Episodios

  • How Dr. Amy Parks Thinks About Therapy, Parents, and Change
    Apr 1 2026

    In this episode of Supervision Simplified, Dr. Amy Parks pulls back the curtain on how she thinks about therapy, parents, and the role clinicians actually play in change.

    This is not a tactics episode. It is a perspective shift.

    Amy shares the experiences that shaped her approach to clinical work, supervision, and leadership, including what she believes most clinicians get wrong about responsibility, why therapy alone often is not enough, and how real change actually happens.

    This conversation moves beyond surface-level techniques and into the deeper thinking that drives clinical decisions, relationships, and outcomes.

    If you are a therapist, supervisor, or practice owner, this episode will challenge how you think about your role and the work itself.

    In this episode, we cover:

    • Why therapy alone does not create change

    • The role parents play in the outcome of treatment

    • What clinicians often misunderstand about responsibility

    • How Amy developed her approach to supervision and care

    • The difference between knowing what to do and actually doing it

    This is Part 1 of a two-part conversation. In Part 2, we break down how these ideas show up in real-world clinical decisions, supervision challenges, and outcomes.

    Sponsor

    Clinical Supervision Directory

    www.clinicalsupervisiondirectory.com

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    20 m
  • Stop Supervising Alone: Why Isolation Is Holding Your Clinicians Back
    Mar 18 2026

    Supervision isn’t just about cases—it’s about people. And people don’t grow in isolation.

    In Episode 56 of Supervision Simplified, Dr. Amy Parks is joined by grief counselor, educator, and supervisor Debi Jenkins Frankle to explore why supervising alone may be limiting your clinicians more than helping them.

    Debi shares her approach to group supervision, including how connection, support, and real-time feedback shape confident, capable clinicians. From starting supervision with “how’s your heart and soul” to creating environments where clinicians can learn from each other, this conversation reframes supervision as a developmental process—not just a requirement.

    If you’re a clinical supervisor, practice owner, or stepping into leadership, this episode will challenge your current model and give you a more effective path forward.

    Connect with Debi Jenkins Frankle:

    https://www.calabasascounseling.com

    https://www.facebook.com/groups/privatepracticegrief

    https://www.instagram.com/debijenkinsfrankle

    Sponsor:

    Clinical Supervision Directory

    www.clinicalsupervisiondirectory.com

    Note: This is a previously released episode we’re bringing back because the conversation is just as relevant today—especially for supervisors looking to build stronger, more supported clinicians.

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    38 m
  • You Probably Have Autistic Clients (Even If You Don’t Realize It)
    Mar 4 2026

    If you think you don’t have autistic clients in your practice… think again.

    In this episode of Supervision Simplified, Dr. Amy Parks sits down with Jamie Roberts, LMFT — therapist, author, speaker, and founder of NeuroPebble — to unpack what clinicians often miss about neurodiversity in therapy and supervision.

    From late diagnoses and masking to the gaps in graduate training, this conversation challenges the idea of a “typical brain” and explores how neuroaffirming practice changes the way we supervise, treat, and support clients.

    We discuss:

    • Why most clinicians underestimate how many autistic clients they serve

    • The difference between neurodiversity as a social model vs. a medical model

    • What grad school didn’t teach us about autism and ADHD

    • How supervision can either reinforce or dismantle neuro-normative assumptions

    • Universal design in supervision and training

    • Why flexibility — not rigid scripts — creates better clinicians

    If you are a supervisor, supervisee, or practicing therapist, this episode will challenge your assumptions and expand your lens.

    The legacy of supervision starts here.

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    36 m
  • Under Investigation by Blue Cross: Insurance Overreach & Leadership in Mental Health
    Feb 18 2026

    In Episode 54 of Supervision Simplified, Dr. Amy Parks speaks with Arizona group practice owner and supervisor Brianna Reinhold about what happens when insurance companies begin reshaping clinical authority, supervision structures, and access to care.

    After being placed under investigation by Blue Cross, Brianna shares how shifting associate billing policies, supervision restrictions, and audit pressures are impacting rural access, training pipelines, and ethical leadership in private practice. Together, they explore what this moment means for supervisors, practice owners, and the future of mental health care.

    This conversation goes beyond billing challenges. It asks a bigger question:

    Who gets to define quality care — clinicians or insurance companies?

    If you supervise, lead, or work within an insurance-based system, this episode will give you language for what many in the field are feeling — and practical insight into what may come next.

    Sponsor:

    Clinical Supervision Directory

    www.clinicalsupervisiondirectory.com

    Guest:

    Brianna Reinhold, LPC

    www.northernlightstherapyaz.com

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    34 m
  • Inside the Supervision Summit That Shifted the Field
    Feb 4 2026

    What happens when over 1,000 supervisors show up—hungry for better leadership, clearer ethics, and supervision that actually works?

    Something shifted at this supervision summit—and it wasn’t just the content.

