Information, tips, etc about trauma, trauma informed care and practice, effects of trauma, tools and statistics. I sincerely hope it helps someone xxjxx
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Check out the Apples' 3D Brain app on the iphone or iPad, it's really amazing and has lots of info which helps in understanding the effects of trauma
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There are said to be five principles that may be utilised by individuals to increase the neuroplasticity of the brain (Daniel J Siegel, website, 2009).
1. Increase the novelty of activity one participates in: new activity encourages new neural pathways to develop, while withholding new experience or skills inhibits neural connectivity.
2. A diet high in Omega 3 fatty acids: salmon, flaxseeds, walnuts, cloves, broccoli, cabbage
3. Maintain healthy sleep patterns: following natural body clock and maintaining adequate amounts (approx. 8 hours)
4. Exercise: Five minutes a day has been shown to reduce the incidence of Alzheimer’s in older adults.
5. Paying close attention: by focussing our attention on a given task, we strengthen the neural pathways needed to receive, understand and manipulate the information presented to us. The acuteness with which we can attend to information increases the strength of neural pathways being developed.
“Research has shown that experiences with new kinds of activity or stimulation can generate growth in the brain within only a few hours after the experiences begin” (Brotherson, 2005).
Terr (1991) says that repeated memories; repetitive behaviours; trauma-specific fears; and changed attitudes about people, life and the future are the four main characteristics of childhood trauma that persist throughout life regardless of any eventual diagnosis. Some of the symptoms of someone having experienced a traumatic event may include:
Physical
§ Difficulty eating/digesting, sleeping, breathing, eliminating, or focusing
§ Nausea or diarrhea
§ Shallow breathing
§ Headaches or migraines
§ Twitches or tremors
§ Grinding teeth
§ Pain in areas on the body that may have been involved in the traumatic experience
§ Anxiety/panic
§ Chronic unexplained pain
§ Experiencing memory problems including difficulty in remembering aspects of the trauma. (Arizona Department of Health Services , 2011)
Emotional
§ Depression; despair; hopelessness
§ Feeling overwhelmed; irritable; angry; agitated; resentful
§ Feeling out of control
§ Teariness
§ Feeling extremely overprotective of and fearful for loved ones
§ Feeling scattered and unable to concentrate or make decisions; unable to focus on work or daily activities
§ Feeling depressed, sad, hopeless, despairing; having low energy; suicidal thoughts; self harming
§ Extreme vulnerability
§ Under-arousal, emotionally numb, withdrawn or dissociated; feeling disconnected or different from others
§ Difficulties in relationships
Behavioural
§ Agitation and over-arousal, ‘on edge’, easily startled; hyper alertness; hyper vigilance;
§ Avoidance of eye contact and/or physical contact; places, people, activities, things that invoke memories of the trauma
§ Inappropriate emotional responses; suspiciousness and/or paranoia; emotional outbursts; lack of control
§ Self harm such as cutting; burning
§ Eating disorders
§ Substance abuse
§ Isolation
§ Suicide attempts
§ Choosing friends/partners that may be unsafe or unhealthy
§ Compulsive and obsessive behaviours
Cognitive
§ Denial of the experience or of the effect it has had
§ Exaggerated reactions to sights, sounds or other sensory input that remind the child of the traumatic experience (e.g. a car back-firing, the smell of tobacco, etc)
§ Being flooded or overwhelmed with, or reenactment of the traumatic experience (e.g. may draw aggressive and violent pictures); recurring thoughts; flashbacks; nightmares.
§ Memory lapses, especially about the trauma (Klinic Community Health Centre, 2008)
§ Loss of time
§ Difficulty making decisions
§ Lack of concentration or focus, distracted
§ Thoughts of suicide
Spiritual
§ Self-hatred
§ Feeling damaged
§ Turning away from faith or obsessively attending services and praying
§ Guilt
§ Shame
§ Self-blame
§ Feeling like you have no future
§ Questioning your purpose
§ Feeling like a ‘bad’ person
§ Questioning the presence of God
§ “Feeling that as well as the individual, the whole race or culture is bad” (Klinic Community Health Centre, 2008).
In young children, other behaviours may also include (but are by no means limited to):
§ Bedwetting
§ Becoming clingy with carers or attached to a place in which he/she feels safe (Arizona Department of Health Services , 2011)
§ Reverting to old behaviours, e.g. thumb sucking, not wanting to sleep alone, etc
§ Being newly afraid of strangers, animals, darkness or monsters
§ Acting out
§ Nightmares
Long term effects of trauma
Prolonged or repeated exposure to stress can cause changes to the way the brain regulates hormones and transmits messages throughout the body. These changes can lead to premature aging of the body which in turn increases the risk of early death. (Phaedra S. Corso, 2008). Peter A. Levine (Waking the Tiger, 1997, p 165) states that trauma can cause bronchitis, asthma, migraine, chronic fatigue syndrome, chronic neck and back pain, gastrointestinal problems, paralysis, blindness, deafness and can make a person mute.
Van der Kolk, et al., (1996b), described the following long term effects of trauma:
§ Generalized hyper arousal and difficulty in modulating arousal
§ Aggression against self and others
§ Inability to modulate sexual impulses
§ Problems with social attachments – excessive dependence or isolation
§ Alterations in neurobiological processes involved in stimulus discrimination
§ Problems with attention and concentration
§ Dissociation
§ Somatization
§ Conditioned fear responses to trauma related stimuli
§ Loss of trust, hope, and a sense of personal agency
§ Social avoidance
§ Loss of meaningful attachments
§ Lack of participation in preparing for the future cited by (Kathleen J. Moroz, 2005)
Some of the long term impacts of trauma include: depression; mental illness; suicide attempts; early initiation of smoking; alcoholism and alcohol abuse; illicit drug use; obesity; early initiation of sexual activity; multiple sexual partners and sexually transmitted diseases; adolescent and unintended pregnancy; fetal death; risk for intimate partner violence; heart disease; cancer; obesity; multiple somatic symptoms; autoimmune disease; lung disease; liver disease; sleep disturbances; problems with work and relationships; and a much higher risk of re-victimisation (CDC, 2011).
