In The Spotlight: Frankie Klaff
By Marilyn Luber, Ph.D.
September 2004
At EMDR Institute trainings, Frankie Klaff likes to introduce herself as "Borderline".
The joke is that she lives on the border of Delaware, Maryland and Pennsylvania;
however, the truth is that there is no one more firmly rooted in her self and
the places that she has chosen to live than Frankie.
Frankie's story began in Durban, South Africa where her family had settled in
advance of the Holocaust. She was a precocious, curious child who had the good
fortune to fall into the hands of a "brilliant" teacher. Miss McGreavey
taught her poetry, drama, literature, and history, but most of all taught her
about being a person. Frankie's touch for the dramatic sprang from those early
days where her talent for the arts was cultivated and she later earned a teaching
diploma in Speech and Drama. While Miss McGreavey tended to her muse, her mother
and Russian grandmother trained her to be the matriarch that she has become. Her
sense of charity and compassion grew from the model of her parents who taught
her that "helping people was a mitzvah (gift)". At the age of 10, she
started her political activism in the Jewish Youth Movement (Habonim), where she
attended and gave lectures and seminars, and at 16 fell in love with "the
rugged, intense, and witty head of the local youth movement," her beloved
Viv. Ultimately, they decided that as "appalled" as they were at the
plight of black South Africans, their friends were being imprisoned for their
stand against the regime, so they decided instead to fight for their own people
and she and Viv moved to Israel in 1966.
With a group of "fellow zealots", they left South Africa and moved to
a kibbutz to learn Hebrew. Later in Jerusalem, Frankie worked as an editor of
scientific texts and studied Hebrew, while her husband began his Ph.D. degree.
Their first son, Oren, was born on the eve of the 1967 war in Israel, and her
second son, Tamir, was born several years later. At this point, in the tradition
of her mother and her mother's mother, she devoted herself to the joys of motherhood,
the arts of cooking and entertaining and teaching English.
In 1970, they moved to their third country of residence, the United States. It
was a difficult decision to leave Israel, but she went to follow her husband's
dream of completing a Ph.D. During that time, she completed her MS in Educational
Psychology at the University of Wisconsin, to integrate her interest in Education
and Psychology. They moved again to Urbana, where Viv had a job at the University
of Illinois, and Frankie continued her studies and raised her boys. In 1975, with
great joy, she gave birth to their daughter, Caryn. She continued to study and
began work as a therapist with adolescents at a residential treatment center.
By this time, her entire family had moved to Israel and she longed to return.
As a result of the Yom Kippur war, Viv was unable to find work in Israel, so he
accepted a position at the University of Delaware in 1977. With that, Frankie
decided it was time to give her family roots and live fully in the United States.Frankie
developed a new professional goal, and decided that with her devotion to parenting
and psychotherapy work at Illinois, she would pursue her interest in Family Therapy.
Although this was a field in its infancy, Frankie's pioneering spirit was well
suited to forging ahead. She began studying at the Philadelphia Child Guidance
Clinic at the exciting time when Minuchin, Whittaker, and Framo were there. She
later was selected for an externship. She also began her first job as a family
therapist in Newark, Delaware. At the same time, she began working on her doctorate
at The Fielding Institute!
Her doctorate was a family affair. Her daughter collated her papers, while her
sons, who were computer wizards, helped their mom with typing and calculations.
Viv was the statistician and made sure everything was coordinated. Part of Frankie's
philosophy of life is, "I am willing to do anything for anybody. I can't
help but help, and people help me too." It is a practice that seems to have
worked for this family.
With her fascination with people and the plots and patterns of their lives, and
her training as a theater teacher, she was a natural as a therapist. The environment
that allowed that young, curious child to flourish in her early years proved to
be an essential factor in understanding the children that she encountered in her
life as an adult. She has maintained that ability of a child - to enjoy herself
thoroughly and to have fun.
