Mary Bowles, a marriage and family therapist, uses applied neuroscience to inform her practice of psychotherapy, and we talk to her about how.
Today we talk to Mary Bowles, LMFT, RRT, MIAAN(Cert), who is a Colorado State Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist, a Certified Applied Neuroscience Practitioner with a focus on Neuropsychotherapy, a Certified Rapid Resolution Therapist, and an elected Management Committee Member for the International Association of Applied Neuroscience (IAAN).
Mary is in private practice and the executive director and founder of the MindWise Institute. She is trained in Interpersonal Neurobiology and has completed Level 3 Gottman Method training for therapy with couples. Mary advocates for the cultivation of equal-value approaches to working with all humans in all areas of life and reducing stigma in mental health.
Mary Bowles, LMFT, RRT, MIAAN(Cert), is a Colorado State Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist, Certified Applied Neuroscience Practitioner, Certified Rapid Resolution Therapist, and a Doctor of Psychology Student at California Southern University. She has extensive training in Interpersonal Neurobiology and has completed Level 3 Gottman Method training for therapy with couples. She is a former Adjunct Faculty Social Psychology Instructor at Colorado Mountain College and the former Support Coordinator for the International Association of Applied Neuroscience (IAAN), trained and supervised by Pieter J. Rossouw.
Mary is in private practice and the executive director and founder of the MindWise Institute, which focuses on “Relationships with the Brain in Mind”. She specializes in using brain based approaches in psychotherapy with couples, children, and families. She presents on topics that include Memory Reconsolidation, MindWise Relationships, Parenting, Co-Parenting through Divorce and Beyond, and Suicide Prevention. She is committed to creating bottom-up approaches to life’s most difficult situations (i.e., parenting, divorce recovery, blending families, trauma recovery…) and to encouraging enriched environments in all areas of life. Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, Mary advocates for cultivating equal-value approaches to working with all humans in all areas of life and reducing stigma in mental health!
Disclaimer: The information on this website is not intended to be fully systematic or complete, nor does inclusion on our website imply any endorsement or recommendation by The Science of Psychotherapy/Dahlitz Media, advisors, or moderators. We make no warranties, express or implied, about the value or utility for any purpose of the information and resources contained on this site.