The impacts of adverse childhood experiences can still be evident 50 years after the initial experience (Felliti 2004) and while the effects have obvious implications for psychological, biological, social, educational and cognitive functioning, the opportunity for ‘crossover’ is also vast; e.g. physical damage to a developing brain caused by exposure to prolonged, extreme stress can have further implications in creating cognitive delays or emotional difficulties. This in turn, may lead to educational and learning challenges, depression, and high risk behaviours which may then lead to physical health issues (Child Welfare Information Gateway , 2008).
Bibliography
Arizona Department of Health Services . (2011). Trauma-Related Stress: Some Warning Signs. Retrieved July 5, 2011, from Arizona Department of Health Services : http://www.azdhs.gov/bhs/trauma1.pdf
Child Welfare Information Gateway . (2008). Long-Term Consequences of Child Abuse and Neglect. Retrieved July 5, 2011, from U.S. Department of Health and Human Services : http://www.childwelfare.gov/pubs/factsheets/long_term_consequences.cfm
Kathleen J. Moroz, D. L. (2005, June 30). The Effects of Psychological Trauma on Children and Adolescents - Report Prepared for the Vermont Agency of Human Services Department of Health Division of Mental Health Child, Adolescent and Family Unit. Retrieved July 4, 2011, from Vermont: Vermont.gov - The Official State Website: http://mentalhealth.vermont.gov/sites/dmh/files/report/cafu/DMH-CAFU_Psychological_Trauma_Moroz.pdf
Klinic Community Health Centre. (2008). The Trauma-informed Toolkit. Retrieved July 1, 2001, from Trauma-informed.ca: http://www.trauma-informed.ca/
Phaedra S. Corso, P. V. (2008). Health-related quality of life among adults who experienced maltreatment during childhood. American Journal of Public Health , 98 (6), 1094-1100.
Terr, L. C. (1991, January). Childhood traumas: an outline and an overview. Retrieved July 4, 2011, from The University of Texas at Austin: Department of Psychology: http://homepage.psy.utexas.edu/homepage/class/psy394U/Bower/03%20Emot,%20Trauma,Mem/Terr-Childhood%20Traumas.pdf
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A few statistics you may or may not be aware of:
· 79.9 % of people diagnosed with depression had suffered some form of trauma, the most common being emotional and physical abuse. (Valentina Moskvina, Ph.D.,1 Anne Farmer, M.D., M.R.C. Psych.,2 Victoria Swainson, M.Sc.,1Joanna O’Leary, M.Sc.,2 Cerise Gunasinghe, M.Sc.,2 Mike Owen, M.B., Ph.D., FRCPsych.,Nick Craddock, M.B., Ph.D., M.R.C.Psych.,1 Peter McGuffin, M.B., Ph.D., FRCP, PRCPsych.,2and Ania Korszun, Ph.D., M.D., M.R.C.Psych.3_
· Survivors of child abuse are seven times more likely to have eating disorders, 16 times more admissions to hospital, 74 times more likely to display suicidal behaviour than those who have not suffered child abuse. (Martin et al 1993 in British Journal of Psychiatry 163, pp 731-732.)
· A recent study found that almost 76% of adults reporting child physical abuse and neglect have at least one psychiatric disorder in their lifetime and nearly 50% have three or more psychiatric disorders (Harper et al., 2007).
· 68.8% of psychiatric in-patients have suffered from child sexual or physical abuse at least half of whom were diagnosed as psychotic (Literature review by J.Read,J.vanOs,A.P.Morrison,C.A.Ross 2005)
· 91% of people with Border personality Disorder (BPD) report childhood abuse, 92% neglect. (Zanarini 1997)
· 92 per cent of heroin addicts in survey had suffered from trauma (2004 National drug and alcohol research centre)
· 94 per cent of amphetamine users had suffered from trauma (NDARC 2004)
· 84 per cent of the participants in Odyssey House programmes in Australia and the USA reported a history of child abuse (Odyssey House report 1997)
· Child sexual abuse has been found to be a key factor in the cause and continuation of youth homelessness with between 50-70 per cent of young people within Supported Accommodation Assistance Programmes having experienced childhood sexual assault (van Loon and Kralik, 2005b).
· 87 per cent of inmates of Reiby House detention centre for male youths had been notified to DOCS as child abuse victims. 63 per cent had been notified to DOCS as in danger on more than three occasions (NSW Government, 1999).
