California Marriage and Family Therapist License # MFC41610
818/343-7714
Two office locations:
9300 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 320 Beverly Hills, CA 90210
16550 Ventura Boulevard, Suite 405A Encino, CA 91436
ph: 818-343-7714
bonnie

This is an excellent introduction to mindfulness. You will learn mindfulness meditation practices including sitting, walking meditations, and how to work with difficult thoughts and emotions. These practices develop greater mind-body awareness and reduce stress. You will learn how to incorporate mindful awareness into your daily life and within your work as actors. These mindfulness practices have scientific support as means to reduce stress, improve attention, boost the immune system, reduce emotional reactivity, develop greater mind-body awareness, and promote a general sense of health and well-being.
When: Saturdays 12-2 or Wed. 7-9 pm
Cost: $165 / 6 weeks
email bonnie@bonniekatz or call 818/343-7714 for start date.
RESERVE YOUR SPACE 818-343-7714
Private Sessions Also Available
You don’t have to win beauty contests or medals to acquire self-confidence. Jack Nicholson possesses neither flawless skin nor the body of an Adonis, yet self-confidence oozes out of him. Confidence has absolutely nothing to do with what you look like on the outside and everything to do with how you feel on the inside-- the antithesis of what we are brainwashed into thinking by savvy marketing mavens. They bombard us with veiled messages that whiter teeth, silkier hair, smoother skin and a leaner body will boost our confidence and guarantee that Mr. or Ms. Right will be knocking on the front door. You can perfect yourself into looking Lady Kate or Prince William, but that will neither guarantee self-confidence nor the perfect royal life. Sadly, just look at what happened to Princess Diana. So, if perfecting ourselves doesn’t guarantee confidence, what will?
In my professional opinion, confidence is merely a by-product of self-acceptance. And that doesn’t mean when you lose the extra 20 pounds, it means accepting yourself right now , just as you are sitting here reading this article. I know how hard this is for many people. In fact, chewing on glass might sound easier.
Let’s take a look at how Cheryl struggled with her feelings of limited confidence. When I started working with her, she was battling with circumstantial depression. Originally from a small Midwestern town, she came to Los Angeles to pursue her dream of being an actress. She had been riding a wave of success in her hometown from being cast in all the leads in college to landing a local agent after graduation and steadily booking commercials and modeling jobs. But when she moved to Los Angeles last year, her success came to a screeching halt and the wave suddenly crashed. She found herself competing for parts with hundreds of other actresses who looked like her and in her words, “had more experience and talent.” But something had taken hold of Cheryl and her struggles to be successful were crushing her enthusiastic spirit. Her confidence was nowhere to be found because it was intrinsically tied to her accomplishments, and at this point they were nil.
As a child she was always told to “Be the best and nothing less.” There’s nothing wrong with striving for excellence, but effort above achievement was not appreciated in her family. She grew up with three older siblings who were all trained to compete with each other for their Father’s attention. If you happened to be the unlucky one with a grade less than A, you were barely noticed that evening at the dinner table. Consistently tying her Father’s love to her achievements solidified in her mind that she had to achieve perfection in order to be worthy enough to love. Her confidence in feeling good enough was based on a lot of conditions needing to be satisfied first. Cheryl never knew what it felt like to be unconditionally loved. This is where the beginning of her difficulties began. It was hard to accept herself if she wasn’t perfect. The upside to this glitch in childhood development is that it can create excellence, just look at Barbra Streisand. Part of what motivated her towards excellence and success was having a very critical mother. The down side is that her perfectionism is relentless even after an enormous amount of well deserved success. The inner critic cannot let go of the need to control the outside circumstances and rest in complete self-acceptance.
And so Cheryl and I began to work each week, getting to know and understand where the seeds of her perfectionism started. She learned to allow herself to grieve for the little girl who had to work so hard to be loved, and realized how a belief formed many years ago was no longer true today. Through Cheryl’s courage and determination she was able to get to know these powerful feelings that were influencing her actions and learned to make new choices for herself. Her sense of worth and self-confidence were no longer tied to her achievements, but to an appreciation and acceptance of herself. Cheryl’s confidence flowed in abundance from a bottomless well because she was able to be open and available for all the parts of herself, not just the ones that looked perfect. She learned that it’s not about cultivating one part of yourself and rejecting another, but looking open heartedly at the whole. The openness Cheryl experienced now allowed her to fall in love with acting again. She learned how to enjoy and be present for the whole process of it, not just when she landed a part. She knew that she was entitled to be loved for who she was not for what she did.
12 steps to jump start your journey towards confidence remember :
Dear Bonnie,
Just wanted to say what a wonderful little story (lesson) in your essay "Callbacks," found in the October 2010 online issue of "The Networker. I shared this with my MFA acting students. We work from our personal selves (sense memory, emotional memory, and imagination---that's all we have) as we tackle emotional preparation in our work. The entire process should make us stronger as actors, and as human beings (I suppose this is all is a part of the power of art--the transformational / enriching possibilities, at least for the actor).
Your expression of these thoughts and your relating them to the seasons--autumn, in this case (I am a native New Englander!)--truly caught my attention. Very thought-provoking and inspirational--so useful to the actor--who, once he/she better understands his/her personal self, can better understand the world and the points of view an author brings to creating characters. This is all so downright helpful to my teaching of acting.
Many thanks!!
Lucien Douglas
Senior Associate Chair
Associate Professor of Acting and Directing
Department of Theatre and Dance
University of Texas at Austin
Austin, TX 78712 Dear Bonnie,
GROUPS WILL BE HELD IN MY BEVERLY HILLS OFFICE: 9300 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE 320, BEVERLY HILLS, CA 90210
TO GET MORE INFO ON MY GROUPS FOR ACTORS PLEASE FILL OUT THE INFO BELOW. PLEASE SPECIFY WHICH GROUPS YOU ARE INTERESTED IN.
ph: 818-343-7714
bonnie