Pre & Post Conference Workshops
June 2nd: Pre-Congress Morning Sessions 9am – 12pm:
This workshop invites participants to explore the art of facilitating existential group therapy through a phenomenological and deeply relational lens. Drawing on the metaphor of the Vestal—the guardian of the sacred fire—it proposes an understanding of the group therapist as one who tends the living flame of human encounter, safeguarding the conditions for authentic presence, openness, and dialogue.
Participants will experience and reflect on the group as a living organism that reveals itself through relationships, tensions, and silences. The workshop integrates conceptual and experiential learning, combining brief theoretical framings with shared dialogue and a central experiential segment in which participants will directly engage the phenomenology of “tending the fire.” Through this process, they will explore how to sustain a non-directive and relational attitude that allows the group’s life to unfold rather than be directed or controlled.
Co-facilitated by Yaqui A. Martínez-Robles and Bárbara Godoy, this session offers an opportunity to deepen the therapist’s attunement to the immediacy of group experience and to rediscover the sacred responsibility of holding a space for others’ becoming—an act of care, attention, and wonder that lies at the heart of existential-phenomenological practice.
Despite love being the most powerful human force for healing, transformation, and meaning-making, it remains taboo in psychotherapy discourse. The very topic of “love” is avoided and often discouraged in training institutions and is often met with embarrassment when brought up amongst colleagues. This workshop invites clinicians and scholars into a courageous, ethically grounded, existential-humanistic exploration of love as a substantive factor in therapeutic presence, relationship, and transformation. Drawing from existential philosophy, humanistic psychology, ethics, theology, neuroscience, and lived clinical experience, participants will explore love not as boundary violation—but as responsible, conscious, relational presence. This workshop challenges fear-based clinical practice and calls therapists into the courage to love responsibly.
The presentation provides an overview of the foundations of Zhi Mian Therapy, which originated in China and has been described as an indigenous Chinese existential therapy. The presentation begins with an overview of Zhi Mian Therapy, specifically its core concepts, common questions, and key texts. This includes a discussion of the meaning of “zhi mian,” which can be translated as “face-to-face” or “to face directly.” The translation does not capture the full richness of the idea of zhi mian, which includes facing oneself directly, facing the world directly, and facing others directly. Next, the presentation considers what is meant by “It is the truth that heals” in Zhi Mian Therapy, including how this concept is applied in psychotherapy. Drawing from this, cultural analysis and cultural issues will be explored.
It is anticipated that this approach of Zhi Mian Therapy, originating from China, will spark dialogue in an international setting. It is an intended dialogue in the hope of benefiting individuals from various cultures. Related to this, consideration will be given to the idea of “speakers in the public square,” which considers the contributions of influential voices from around the globe who have contributed to existential psychology and therapy. It will be considered how these diverse voices contribute to advancing existential thought.
June 2nd: Pre-Congress Afternoon Sessions 1pm – 4pm
This workshop presents a systematic overview of state-of-the-art research on meaning in life and meaning-centered practices. One of the workshop’s innovative highlights is the presenter sharing his latest cutting-edge research on the evolutionary and neurocognitive foundations of meaning-making, and its revolutionary implications for how we conceptualise and work with meaning in practice and society. This session may benefit practitioners seeking evidence-based concepts, models, and interventions about meaning in life, as well as tools for assessment and outcome measurement. Researchers in all career stages may enjoy learning about state-of-the-art methods on meaning, as well as their strengths, limitations, and future opportunities; the presenter will share an ambitious research agenda for our field. Training institutions, such as lecturers and managers in existential and positive psychology and psychotherapy programmes, may want to attend this workshop to learn about the evidence-based knowledge and competencies that their programmes should ideally cover. Policy-makers and lobbyists may join to learn how to position themselves and promote evidence-based meaning-centered practices to mental health care institutions, health insurers, and national health services. Finally, the workshop offers innovative, evidence-informed applications of existential principles in societal and political-economic contexts. Through a combination of didactic presentations, interactive discussions, and experiential exercises, participants will explore research developments, practical applications in their practice, and research projects. Content draws, amongst others, from the presenter’s systematic reviews, meta-analyses, clinical trials, and published handbooks. Participants can attend this workshop on its own, but are recommended to also attend the morning workshop, which the presenter will give on the evidence-based overview of existential therapies. Content draws, amongst others, from the presenter’s 25-year research line, with systematic reviews, meta-analyses, clinical trials, and published handbooks (joelvos.com). Participants are asked to fill-in beforehand the Meaning Sextet Questionnaire and the Meaning Approach Questionnaire, downloadable from https://joelvos.com/questionnaires/ and read Vos, J. (2022). Meaning in life across cultures and times: an overview of the empirical literature. In: Chen, Y. (Ed.) Meaning in Life (freely downloadable). Other recommended reading: Vos, J. (2018), Meaning in Life: An evidence-based handbook for practitioners; Vos, J. (2020), The Economics of Meaning in Life; Vos, J. (2025). Measuring meaning in life at macro- and micro-level. Journal of Positive Psychology. Hoffman, L. E., & Lac, V. E. (2025). The evidence-based foundations of existential-humanistic therapy. APA. Batthyany, A.,&Russo-Netzer, P. (Eds.). (2014). Meaning in positive and existential psychology. Springer. Researchers may benefit from Vos, J. Doing research in psychological therapies (Sage, 2023).