· During 2010 there were 17,757 victims of sexual assault recorded by police, 25% of these victims aged 10 to 14 years (ABS, 2010)
· In 2010, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders in New South Wales were victims of sexual assault at almost four times the rate of non-Indigenous persons (ABS, 2010)
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The Neuroscience of Attachment
[first presented as a Clinical Conversation at the Community Institute for Psychotherapy, Fall 2008] © Linda Graham, MFT It’s fascinating to learn what’s happening in our brains as we feel accepted or rejected by people closest to us or important to us. What’s happening in our brains as we experience a sense of connection and belonging or dis-connection and isolation. (You may have experienced reactions in your own brain as you even read words like acceptance or rejection or experienced either one so far today.) While we hope it’s Love that makes the world go round, it IS human beings relating to one another that makes the world go round, either keeping it healthy and viable one generation to the next or threatening to destroy it. Relating to one another, one on one, couples, families, or in larger social groups, is the most complex thing human beings do, more complex than writing a symphony or running a government or solving global warming, and the need to relate, to be emotionally and socially intelligent, has driven the evolution of the human brain to be the most complex anything in all of existence. It becomes important, as clinicians, to understand what’s happening in our brains, ours and our clients, in the therapeutic relationship, to understand what attachment theory and research over the last 50 years and modern neuroscience of the last 20 years are telling us:
- our earliest relationships actually build the brain structures we use for relating lifelong;
- experiences in those early relationships encode in the neural circuitry of our brains by 12-18 months of age, entirely in implicit memory outside of awareness; these patterns of attachment become the “rules”, templates, schemas, for relating that operate lifelong, the “known but not remembered” givens of our relational lives.
- when those early experiences have been less than optimal, those unconscious patterns of attachment can continue to shape the perceptions and responses of the brain to new relational experiences in old ways that get stuck, that can’t take in new experience as new information, can’t learn or adapt or grow from those experiences. What we have come to call, from outside the brain looking in, as the defensive patterns of personality disorders. What one clinician calls “tragic recursive patterns that become encased in neural cement.”
Fortunately, the human brain has always had the biologically innate capacity to grow new neurons – lifelong – and more importantly, to create new synaptic connections between neurons lifelong. All of us can create new patterns of neural firing from new experiences. All of us can pair old even maladaptive patterns with new, more adaptive, patterns of neural firing. All of us can all create new neural circuitry, pathways and networks that allow us to relate, moment by moment in new, healthier, more resilient ways. All of us can store those new more adaptive patterns in both the structures of explicit memory, making them retrievable to conscious awareness and conscious healthy functioning, and in the structures of implicit memory, making them the new habits of relating. This neural plasticity of the brain was confirmed by neuroscientists in the year 2000. That’s just 8 years ago. Modern neuroscience IS new. All the new technologies that allow us to see what’s happening in the brain, as we think of a loved one or plan what to have for lunch, are new. 90% of what we know about how the brain works has been learned in the last 20 years. Dan Goleman wrote in his introduction to
Social Intelligence, which came out last year, that most of the understanding we have about the neurological substrate of things like empathy, emotional regulation, the effect of trauma on explicit memory, interoception – how we know what’s going on in our bodies …..hadn’t even been discovered yet when he wrote
Emotional Intelligence 10 years before. In that time there’s been an explosion of discoveries relevant to addressing the wounds of less-than-optimal attachment: the social engagement system of the brainstem, the fight-flight response of the amygdala, mirror neurons, bonding hormones, the social-emotional bias of the right hemisphere, the positive bias of the left hemisphere, the role of the pre-frontal cortex in attunement and learning the “rules” of attachment, the resonance circuits we can use in empathic therapeutic relationships to catalyze brain change in our clients. The more we can become comfortable applying these discoveries to our interventions with clients, and the more we can learn specifically which interventions will most effectively accelerate change in our clients’ brains for the better, the more immediate and enduring our therapeutic interventions will be. Interpersonal neurobiology, pioneered by Dan Siegel at UCLA, is a new field attempting to bridge the discoveries of neuroscience to the clinical world. Much of what I am presenting here has been informed by the trainings and writings available in this field, especially from Louis Cozolino’s book:
The Neurobiology of Human Relationships: Attachment and the Developing Social Brain and Bonnie Badenoch’s new book, just out this summer,
Being a Brain Wise Therapist. This article offers recent research findings, new hypotheses and theories, but also practical skillful means to incorporate into your ongoing work with clients. I’m hoping all of this rings true to experienced and dedicated clinicians at the level of common sense. I’m aware of three things as we begin.
- All theoretical orientations have their own lenses about psychopathology and therapeutic healing, with their own vocabularies. Both attachment theory and neuroscience give us new lenses with which to view our clients and our interactions with them (not contradictory, quite complementary) and also new vocabularies. Soon there will be a glossary available as an appendix to this article to clarify terms and concepts in a big download of information.
- We all have the brains we are going to be learning about here, and we all have one or more of the attachment patterns we are going to be learning about here. We are human. So, it’s possible that this material can trigger thoughts and feelings and defenses about our own experiences even while we are applying this to our clients. I hope to call upon your own considerable experience with these processes to stay well within the window of tolerance.
- I attended a daylong training in the neurology of awakening rcently, taught by neurologist Rick Mendius and clinical psychologist Rick Hanson. Rick Mendius suggested so much of what we are learning about the brain is so new, tip of iceberg, to talk about this at all we have to be comfortable “venturing into error”. I love that. We are venturing into error together.
1. The brain is a social organ, developed and changed in interactions with other brains
We begin with the brain, understanding now that the brain is a social organ, developed and changed in interactions with other brains. There is nature; we are genetically programmed to walk, talk, learn to share, recognize an “I” separate from “you”, on a developmental timetable. That development, however, is always stimulated or kindled by experiences we have in interactions with other people, other brains. It IS interacting in relationships that stimulates brain structures to activate and mature. This is true on the individual level and on the social level. On the individual level, the neurons in the limbic regions – the seat of our emotional learning that is foundational to our subjective sense of personal and social self – are not fully connected at birth. They are genetically primed to form synaptic connections through the relational experiences we have with those closest to us. Caregivers activate the growth of those regions of the brain – through emotional availability and reciprocal interactions. This includes the hormones of bonding and pleasure that are released in intimate and contingent relating. That is nurture. Patterns of energy and information laid down in these early moments of meeting develop the actual structure of these limbic regions. This means that the very foundations of perception, particularly in regard to relationships, relies on the quality of these earliest interactions with our parents.
