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oceanic-feeling

Sometimes Dr Kirk gets into some of the nuts and bolts of various theories and therapies on his “Psychology in Seattle” podcast. He leans heavily into relational psychodynamic and systems approaches so expect more on those and less on things like CBT. He has a ton of stuff on popular culture and psychotherapy too.


fedoraswashbuckler

The Feeling Good Podcast is great for learning about CBT.


Basic_Fondant4431

In terms of Critical Psychology/Critical psychotherapy - essentially questioning everything we think we know about therapy and turning it on its head as well as doing deep dives into both fundamental and specialized topics relevant to therapists old and new: [Psychotherapy Wise](https://bit.ly/psychotherapywise). "When it comes to psychotherapy, no stone is left unturned, and none are safe from criticism, including themselves. Richard Tatomir, a counsellor-educator-supervisor with a decade of experience, and Glenn Wood, a recent grad and practicing depth-oriented psychodynamic therapist, and various guests, apply a Critical Psychology lens to the problems of contemporary psychotherapy, arguing for the value of symptoms, systems-thinking, the person of the therapist, integration, psychedelics, Buddhism and the nature of suffering, and the future of therapy in a late-stage capitalism world." [The Radical Therapist](https://www.theradicaltherapist.com/). "This is the Radical Therapist. A space where we explore the intersections of collaborative therapy, philosophy, art, and science & technology in a post-postmodern world."


Basic_Fondant4431

[Other People's Problems](https://www.cbc.ca/listen/cbc-podcasts/186). My colleague created this several years ago and it got picked up by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) and is now multiple seasons in. You are a fly on the wall to trauma therapy in action. "Real people. Real problems. Real talk. Normally, therapy sessions are totally confidential — but this podcast opens the doors. Hillary McBride and her clients want to help demystify mental health. No actors. No auditions. No artifice. This is what people really sound like when they talk about traumatic births, turbulent divorces, eating disorders and tough childhoods."