    From the questions being asked to the conversations happening behind the scenes, it was clear that supervisors are craving something deeper than techniques and checklists. In this episode, Dr. Amy Parks pulls back the curtain and shares what she witnessed firsthand: the themes, tensions, and moments that quietly raised the bar for supervision across the field.

    You’ll hear Amy’s candid reflections on standout sessions covering:

    1. Presence and mindfulness in supervision
    2. Neurodiversity-affirming supervision
    3. Remediation, gatekeeping, and ethical leadership
    4. Professional identity development
    5. Culturally responsive supervision
    6. Trauma-informed supervision and burnout
    7. Advanced clinical thinking and questioning
    8. EFT-informed supervision in action

    More importantly, Amy explains why this content landed so strongly, what supervisors are clearly craving right now, and how this summit raised the bar for what supervision education should look like.

    If you supervise clinicians—or plan to—this episode will help you decide whether the PESI self-study recording is worth your time (spoiler: Amy doesn’t mince words).

    🎧 Insider perspective. Real supervision leadership. No fluff.

    👉 Affiliate link to purchase the PESI Clinical Supervision Summit recordings is included in the show notes.

    Purchasing through this link supports the Clinical Supervision Directory and helps keep high-quality supervision resources accessible.

    LINK TO PURCHASE SELF STUDY COURSE (LIVE COURSE HAS ENDED) -

    https://my.pesi.partners/298N36N/2QGWMGX/

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    38 m
  • AI in Clinical Supervision: Ethics, Awareness, and Responsibility
    Jan 21 2026

    Artificial intelligence is already part of clinical supervision, whether we acknowledge it or not. From documentation and treatment planning to reflective practice and supervision prep, AI is shaping how clinicians work and how supervisors guide development.

    In this episode of Supervision Simplified, Dr. Amy Parks offers a clear, ethical, and human-centered framework for supervising in an AI-influenced landscape. This conversation moves beyond hype and fear to focus on what supervisors actually need: judgment, awareness, and responsibility.

    Dr. Parks examines emerging research, ethical risk areas, and real-world use cases while emphasizing one essential truth: supervision is not an output skill. It is a relational process designed to shape clinical judgment over time.

    This episode is for supervisors, educators, and clinicians who want to engage AI thoughtfully without losing the heart of the work.

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    30 m
  • Supervision Is Not Management: Building Sustainable Supervision with Gulsah Kemer
    Jan 7 2026

    In this episode of Supervision Simplified, Dr. Amy Parks is joined by counseling supervision researcher and educator Gulsah Kemer for a thoughtful conversation about what supervision truly is and what it is not.

    Together, they challenge the idea that supervision is simply a form of management or administrative oversight. Instead, they explore supervision as a relational, reflective, and sustainability-focused practice that supports both supervisors and supervisees over time. Gulsah shares insights from more than a decade of research and teaching in counselor education, including the development of her Cohesive Model of Supervision, a research-informed framework grounded in how experienced supervisors think and make decisions in practice.

    The conversation addresses why supervisors are often left to develop their identities and styles in isolation, particularly outside of academic settings, and how this lack of support can contribute to burnout, ethical strain, and uncertainty. Dr. Parks and Gulsah discuss the importance of supervisor self-awareness, intentional reflection, and lifelong development, as well as the role supervision plays in gatekeeping, professional identity formation, and client care.

    This episode is especially relevant for supervisors working with students, licensure-seeking clinicians, and early-career professionals, as well as anyone interested in the future of supervision, counselor education, and sustainable clinical practice.

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    37 m
  • Supervision Isn’t About Managing People—It’s About Keeping Them in the Field
    Dec 24 2025

    Supervision isn’t about managing people. It’s about sustaining them.

    In this final episode of 2025, Dr. Amy Parks zooms out to take a 30,000-foot look at what sustainability really means in supervision and leadership—and why it matters now more than ever. Drawing from supervision practice, leadership research, neuroscience, and real-world supervision stories, Amy explores how traditional management models fall short in mental health work and how sustainable supervision protects clinicians, supervisors, and the profession itself.

    This episode unpacks why burnout, ethical drift, and workforce loss are not individual failures—but leadership and systems issues—and how supervision can become the most powerful tool we have for keeping clinicians engaged, ethical, and alive in the work.

    You’ll hear about nervous system regulation, psychological safety, moral injury, capacity over productivity, and the subtle ways supervision either sustains or silently erodes the people inside our systems.

    As we head into 2026, this episode offers a grounded, hopeful reframe: sustainability isn’t soft—it’s strategic.

    Supervision Simplified brings you real conversations with real clinical supervisors navigating the complex, messy, and meaningful world of mental health. Each episode delivers tools, insights, and stories that make supervision a little simpler—because who doesn’t want simpler?

    Sponsor:

    Clinical Supervision Directory – www.clinicalsupervisiondirectory.com

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    22 m