mix of emotions, and most of mine lean towards the happy side regarding closing this chapter at Trinity. Overall, I've thoroughly enjoyed my educational, spiritual, and personal development while at Trinity. All of these factors have played a role in the clinician I am as I graduate, and I am thankful for being a part of an institution which gives significant importance and attention to issues related to integration between psychology and theology/Christianity, and I am especially thankful for this as I go into a secular doctoral program.
As I look back over the 60-some credit hours and about 1,250 clinical hours I've completed over these last three years, it is difficult to pin-point particular courses which have been pivatol or life-changing. To be sure, there are ones I enjoyed more than others, but each one played a subtle and distinct role in my development, and some were instrumental in leading me to pursue doctoral education. I loved Addictions Counseling, and particularly am thankful for that class introducing me to the writings of Gerald May. I loved the various Family Therapy courses I took, and enjoyed learning about how various theories impact the direct treatment planning and direction of therapy. Multicultural Counseling was one of my favorites, and has led to my continued interest regarding racial identity development and overall multicultural awareness. Psychological Testing and Research Methods were the two courses which pushed me to consider pursuing a doctorate. These were the two courses I was least looking forward to when I began the program at Trinity, but I had them concurrently during the same semester, and when the dust settled, they were actually two of my favorites. I wanted to learn more in these areas, learn more about projective and standardized tests, learn more about good research and how to do good research, learn more about publication and presentations, and all of these point to being a psychologist, not a master's level therapist. Another class was Personality Development, as intriguing as anything, especially when coupled with Psychopathology. I was drawn to attachment theory, and was able to develop this interest into the paper I presented at a conference this spring in Arizona. It's clear as I consider my current research interests the way in which they have been molded by various courses, faculty, and clinical experiences I've had over the last two years. While it is so likely to change and develop, as most things do, my current interests lie in the areas of adolescent development as it relates to family systems, multicultural issues and racial identity, and wilderness therapy. We'll see what happens...
Tonight I have the counseling department banquet with the graduating class. While I've not developed the intimate friendships I did while at Taylor in undergrad, I have really enjoyed being in class with my peers and getting to interact with them around their lives and interests. I will be so intrigued to see where everyone ends up in five or ten years, how their interests and growth continues to develop, and how they go out an impact their clients' lives. I will miss them, and I will also miss the faculty. They have been a clear support for me and have been so willing to meet with me separately as I've worked through various papers and projects, and they have been personally invested in my desire to go on for more schooling. Not to mention all of those letters of recommendations.
While I don't graduate for another two weeks, and I will be at my internship until the end of May, the chapter is reaching its closure, and another one will open. But for now, I am seeking to rest in the present before looking ahead, and when all is said and done, I will be proud to be a graduate of Trinity.
But it's still exciting that my last class is done.
Friday, April 25, 2008
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
On Pouring Wine
In my daily browsing of The New York Times, I often find articles that make me think, cringe, or laugh. This one did a little bit of all three:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/21/opinion/21cohen.html?em&ex=1209009600&en=822b6125ea4a032b&ei=5087%0A
Enjoy!
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/21/opinion/21cohen.html?em&ex=1209009600&en=822b6125ea4a032b&ei=5087%0A
Enjoy!
Friday, April 18, 2008
The Education Continues
It's one of those rare Friday nights here in our apartment where we are actually free for the night. Just Joy and me and the dog. Every once in a while, we do something exciting: we move the sofa and coffee table, take the mattress off our bed, carry it down the hall, and put it right in front of the TV. We spend the night making some popcorn while piled in pillows and pick some movie that Joy will end up falling asleep to anyway. It's great fun. We took the idea from Over the Rhine's "Let's Spend the Day in Bed," and it really is just glorious. Toss the dog a treat, rub each others feet...
I write all this because it's one of the many things Joy and I have enjoyed in our humble apartment. While this last semester has been a little bit of a roller coaster while considering our plans once I graduate from Trinity International University, we now know what the next step is going to be. I was accepted into the doctoral program in clinical psychology at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.