It is essential to understand experience dependent maturation of the brain to understand the importance of early attachment experiences to shape the brain and our patterns of relating and to embrace the power of new attachment relationships in therapy to re-wire the memories learned with this part of the brain. At the social level, it is now hypothesized that the need to communicate, non-verbally and verbally with fellow members of our clan or tribe on the savannah to survive, is what drove the phenomenal growth of the cortex in humans – the “higher brain” with all of its amazing capacities of empathy, consciousness, planning, language, thinking, discernment. So it’s not just that we have empathy because we have the pre-frontal cortex in our brains but that we have highly evolved complex brain structures like the pre-frontal cortex because they are developed and matured by empathy. As Cozolino says, we are not the survival of the fittest; we are the survival of the nurtured.
This highly evolved human brain is the most complex structure and the most dynamic process – noun and verb – in existence. 100 trillion cells in 3 pounds of firm tofu between our ears. Of which 100 billion neurons are gray matter that are the working clipboard of the brain. Each gray matter neuron is capable of connecting with – and communicating with – 7,000 – 10,000 other neurons. Those who have done the math have calculated that the number of synaptic connections – and thus neurochemical messages – possible in each human brain is 1 to the millionth power, numbering more than atoms in the universe [estimated at 1 to the 80th power]. These brain cells fire 10 – 100 times a second, sending neurochemical transmitters across the synaptic cleft to be received by another neuron. In one hand clap, billions of neurons fire in our brains. So the brain operates in a dynamic oscillation of a fraction of a moment of firing, a fraction of a moment of quiet, a moment of activity, a moment or rest. There is a moment of change, and there is a moment of stability. These oscillations are integrated across brain structures, from the bottom up and top down and right-left and other ways, too, to create continuity – yet flexibility – of self, other and relating. These oscillations of stability and change are what underlie neural plasticity. And they are what allows us to use moments of change in the brain to help clients change their lives.
How the brain works…how relational learning works Any experience cause neurons in our brains to fire. Repeated experiences cause neurons to fire repeatedly. Neurons that “fire together wire together,” strengthening neural connections. Strong neural connections become neural pathways and neural networks. This experience-triggered neural firing is how ALL neural pathways become patterns of response, and how all structures of the brain mature. This is how all patterns of attachment are laid down in the brain; it is also how they can change. I’m sure many of you by now are familiar with Dan Siegel’s hand model of the brain. The arm and wrist are the spinal column and brainstem of the brain. The brain stem regulates the internal homeostasis of the body: heart rate, respiratory rate, digestion, through the autonomic nervous system (ANS) – the extension of our brain throughout our body. The ANS has two branches, the sympathetic (SNS) of arousal and the parasympathetic (PNS) of calming. These two, arousal-calming, gas and brakes, are part of the completely unconscious social engagement system that regulates the energy level or vagal tone of our bodies. Too much SNS and too little PNS, we feel restless, agitated, stressed, all the way to panic attack. Too much PNS and too little SNS, we feel slow, lethargic, numb, all the way to collapsing in a faint. When there is a balanced vagal tone, we are happy campers. When we feel safe in relationship, we stay within our window of tolerance and our cortex stays functional. When we perceive threat or danger, the SNS arouses the amygdala to prepare for fight or flight. We can experience this as an emotional hijacking; our rational self temporarily nowhere to be found. When we perceive a life threat, the PNS calms down everything, down to the point of shut down. We go numb and freeze. We share these functions of the brain with all life forms down to reptiles; there’s no consciousness awareness yet; there’s no attachment going on here yet. Though, with conscious awareness later, when we say someone makes us sick to our stomach or someone is breaking our heart, it is information from the internal regulation of bodily states that unconsciously informs that subjective experience. Next, the thumb, folded into the palm, one on each side actually, represents the mid-brain limbic regions, sub-cortical but just a few cell layers away from the pre-frontal cortex (PFC). The most well-known structure of the limbic system is the amygdala, almond shaped structures of perception-appraisal-response. Our 24/7 alarm center, constantly scanning the environment for threat or danger, even in our sleep. The amygdala generates the fight – flight response, very important to attachment. We share this with mammals and birds. The amydgala is also the core of our interactive social processing and the center of our emotional learning. The amygdala assesses every experience, including relational experience, for safety or danger, for pleasure or pain, and pairs each experience with an emotional valence, an emotional charge, positive or negative, that makes us approach or avoid similar experiences in the future. The more intense the emotional charge, the more neurons will fire in our brain and the more likely we will register the experience in implicit memory. Any such experience that is also processed with the conscious awareness of the cortex can be stored in explicit memory. We consciously learn to approach or avoid this or that person or emotion again. But the amygdala itself operates below the level of the cortex, below the radar of conscious awareness, and it stores all of its responses to experience in implicit memory, outside of awareness. The amygdala operates much faster than the more complex cortex – 200 milliseconds to trigger fight or flight rather than the 3-5 seconds of the cortex that notices we just got in somebody’s face or bolted out of the room just precious seconds before. So the processing of the amygdala does not have to come to our awareness for an experience to register and be stored in our implicit memory. 