Insight Family Therapy Group, Inc.

Insight Family Therapy Group, Inc. Psychotherapy practice for couples, individuals, groups & families. Additional offerings include trauma informed yoga & somatic groups.
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Specialities inclide: Somatic, Gestalt, Perinatal, Eating Disorders, Emotionally Focused Couples, EMDR & Yoga Therapy. Insight Family Therapy Group is a psychotherapy practice offering mental health services to: individuals, couples, and families. Areas of speciality are: eating disorders, trauma, anxiety, dissociative disorders and depression. This practice uses a variety of techniques and treatment modalities. These include: relational Gestalt therapy, EMDR therapy, and exposure based methods. Mary Ortenburger is EMDR certified and an approved EMDR consultant, a Certified Eating Disorder Specialist (CEDS) and supervisor (CEDS-S). She is also a certified Gestalt therapist and runs a consultation group for therapists seeking certification. Mary Ortenburger, LMFT, owner of Insight Family Therapy Group, is a Registered Yoga Teacher (RYT) and actively training as a Certified Trauma Informed Yoga Therapist.

✨ NEW DATE ADDED – Parent-Child Yoga Play ✨Our last class sold out, so we’ve added another one!🗓 Sunday, May 17🕚 11:00 A...
02/21/2026

✨ NEW DATE ADDED – Parent-Child Yoga Play ✨

Our last class sold out, so we’ve added another one!

🗓 Sunday, May 17
🕚 11:00 AM – 12:00 PM

This playful, connection-focused class invites parents and children to move together using the yoga wall, swings, and props in a supportive, joyful way.

⚠️ Important registration note:
👉 You must book TWO spots — one for yourself and one for your child.
(Please don’t book just one spot — each participant needs their own registration.)

🌿 Limited to a small group for safety and individualized attention.

💫 Reserve your spots early — this one will fill quickly!

Thank you, for lending me this amazing photos from our last class!

April 12 | Somatic Support CircleIn light of what many are carrying right now, I’m offering a one-time somatic support c...
02/20/2026

April 12 | Somatic Support Circle

In light of what many are carrying right now, I’m offering a one-time somatic support circle for survivors of sexual assault.

This is not psychotherapy.
There will be no trauma storytelling.

This will be a guided, trauma-informed space focused on:
• Nervous system regulation
• Gentle grounding movement
• Reconnecting to internal safety
• Strengthening a sense of choice and agency

You are never required to speak.
Participation is always optional.

This is a 90-minute, in-person circle.
Capacity will be limited to maintain safety and containment.

Exchange: Donation-based. Venmo
Registration through Momence (link in bio).

If you are currently in acute crisis, this circle may not be appropriate. Please seek individual support or contact 988.

We don’t have to do this alone. ❤️‍🩹

In both Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) and Gestalt therapy, recurring conflict is understood as a disruption in conta...
02/19/2026

In both Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) and Gestalt therapy, recurring conflict is understood as a disruption in contact.

EFT describes this as an attachment cycle. When connection feels threatened, the attachment system activates. Partners may pursue, protest, withdraw, or shut down habitually because their nervous system is organizing around perceived relational risk.

Gestalt theory describes a similar moment as a disturbance at the contact boundary; there is a narrowing of awareness in which mutual influence becomes difficult or impossible.

The models use different theoretical language but converging insight.

When regulation drops, dialogue collapses into protection or the organism. The interaction becomes about managing threat to maintain connection to preserve the self.

Across couples, families, and even workplace dynamics, the task is not to argue more effectively, but to restore enough regulation for authentic contact to re-emerge.

Without regulation, there is no contact.
Without contact, there is no meaningful resolution.

02/18/2026

Something I notice again and again in my practice is that trauma survivors blame themselves.

They blame themselves for the divorce.
For the anger in the house.
For the drinking.
For being “too sensitive.”
For needing too much.
For not being enough.
They think “something was wrong with me”
Self-blame occurs as an adaptation to the mystification a child feels when an adult doesn’t “straighten out” that what is occurring is not their fault, or explicitly blames themselves child for being “bad”.

For a child, believing “It’s my fault” is often safer than believing “The people I depend on can’t protect me.”

If it was my fault, I can fix it.
If it was my fault, I have control.
If it was my fault, I can stay attached.

Shame becomes a strategy for survival.

However the cost of this strategy is that many adults are still carrying responsibility for things they never caused.