Part II of the two-part workshop builds on the content and examples from Part I, inviting participants to practical skill development of Personal Existential Analysis (PEA) through exercising the content of Part I. Participants will benefit the most from Part II if they have participated in Part I.
The main application of the method will be trained through live therapeutic engagement with a real-life practical situation brought from a volunteer workshop participant. With guidance from the workshop facilitators, all participants will be invited to take part in this live demonstration, proceeding step by step through the specific procedures of PEA. The challenges and difficulties that present will be discussed as they emerge, through reflective dialogue. This structured practice, reflection, and facilitated discussion of the process and the challenge of PEA is the heart of the learning, allowing participants to integrate and translate the learning into their own therapeutic work.
June 2nd: Pre-Congress Full Day Sessions 7:30am – 5:30pm
Participants will be taught specific skills of analysing dream imagery, whilst cataloging it as pertaining to physical, social, mental or spiritual issues. They will also learn to see the tensions and conflicts of polarities that figure in the dream images. They will be shown how to use this observation to work with the paradox and to enable clients to move from apparent contradictions to dialectical transformation, thus transcending current problems in their lives that are represented in the dream.
This 3-hour experiential and didactic workshop integrates existential psychology with nature- and hiking-based metaphors to support clinical orientation, humility, responsibility, and meaning-making in an increasingly unstable cultural context. Using the concept of bushwhacking—movement through terrain where trails are unclear or absent—the workshop invites clinicians to examine disorientation as a sane response to uncertainty rather than a symptom to be eliminated.
Participants explore core existential foundations (e.g., freedom, responsibility, authenticity, isolation, mortality, meaning, absurdity) (Yalom, 1980; van Deurzen, 2012) through embodied metaphors drawn from hiking, wilderness ethics, and Leave No Trace (LNT) principles. The workshop emphasizes therapist congruence, ethical restraint, and experiential self-reflection as prerequisites for clinical application. Rather than prescribing techniques, the workshop models an invitational stance that prioritizes orientation before intervention and responsibility before technique acquisition.
Participants will leave with a grounded conceptual framework, practical metaphors adaptable to diverse clinical populations, and an increased awareness of the risks, limits, and ethical considerations inherent in experiential and metaphor-based clinical work.
*This full-day experience will be held off site at the International Archives of Existential and Humanistic Therapy in Colorado Springs with a morning hike in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains Guided by Backpackers. Workshop fee includes a half-day workshop, tourism attractions, and transportation to and from the Hyatt Denver/Aurora Conference Center. Participants will meet at badge pickup no later than 7:00 a.m. to be transported to the designation.
June 7th: Post Congress Morning Session 9am – 12pm:
June 7th: Post Congress Afternoon Session 1pm – 4pm:
Pre- and post-Congress workshops offer an opportunity to spend more time with ideas, practices, and conversations, and are designed for deeper engagement in smaller, more focused settings, allowing for reflection, skill-building, and meaningful exchange with colleagues. All workshops will be held conveniently at the conference center and the full-day workshops will take place at the International Archives of Existential and Humanistic Therapy in Colorado Springs. Workshops are available to reserve with or without a Congress registration. Space is limited and require a paid reservation through the Eventify page here.
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