80% of the time it doesn’t. Here’s the zinger about all this. Any emotional-relational-social experiences that are processed before the brain structures that can process experience consciously are fully mature, before 2 ½ -3 years of age, those experiences are stored only in implicit memory, only outside of awareness. This includes ALL early patterns of attachment. The research has proven “beyond irrefutability” that attachment patterns stabilize in our neural circuitry by 12-18 months of age. They are stable and unconscious before we have any conscious choice in the matter and unless new experiences change them, will remain stable “rules” of relating well into adulthood. Unfortunately, for purposes of attachment, Cozolino suggests that because the amygdala is the structure of both our social emotional processing and is our fear center, the negotiation of relationships and the modulation of fear so overlap, our earliest relating, our earliest implicit experience of self can have a bias toward the negative. Because, evolutionarily, members of our species who were nervous, anxious, on alert, tended to survive. Those who are nice and mellow got eaten. The hippocampus, one on each side of the temporal lobe near the ears, are part of the limbic system but as they mature, at about 2 ½ years of age, they begin translating experience into explicit memory, a vital link to cortical functioning. With explicit processing, conscious processing, we begin to remember our experiences, including relational experiences from 2 1/2 – 3 years of age on. So, the temporal lobe of the cortex is where memories of attachment experiences are stored, consciously and unconsciously; it’s where they get stuck, and when brought to consciousness, where they can change. The hypothalamus located deeper in the limbic system releases many different hormones to regulate the amygdala. A very important one, that researchers have begun to understand more fully in the last 5-10 years, is oxytocin – the bonding hormone that is released through touch, warmth and movement, such as breastfeeding and orgasm. Oxytocin calms the amygdala, it can spur the pre-frontal cortex to grow GABA bearing fibers down to the anydgala and quell the fear response. Why hugs make us feel safe and bonded to the person who is helping to release oxytocin in our brains. We are learning that even a visual image of someone we love or feel safe with can release oxytocin in our brains. Since imagining something is as real to our brains as seeing something for real – i.e., the same neurons fire if we imagine a banana as when we see a banana for real – remembering people who have given us unconditional love, or our clients remembering us giving them unconditional positive regard, can release oxytocin and calm down the fear center. I can share an example of this from my own experience. In July 2003, I chose to have lasik eye surgery to correct lifelong near-sightedness and astigmatism. The operation is risky, so I went into the operation with considerable anxiety. I had asked friends to think of me on the day of the operation, at the time I was actually in surgery, so I felt resourced and not alone during the procedure. I had to remain conscious during the operation and focus my eyes on the light beam above me so the laser could track exactly where to remove the fluid in the eye which would re-shape the cornea and create the lens that would allow new 20-20 vision. So, while lying on the gurney staying as still as I could be, I thought of all my friends thinking of me, taking in the sense of love and caring I knew was being sent my way. About 10 minutes into the operation, quite suddenly, all sense of anxiety ceased completely. I was flooded with a sense of love and belonging that was quite over-powering. There was nothing to be afraid of, nothing at all. This serene peacefulness lasted until the surgery was finished. It lasted for the next 8 months. I was aware that, in situation after situation that would have caused anxiety in the past, I was not feeling any anxiety. Just feeling aware and moving right along. I had a chance to ask Dan Siegel about this experience at an attachment conference at UCLA the following spring. He told me that, indeed, the pre-frontal cortex can grow neuronal axons down to the amygdale; it’s only a few cell layers away. And these neuronal fibers can carry GABA (gamma butyric acid) down to the amygdala; the GABA will extinguish the fear response. Later I learned about the role of oxytocin, the bonding hormone I released in my brain by concentrating on feeling so loved by my friends, to activate this pro-active, regulatory response of the pre-frontal cortex. The back of the hand and the fingers, folded over the thumb down toward the bottom of the palm, represent the cortex of the brain – the “higher” brain of the “clever apes.” The cortex has many lobes specializing in many complex functions; these functions must be integrated for healthy relational functioning. Occiptal lobes in the back of the brain for visual processing, parietal lobes in the mid-back region, the right side for location of body in space, the left side for the boundary of self and other. The sensory motor strip just in front of the parietal lobes that feeds information about the body. The temporal lobes on the side of the head, the site of auditory processing, speech comprehension, language and memory. The frontal lobes in the front of the brain for attention and concentration, organization and planning, abstract thinking and reasoning, judgment, decision making, creativity. It’s the last two knuckles of the middle two fingers, curled over the limbic region (thumb), that are essential to the complex cortical functions of emotional regulation and empathy, essential to understanding and changing patterns of attachment. The structures that make up the middle pre-frontal cortex ( MPFC) – the ventral (front) medial) (middle) and orbitofrontal( behind the eyes) cortices and the anterior cingulate (even closer to the limbic regions) which focuses attention, are what make up the social brain. The middle pre-frontal cortex IS our social brain. Only a few cell layers away from the limbic regions, it is what regulates or overrides the rapid emotional signaling and response of the amygdala. The dorsal lateral pre-frontal cortex on the sides of the frontal lobes, (the knuckles of the little finger) is the area of working memory, the chalkboard of the brain, where we can retrieve stored memories into conscious awareness and play with them. Where we can reshape than with new experiences before re-storing them in structures of memory.