“It’s not your fault” can feel relieving but it can also feel destabilizing because letting go of self-blame means grieving the protection you didn’t receive.

Healing isn’t about avoiding responsibility in your present life.
It’s about releasing the shame that never belonged to you.

And that begins when your nervous system slowly learns:
You survived it.
You adapted brilliantly.
And it wasn’t your fault.

02/17/2026

When someone says “just get over it,” it often reveals more about their history than yours.

Minimizing another person’s pain is rarely a sign of strength. More often, it is a well-practiced survival strategy. Many people were never given the space, language, or safety to feel what hurt. They learned to override, suppress, intellectualize, or power through. So when they see someone pausing to acknowledge grief, trauma, or disappointment, it can feel threatening. It confronts the very defenses that once kept them intact.

Psychologically, this is understandable. Unprocessed pain does not disappear; it reorganizes itself into avoidance, rigidity, irritation, or contempt. Being in the presence of someone who is consciously tending to their wounds can activate what was never permitted in one’s own story.

But healing is not indulgence, and it is not stagnation.

Those doing the work of therapy, somatic processing, or reflective practice are often metabolizing pain that was never metabolized by prior generations. They are interrupting patterns of silence, emotional cutoff, and inherited survival responses. This is not about staying stuck in suffering. It is about completing what was interrupted — feeling what could not be felt, naming what could not be named, and moving through what was once frozen.

Acknowledgment is not the opposite of resilience. It is the foundation of it.

The goal is not to live in the wound. The goal is to integrate it, so it no longer runs the nervous system from the shadows. And that requires something many of us were never taught: turning toward pain with enough safety and support to let it move.

If “getting over it” were that simple, we would have generations of fully healed families. Instead, we have generations learning — sometimes for the first time — how to feel, process, and repair.

Healing is not weakness. It is the courageous refusal to pass unprocessed pain forward.

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In Gestalt therapy, contact is not just communication. It is the meeting point between two regulated nervous systems.Tru...
02/15/2026

In Gestalt therapy, contact is not just communication. It is the meeting point between two regulated nervous systems.

True dialogue requires mutual influence — both people must be able to tolerate being impacted.

When someone needs to win, dominate, escalate, or test allegiance, the system shifts from contact to defense.

And no amount of clarity, insight, or emotional intelligence can create mutuality where the structure doesn’t allow it.

If you keep “getting nowhere,” that may not be a skill deficit. It may be field information.

Sometimes the most mature move is not to argue better — but to adjust access.

Differentiation isn’t exile.
It’s clarity at the contact boundary.

Boundaries don’t always mean cutting someone off. Sometimes they mean adjusting depth.

Inversion Class | Sunday, March 15 | 10:00–11:30amOur classes this year have been selling out so far, and we want to giv...
02/15/2026

Inversion Class | Sunday, March 15 | 10:00–11:30am

Our classes this year have been selling out so far, and we want to give folks time to plan, sign up, and actually get a spot.

This 90-minute inversion class is a supported, thoughtful exploration of going upside down—using the wall, props, progressions, and plenty of options. You don’t need to “have” inversions. You need curiosity, steadiness, and a willingness to explore.

If this studio and these classes have been part of your routine, thank you. Your consistency is what allows this space to keep existing and offering this work.

Spots are limited, and advance registration is encouraged.

🌀 Sunday, March 15
🕙 10:00–11:30am
📍 At the studio
🔗 Registration now open

02/14/2026

Emotional numbing following overwhelming stress is well documented in trauma research.

Under extreme threat, the nervous system may shift into protective states that dampen affect, reduce sensation, and limit emotional overwhelm. Research in trauma psychophysiology has described stress-induced analgesia, endogenous opioid involvement, and autonomic shutdown responses as possible contributors to this blunting of emotional experience.

These responses are not character flaws. They are adaptive survival strategies.

When an experience exceeds perceived capacity, the system may prioritize protection over processing.

Therapeutic work is not about forcing emotion to return. It is about increasing safety and expanding capacity so that sensation and affect can emerge gradually and in tolerable ways.

Numbness is often protection — not pathology.

Spring & Summer at the studio 🌿These offerings are an invitation to slow down, tune in, and work with the nervous system...
02/13/2026

Spring & Summer at the studio 🌿

These offerings are an invitation to slow down, tune in, and work with the nervous system in intentional ways—through movement, rest, support, and connection.