Frankie learned about EMDR through Mary Framo, who called her from San Diego to
tell her about this interesting new therapy "that managed care will love
because it shortens treatment". She went to her first training in Philadelphia,
where she heard Francine Shapiro talking about Vietnam Vets and eye movement and
thought, "Oh my god, get me out of here!" However, Frankie, the pioneer,
took over and the next day when arriving at her office, decided to try it out.
Later that night, she said to her family, "I do not believe what happened
in my office today. My patient made more progress in one session than in the two
years of work I had done with her!" Frankie was hooked!
When Frankie believes something is effective, she becomes an advocate. Despite
the controversy surrounding EMDR, she gave free presentations for colleagues and
the public. Frankie persevered even in the face of criticism, believing the data
that she was observing in her treatment room. Later, a clinician who had been
critical of EMDR, began to realize its impact and began to send Frankie her difficult
cases - even a family member!
In 1995, she became a Facilitator for the EMDR Institute, and as she says, "My
life has turned upside down ever since". Since then, she has devoted a large
part of her professional life to EMDR. As Frankie puts it, "I am so incredibly
grateful to Francine Shapiro for what she has given me, because it enriched my
life as a therapist and gave me the opportunity to teach - which I love. I have
a world full of wonderful people who have enriched my life with friendship. The
people that I have taught with and trained, and some who have stayed in our home
still e-mail me. That is my secret life late at night...connecting with the world
of EMDR, keeping up with the list, offering support to people through that and
shooting the breeze with friends.
Then one day there was a turning point. A mother asked Frankie to work with her
child using EMDR, after she herself had been successfully treated. Feeling like
a renegade from her usual family therapy work, Frankie took this challenge on
with gusto. She found that EMDR worked with children, but that adaptations needed
to be made. While keeping the protocol in her head, she began to make adjustments
to incorporate play and the developmental challenges of working with children
and adolescents, while still keeping a family perspective. Frankie sees teaching
and furthering this work as one of her missions in life. Through the EMDR Institute,
EMDR-HAP, and privately, she has been invited all over the world to impart her
knowledge to other therapists. Her last challenge before she is to retire is to
write about her work so that she can share what she has learned.
Frankie's words for the EMDR community are key to all of the values that she holds
most dear: "I always find lucky pennies and Francine Shapiro was my lucky
penny...Francine and EMDR. And what do you do when you have a lucky penny? You
share it with someone else. That is the legacy my parents gave me through their
volunteer work, and that is the belief that I have with EMDR. A lucky penny doubles
the luck when you give it to someone else. I want to encourage people to give
of themselves. If they are involved in their community, offer to give talks and
to share. If you believe in something, you have to stand up, even if you are going
to have a few rotten apples thrown at you. We have to do this as a group because
then we have more power. This is the power of the little person to make a difference.
You give and you get".
Currently, Frankie is a clinical psychologist in private practice and a member
of the staff of Behavioral Health Associates and Survivors of Abuse in Recovery.
She is a Clinical Supervisor at the Delaware Guidance Center and a Consultant
internationally and with private case management. She is a Trainer at International
Workshops on Advances in Treating Children. She is an Adjunct Faculty Member at
the Union Graduate School in Yellow Springs, Ohio, and a Senior Faculty member
of the EMDR Institute. She is a member of the Maryland Disaster Response Team
and has participated in EMDR-HAP services. She is a Disaster Response Mental Health
trained volunteer at the Red Cross and served as an Executive Board Member of
the Delaware Psychological Association for multiple terms.
Frankie is an avid reader, walker, and admirer of nature. Her basic joys include
cooking and having people over. Her devotion is to Viv, her family, her patients
and to EMDR. To Frankie, the well-lived life includes the give and take - of a
wife and her husband, of a parent and her children, of a therapist and her patient/s,
of a citizen and her country, and of a person and her planet. The dedication that
Frankie has demonstrated in the EMDR world is a gift. May we continue to have
her graciousness of spirit and delight in her work with her patients and our community
as our model.