How relational learning works John Bowlby, British psychoanalyst, founder of attachment theory, hypothesized that attachment is all about safety and protection and emotional regulation in times of perceived threat or danger. Attachment is part of a 3-part motivational system of fear–attachment-exploration. Fear triggers attachment behaviors. The safe haven of secure attachment soothes the fear of the amygdala, and opens exploration. (rapprochement and bye- mom!) Exploration eventually bumps us into something that triggers fear again which shuts down exploration and triggers attachment behaviors again which soothe the fear again and open exploration cycle of safety-exploration again. It has been amply demonstrated by Allan Schore that
the need for emotional regulation is what drives attachment behaviors. Affect regulation is the engine of attachment and attachment is what drives the development of the pre-frontal cortex, the brain structures that do that. Dan Stern and Peter Fonagy have amply demonstrated that
it is the need for empathy, the need to be seen, understood and reflected that drives the intersubjectivity that develops theory of mind. I know that you know what I know and I know that you can also know something different than what I know. So how parents – and therapists – use empathy and bonding and reflection to regulate fear, anxiety and shame, and soothe the firing of the amygdala, and help the other discover who they are by seeing and accepting them first, this attunement and feedback are so very determinative of attachment patterns and are a crucial part of their healing. So, even before consciousness develops, the parent is regulating the emotions of the baby through their own pre-frontal cortex, brain to brain regulation. The baby is “borrowing” the PFC functioning of the parent to regulate their emotions. And the baby is introjecting the reflections of who they are from the parent to develop the internal working models of who they are in relation to the other. As the baby’s PFC develops from these experiences, they can begin to regulate their emotion on their own. They can begin to have self-awareness and self-reflection on their own. The 9 functions of the pre-frontal cortex are:
- regulation of body – SNS-PNS balance
- attuned communication, felt sense of other’s experience
- regulation of emotions
- response flexibility – pause, options, evaluate options, appropriate decision
- empathy
- insight – self awareness
- fear extinction – GABA fibers to amygdala
- intuition – deep knowing without logic
- morality – behaviors based on empathy.
Research has shown that 7 of the 9 functions of the PFC are outcomes of secure attachment. Research also shows that all 9 functions are strengthened in mindfulness practice, internal attunement rather than interpersonal attunement. So a therapist’s mindful awareness of their own internal states strengthens the same pathways of the brain we need to become aware of another person’s internal states. (Mindfulness and psychotherapy is another article.) The laterality of the two hemispheres of the cortex is important here. The right and left hemispheres of the brain develop at different rates and specialize in different functions, allowing a much greater complexity of functioning than if they were duplicating each other. The right hemisphere of the brain grows larger in volume and more rapidly than the left, from before birth through 18 months of age, which completely coincides with the developmental timetable of when attachment patterns are being stabilized in the brain.
These patterns of attachment are stored in our memory in the mode of RH processing. The right hemisphere processes experience differently from the left – non-verbally through body sensations, visual images, emotions, and holistically – it processes the gestalt of someone’s face or energy globally, all at once, rather than in a linear data bit by data bit mode. The right hemisphere is where we get our “gut” intuitive sense of things and the gestalt of things as a whole. The right hemisphere is the seat of the social and personal self. The right hemisphere regulates the sub-cortical limbic system and is dominant for social-emotional processing. Our attachment patterns are stored in this mode. The left hemisphere is developing all along but goes through a growth spurt from 18 months to three years of age and becomes dominant after that, except for a period of re-organization during adolescence when the two hemispheres battle it out for dominance. Why, with the amping up of hormones, too, adolescence is such a stormy period. This adolescent period coincides with the need for attachment patterns to change, moving the focus from leaving parents to focusing on peers and forming one’s own family. The left hemisphere of the brain processes logically, linearly, linguistically, through symbols and words; it is dominant for cognitive processing. Remember, both hemispheres do process experience consciously, it’s just that what comes to consciousness in the right hemisphere is images, sensations, emotions and what comes to consciousness in the left is words and symbols. The right hemisphere decodes our relationship experience; the left hemisphere describes it. Because the right hemisphere develops early and the left hemisphere develops later, and because the right hemisphere is more neuronally connected to the limbic system than the left, it has a negative bias toward anxiety, shame, depression and withdrawal, which can impact our experience of attachment and make it harder to change those patterns. There is a corresponding bias in the left hemisphere toward positive emotions, humor and mania, and approach. “An unfortunate artifact of the evolution of laterality may be that the right hemisphere, biased toward negative emotions and pessimism, develops first and serves as the core of self-awareness and self-identity. To be human may be to have vulnerability toward shame, guilt and depression. So although both sides of the brain are involved in emotion, the dominant role of the right hemisphere in defensive and negative emotions gives it executive “veto power” over the left. Just as the left can block emotional and visceral input from the right, the right can override conscious processing and emotional well-being in reaction to threat.” [Cozolino p. 78] Think about this for ourselves and our clients. The corpus collosum, running right down the middle of the brain front to back, is what begins to integrate the information between the right hemisphere and the left hemisphere at about 12 months of age. What’s important about any of this brain functioning is integration. The brain is about teamwork; various parts of the brain firing together in synchrony There is bottom-up information from the limbic system about the emotional charge of any experience and top-down regulation of our reflexes and emotions; there is right left integration of feelings and thoughts, integration of positive and negative responses. The more integrated neural pathways, networks, structure are, the better the brain functions
2. How attachment shapes the brain and what patterns of attachment are embedded in the neural circuitry of the brain that shape our 3 R’s , relating, regulation of affect, and resilience, for the rest of our lives.