Over the coming months, we’ll be exploring:
✨ deep rest through Yoga Nidra
✨ trauma-informed yoga and somatic education
✨ supportive inversions and wall-based practices
✨ seasonal resets and immersive experiences
✨ parent–child co-regulation and connection
✨ yin and integration for the summer months

Whether you’re a practitioner looking to deepen your understanding, or someone simply needing space to land, there’s a place for you here.

Upcoming dates:
• Wed, Feb 25 – Yoga Nidra | 6 PM
• Sat, March 1 – Healing Trauma Through Yoga & Somatics (CE Course) | 9–2:30
• Sat, March 15 – Supportive Inversion Yoga Wall Workshop | 10–11:30
• Wed, April 8 – Yoga Nidra | 6 PM
• Sun, May 3 – Spring Reset Somatic Wall Immersion | 10–12
• Sun, May 17 – Parent–Child Yoga Wall Workshop | 11–12
• Sat–Sun, June 27–28 – Advanced Somatic Wall Intensive
• Sun, July 12 – Yin Yoga | 10–11

Space is intentionally limited for most offerings.
Details + registration through the link in bio.

You don’t have to push to heal.
You’re allowed to be supported. ✨

02/12/2026

When conversations consistently leave you feeling confused or disoriented, it can reflect a breakdown in mentalization and reflective functioning under relational stress.

Developmental and attachment-based research shows that when individuals have limited tolerance for emotional discomfort, communication may shift toward deflection, topic-shifting, or circular responses—not as conscious manipulation, but as non-conscious defensive processes aimed at regulating affect and avoiding perceived threat (Fonagy et al.).

From a clinical perspective, these patterns are associated with emotion dysregulation, low differentiation of self, and reduced capacity to stay engaged with relational impact (Linehan; Bowen). Over time, such dynamics can erode mutual understanding and lead one party to doubt their own clarity.

Confusion is not pathology.
It is often a signal of relational process.

Frameworks referenced:
Fonagy et al. – Mentalization-Based Theory
Linehan – Dialectical Behavior Therapy (emotion regulation & interpersonal effectiveness)
Bowen – Family Systems Theory (differentiation of self)

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02/11/2026

Silence during conflict is often labeled as avoidance or disengagement, but in clinical psychology it is often more accurately understood as emotional withdrawal—a nervous system–mediated response to perceived relational threat.

Attachment and trauma research shows that for some individuals, vocalizing needs, emotions, or disagreement was historically paired with loss of safety—whether through punishment, escalation, invalidation, or abandonment. Over time, the nervous system learns that speech itself increases risk. Silence becomes regulation.

Importantly, emotional withdrawal does not imply an absence of internal experience. Thought, feeling, and meaning-making may be intact. What is limited is the felt safety required to translate internal experience into outward expression.

From a neurobiological perspective, this reflects a shift toward protective inhibition under stress, rather than cognitive shutdown. Safety—not insight—is the missing variable.

Understanding silence as a state-dependent response, rather than willful refusal, allows for more accurate attunement and more effective repair.

Frameworks referenced:
– Attachment Theory (Bowlby; Ainsworth)
– Polyvagal Theory (Porges)
– Trauma & autonomic nervous system regulation (Schore; van der Kolk)
– Emotion regulation & interpersonal effectiveness (Linehan)

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This space is about inner work.Quiet, private, relational workthat happens within the nervous system.When the inner chil...
02/10/2026

This space is about inner work.

Quiet, private, relational work
that happens within the nervous system.

When the inner child feels stirred, the work isn’t to analyze or interpret—
it’s to establish adult presence first.

Orientation. Grounding. Respect for protective strategies.

In this approach, the inner child isn’t asked to integrate, understand, or change.
They’re invited to look through adult eyes—
to take in cues of stability, neutrality, and support in the present moment.

Nothing is forced.
Protective parts are honored.
Safety leads the process.

This is the form of inner child work I return to—
progressive, attuned, and regulating.

Take what feels supportive. Leave the rest.
Sending love ❤️‍🩹

Address

219 North Indian Hill Boulevard Suite 201
Claremont, CA
91711

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 4:30pm
Tuesday 8am - 3:30pm
Wednesday 8am - 3:30pm
Thursday 8am - 4:30pm
Friday 8am - 4:30pm

Telephone

+15622817752

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