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With the growing population of aging citizens and citizens with mental wellness issues, the need for the ground-breaking approach to education, eldercare and mental care services is enormous. Therefore, we need leaders that help the Institute in the amplification of our teachings and promise to bring the greatest growth in our ability to replicate and scale up our vital services.
To help us reach our goals, Pacific Institute is fortunate to be guided by a Board of Directors that represents high-caliber professionals in the field of education, mental health, and gerontology and by elders from the community who belong to our Elder Advisory Council. Both governing bodies help us further our mission of teaching new perspectives on wellness and raising societal awareness to build healthier communities.
Board of Directors
Richard Wiseman, Ph. D., Emeritus and Member
Professor Wiseman continually searches for innovative links between literature and other disciplines such as philosophy and psychology. Most of all he is interested in how literature whether in the form of prose, poetry or philosophy has relevance for the concrete task of living our everyday lives, a topic he addresses specifically in his book The Therapies of Literature. R. W. Wiseman has traveled widely and studied in New York at Columbia and Hunter College, receiving a Certificat from the University of Strasbourg and a Diplome d'Etudes from the University of Caen. Back in the U.S. he received his M.A. and Ph.D. in Literature from the University of California, Berkeley, with postdoctoral study and research at the Sorbonne, Paris, the Thomas Mann Archives and the C.G. Jung Institute in Zürich. He later received an M.A. in Psychology at the Professional School of Psychology in San Francisco.
Professor Wiseman's teaching includes the University of Washington, U.C. Berkeley, the C. G. Jung Institute at Küsnacht/Zürich and San Francisco State University where he was Professor of Foreign Languages and Literatures as well as Department Chair of World and Comparative Literature. He has also offered extensive private seminars and workshops and has worked with Visiting Nurses and Hospice and Langley Porter Psychiatric Institute as a volunteer. He is a long time resident of the San Francisco Bay Area.
Nader Robert Shabahangi, Ph.D., Chairman & Founder
Nader R. Shabahangi, Ph.D., received his doctorate from Stanford University and is a licensed psychotherapist. His multicultural background has made him an advocate for different marginalized groups of society throughout his adult life. In the 1980's he worked with abused children and teenagers and led anticipatory bereavement groups for Coming Home Hospice. In 1992 he founded the non-profit organization Pacific Institute with the purpose of training psychotherapists in a multicultural, humanistic approach to counseling and to provide affordable therapy services to the many diverse groups living in San Francisco. In 1994, noticing the often inhumane treatment of the elderly living in institutions, he started to develop an innovative Gerontological Wellness Program in order to provide emotional support and mental health care services for the elderly. In 1997, together with his two brothers, Nader opened a residential care home for the elderly in San Francisco called Hayes Valley Care, where he could along with the Pacific institute Internship team implement the Gerontological Wellness Program.
Nader continues to create programs with the purpose of caring more comprehensively for the elderly. In 2002 he helped found Pacific Institute Europe in Warsaw, Poland, in order to bring gerontological and comprehensive care services to the European continent. He was also inspired to explore new ideas for community living and began design of a 'village' concept for older adults he calls 'Elders Academy'. In 2003 he co-founded Elders Academy Press, a publishing program of Pacific Institute and Pacific Institute Europe, specifically dedicated to promoting writings of and for elders.
At the same time Nader also began a program of conflict resolution between Russians, Germans and Poles. Last year - combining his passion for the elderly with his love for photography and philosophy - Nader wrote Faces of Aging as a tribute and celebration of being an elder. He continues this exploration through teaching 'eldership' workshops in Europe. These meetings explore the difference between getting 'old' and growing into the role of an elder and have the purpose of preparing us for old age and eldership.
Alan Klaum, Ph.D. and President
Alan brings international expertise to organizational and business development. He is co-author of In Our Fifties: Men and Women Reinventing Their Lives (1993) and is president of the Board of the San Francisco Mental Health Association. In his private practice, Alan brings cross-cultural experience and focuses on adult life transition issues, organizational development and conflict resolution.
Masha Levinson, Board Member
Elder Advisory Council
The Elder Advisory Council serves as a voice for the community and honors the wisdom of our elders whose guiding principles direct the Institute's activities and development. The Council provides input into better ways to fulfill our mission and works to ensure that our strategies respect the values and philosophy that guide the Institute.
Members of the Elder Advisory Council are representatives of different sectors of the community who have demonstrated the art and wisdom of working towards raising personal awareness and building healthier communities
Our Elder Advisory Council:
Elizabeth Bugental, Ph.D.
Ken Dychtwald, Ph.D.
John L. Levy, Ph.D.
Beth McLeod, M.S.W.; LCSW
State Senator Jackie Speier - CA
Richard Wiseman, Ph.D - Emeritus Board member
Our Executive and Clinical Staff:
Click here to meet them.
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