Dan Siegel has proposed a resonance circuit in the brain. * Various structures cooperating with each other * to support the processes of interpersonal resonance, attunement, and empathy * that activate neurons in the limbic regions and the middle pre-frontal cortex * and stimulate neurons there to fire together, wire together * and strengthen the synaptic connections for the circuits and pathways * that become our internal working models, templates, schemas, mental representation of self and other in relationship. This resonance circuit begins with sensory input – what we see, hear, smell, touch of another. Then mirror neurons, which were discovered in the cortex at the crossroads of visual, motor, emotional processing, communication, language, cohesion and empathy not even a decade ago, fire when I observe and comprehend an intentional behavior in you. The exact same neurons fire in my brain as are firing in your brain when I observe the intention of the behavior you are doing, or when I imagine myself doing it. If you make a random gesture of moving your hand toward your mouth, nothing much happens. If you pick up a glass of water and move it toward your mouth, the same neurons are firing in my brain as I perceive and comprehend your intention as are firing in your brain as you do that intentional behavior. When we are attuning to another’s behavior and expressions of intention – facial expressions, body gestures, tone of voice, mirror neurons fire in our brain. Information from these mirror neurons travels from the cortex of our brain through the insula – a structure buried deeply in our brain that is located at the interface of the cortex and the limbic regions. The insula carries information down from the cortex through the limbic regions to the neurons of interoception – how we sense what is happening internally in our bodies. The information gathered through interoception, tension, tightness, tiredness, travels back up through the insula through the limbic regions where the sensations are given emotional meaning, back up to the structures of the middle pre-frontal cortex. The insula integrates somatic experience with conscious awareness. We feel pain when another feels pain. Cozolino notes that this insula, though a very small part of the brain, is an evolutionary masterpiece. Remember one of the 9 functions of the pre-frontal cortex is attunement – we interpret our felt sense of the other’s experience. Another function of the PFC is empathy – to communicate that felt sense, nonverbally being even more important than verbally. This resonance circuit is essential to stimulating growth of all 9 functions of the PFC, including regulation of body, regulation of emotion, extinguishing fear, response flexibility, self awareness etc. This resonance circuit operates in the brain of the parent attuning to his or her child; it’s what stimulates the developing brain of the infant to process and know its own experience; its experience metabolized and reflected back by the parent becomes encoded in the infant’s neural circuitry. Because you know what’s in my mind and heart, I can know it, too. These patterns do stabilize in the brain by 18months of age, rendering them as Cozolino says, of permanent psychological significance. This resonance circuit operates in us as therapists as we attune to our clients. And clients experiencing us attuning to them as they share their experience are also receiving our unconditional acceptance of that experience which re-wires their sense of it and their sense of self. This resonance circuit helps us understand the neurobiology operating in the development of each of the four styles of attachment identified over 40 years of attachment research. How relational experiences, the meaning the developing brain gives those experiences, create conclusions or models of how life works. These models create anticipations of what to expect in the future which shapes, filters, distorts our perceptions and response which can reinforce our conclusions. None of this is an issue if attachment is secure, but this process is very much an issue if attachment is less than secure. These distortions become the Truth of the Way Things Are. They become defenses which block learning and prevent change. Mary Ainsworth at the University of Virginia identified three styles of attachment that have since been proven to be universal across cultures: secure, insecure-avoidant, insecure-anxious. Mary Main and Erik Hesse of U.C. Berkeley discovered a fourth less common style – disorganized – occurring within the other three styles rather than all the time. If the parenting style of the parent is Responsive: the parent is available, present, predictable, sensitive, focuses attention on baby, is emotionally attuned, empathically resonant, contingently reflective of baby’s inner reality, reciprocally communicating in tones, gestures, facial expressions as well as words, if engagement-disengagement follows the baby’s lead, if the parent is able to hold-process-regulate baby’s affects (soothe distress, amplify joy), effective in interactions - Then the attachment style that develops in the child is likely to be Secure: the child feels safe and protected, feels “felt” in their own reality; feels affects regulated and soothed; learns to self-soothe; develops trust of the caregiver as a safe haven, internalizes mother as a source of comfort, the child pro-actively seeks connection, trusts its own capacities to activate a response; the child expects others to be attentive, helpful, encouraging of autonomy; there is a flexible focus on self-other-world. Securely attached children are likely to become Secure-Autonomous adults. They believe relationships are generally safe and people are generally helpful; they are comfortable with emotions, intimacy, inter-dependency; they tolerate relational frustration well; are optimistic about relationships lasting and being satisfying. If the parenting style of the parent is Dismissive: the parent is indifferent, distant, neglectful, absent, rejecting, shaming, blaming, critical, judgmental, physically-emotionally unavailable, ineffective in regulating affect - Then the attachment style that develops in the child is likely to be Insecure-Avoidant: the child withdraws from interactions, is seemingly indifferent to parent; the child doesn’t seek or expect comfort or soothing; there is a defensive exclusion of affects (numbing out); there is a focus on self or world, not other. Insecurely-avoidant children are likely to become Insecure-Avoidant adults: emotionally shut down; devaluing relationships and feelings; uncomfortable with intimacy, vulnerability, dependency. There is difficulty trusting; they can be aggressive or hostile. If the parenting style of the parent is Pre-occupied: inconsistent, unpredictable, sometimes attentive and loving, sometimes harsh or punitive, sometimes over-involved, sometimes off in their own world - Then the attachment style that develops in the child is likely to be Insecure-Anxious: the child is snsecure about the reliability of the parent for safety-protection; they are not easily soothed; ambivalence: they are sometimes clingy and possessive, sometimes angry-defiant. There is an internalization of anxious mom. There is a focus on others, not on self. Insecurely-anxious children are likely to become Insecure-Anxious adults: they are subject to abandonment fears; there is chronic vigilance about attachment-separation, there is emotional dysregulation and anxiety, passivity and lack of coping; there can be a victim stance. If the parenting style of the parent becomes Disorganized: if the parent, even temporarily, is fragmented, disorganized, dissociated; or is frightening, bizarre, abusive, traumatizing to the child - Then the attachment style of the child can become