I had really come to think the possibility of doctoral education was out of the picture for the immediate future, but after a few phone interviews and a visit to the campus last weekend, the door has opened and we're walking through. Yes, it will be many more years of school. (People always ask and I dread telling them just how long, but it's five or six years. Thankfully, they're paying all tuition and giving me a stipend as well). While Joy and I have really loved living here in Arlington Heights and have come to make Country Glen Apartments a home we enjoy, we're very excited for this next step and move. There are indeed many details to take care of, but there's energy in those details and excitement in the plans.
Since our lease is finished at the end of May, we'll be living with Joy's parents for the months of June and July and then moving to Ohio at the beginning of August. I'm a little intimidated by the school, and all of the graduate students I met in the program commented on how overwhelming it can be, particularly the first year. In fact, one of the students had gotten her J.D. before starting the Ph.D. program, and I had tremors go through my body when she told me that law school was a piece of cake compared to the program she was in at Miami. Yikes. (Drew and Blom, I told her you would not be happy with that assessment.) As I met with several of the professors, there were multiple times that I understood the actual words coming from their mouths regarding their research, but when I tried to put those individual words together into coherent sentences, my mind was a fog. Nonetheless, the excitement remains, and it's certainly one step closer to my long-term goal (okay, very long-term goal) of getting my Ph.D. We'll see if it actually happens.
So for now we are trying to enjoy looking to the future while relishing in the present. We have one and a half months left here, and by jove, we're going to enjoy it. After all, I need to enjoy these days before the misery sets in come fall and I'm surrounded by books and research I don't understand. Plus, we don't know where we'll be living, and it just might not be as easier to bring the mattress into the living room.
I write all this because it's one of the many things Joy and I have enjoyed in our humble apartment. While this last semester has been a little bit of a roller coaster while considering our plans once I graduate from Trinity International University, we now know what the next step is going to be. I was accepted into the doctoral program in clinical psychology at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.
I had really come to think the possibility of doctoral education was out of the picture for the immediate future, but after a few phone interviews and a visit to the campus last weekend, the door has opened and we're walking through. Yes, it will be many more years of school. (People always ask and I dread telling them just how long, but it's five or six years. Thankfully, they're paying all tuition and giving me a stipend as well). While Joy and I have really loved living here in Arlington Heights and have come to make Country Glen Apartments a home we enjoy, we're very excited for this next step and move. There are indeed many details to take care of, but there's energy in those details and excitement in the plans.
Since our lease is finished at the end of May, we'll be living with Joy's parents for the months of June and July and then moving to Ohio at the beginning of August. I'm a little intimidated by the school, and all of the graduate students I met in the program commented on how overwhelming it can be, particularly the first year. In fact, one of the students had gotten her J.D. before starting the Ph.D. program, and I had tremors go through my body when she told me that law school was a piece of cake compared to the program she was in at Miami. Yikes. (Drew and Blom, I told her you would not be happy with that assessment.) As I met with several of the professors, there were multiple times that I understood the actual words coming from their mouths regarding their research, but when I tried to put those individual words together into coherent sentences, my mind was a fog. Nonetheless, the excitement remains, and it's certainly one step closer to my long-term goal (okay, very long-term goal) of getting my Ph.D. We'll see if it actually happens.
So for now we are trying to enjoy looking to the future while relishing in the present. We have one and a half months left here, and by jove, we're going to enjoy it. After all, I need to enjoy these days before the misery sets in come fall and I'm surrounded by books and research I don't understand. Plus, we don't know where we'll be living, and it just might not be as easier to bring the mattress into the living room.
Monday, April 07, 2008
A Quote for Today
"All things of the universe are miracles, each as profound as any."
--Walt Whitman
Needless to say, I love this quote. There are miracles all around us, in each moment of each day. How many have you seen today?
Oh, and I must add: Happy Birthday, Drew! You are a miracle as profound as they come.
--Walt Whitman
Needless to say, I love this quote. There are miracles all around us, in each moment of each day. How many have you seen today?
Oh, and I must add: Happy Birthday, Drew! You are a miracle as profound as they come.
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