Disorganized: the child can become, even temporarily, helpless, paralyzed, fragmented, chaotic dissociated; they cannot focus; they cannot soothe. Experiences of disorganized attachment can lead to an Unresolved/Disorganized adult: there are difficulties functioning; they are unable to regulate emotions; there are dissociative defenses. What’s happening in the brain as these attachment styles operate in adult life? When a person is experiencing the safety of a secure attachment relationships there is no over-arousal of the sympathetic nervous system; everything is OK and humming along. There is a flexible balance of stimulation – vitality – and regulation – calm or ease. When there is insecure attachment – either style – there IS arousal of the SNS. Relationships mean danger, so the brain prepares for flight or fight. In insecure-avoidant attachment, the coping mechanisms of avoidance, withdrawal, minimizing, focusing externally, over-regulate the body and any emotional signals that might come through. There is flight from feelings and people. There is a shutting down of core affect, a de-valuing the importance of relationship. A person may be functioning well in the outside world but clueless about interpersonal interactions or even their own inner world. They can present as under-stimulated and over-regulated. In insecure-anxious attachment, the sympathetic nervous system is over-stimulated and under-regulated. The personal can feel flooded with stress, fear of abandonment, panic and not be able to self regulate enough, not enough calming of the parasympathetic nervous system. There is energy for fight; people engage through anger aggression. In disorganized attachment, “fright without solution,” there can be such a sense of danger or life threat, even the momentum of the amygdala, the flight-fight response, collapses. Only the brainstem is operating. The parasympathetic nervous system over-regulates bodily energy to the point of paralysis and helplessness. Clients can appear catatonic. What clinicians need to face directly in healing attachment trauma is that the coping strategies in less than secure patterns of attachment are defensive – they create barriers to emotion, to the full range of human emotions that are important signals of what to pay attention to in our lives and in others’ lives. They create barriers to the skillful regulation of emotion, creating avoidance or flooding rather than skillful experiencing, processing, managing, moving through. They create barriers to healthy relating, if relating is going to trigger unbearable emotions of fear, shame, loneliness, despair. So clients regulate closeness-distance by dismissing, focusing on self rather than other, or clinging, focusing on other rather than self, or by losing focus altogether, rather than flexibly focusing on self and other, the hallmark of secure attachment. Why Allan Schore said “The security of the attachment bond is the primary defense against psychopathology.”
3. How we harness the neural plasticity, resonance circuits and social engagement system of the brain (ours and our clients) to help clients move from the misery of being disconnected, unaware and stuck in old patterns of relating to the well-being of being connected, aware, and flexible in their relating.
We know the brain is a dynamic system. Neurons constantly firing; structures constantly processing new experiences. Of course, if neurons are not used, if they don’t fire, they die off, by the millions. If neurons are not connected to other neurons, they are pruned, just as human beings shrivel and die when isolated and disconnected. The brain is a social brain. And experiences in relationship are the most powerful interventions we have to harness that neural plasticity to help clients fire and re-wire neurons in new ways. When clients experience something new about themselves while in relationship with us, and that new, more positive experience is repeated and reinforced over time, they develop new neural circuits that store the new, more positive sense of self in conscious, explicit memory, available as a reference point from then on. When clients experience something old or afflictive about themselves while in relationship with us, and that old memory, however negative or traumatic, is paired with the positive experience of being seen, accepted, cared about, made sense of, the pairing of acceptance with old trauma, repeated often enough, modifies the old circuits and they are returned to explicit or even implicit memory modified, over time transformed. Because the attachment patterns we want to re-wire are stored only in the mode of right hemisphere processing, – sensations, images, including dream images, emotions – and outside of awareness – we MUST use the resonance circuits to access those old implicit memories and pair them with new, more positive experiences in a right hemisphere mode. Right brain to right brain therapy is Allan Schore’s phrase for the kind of therapy essential to re-wire the brain’s patterns of attachment. The attachment-based, emotion focused therapies that are most effective in helping clients re-wire their brains and heal attachment traumas – Diana Fosha’s Accelerated Experiential Dynamic Psychotherapy (AEDP) for individuals, Sue Johnson’s Emotion Focused Therapy (EFT) for couples, and Dan Hughes’ Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy (DDP) for children and families – zero right in on attuning to non-verbal right brain signals of facial expressions, body language, tone of voice, eye contact, to help clients use the social engagement system of the therapeutic relationship to regulate affect and create new corrective emotional and relational experiences. They focus on the relationship, therapist and client, client-client in couples and families, right here, right now, in this room, in this moment, exploring engagement – dis-engagement, closeness-distance, intimacy and individuation, creating a new experience of relationship, thus creating new pathways, new internal working models in the brain, and a new experience of self in relationships. They create the self-empathy, self compassion, self acceptance that makes it safe enough to evoke, explore and let go of the old internal working models of attachment when insecure or disorganized. [See Appendix A at the end of this article – Therapist as Attachment Figure – for sample interventions from AEDP to transform attachment patterns.] I do want to say that while right brain techniques are essential to accessing the old internal working models, and secure attachment is essential to creating new internal working models, we still use the miraculous powers of the left hemisphere – to observe, meta-process, reflect, comprehend, and choose – to learn new patterns of attachment that are more secure, more functional, more resilient. Ultimately it is the full integration of right hemisphere and left hemisphere modes of processing that leads to the new internal secure base that is the foundation of healthy, resilient functioning, in our brains, in our lives. And as better brain functioning supports better emotional-social-relational intelligence, the resulting secure attachments support better functioning brains. David Wallin’s Attachment in Psychotherapy gives an excellent model for shifting attachment patterns. Empathy and bonding in the relationship create safety to explore the inner emotional world, the personal belief systems, the dysfunctional patterns of defense, that keep us blocked. Moving from the “me” perspective – “what’s happening to me is awful and it’s the only thing that’s happening. There is no other reality. And I’m the shame based victim of it. There’s nothing I can do to change this.” To the “I” perspective. “I can see that this is happening in the moment and there are reasons why it’s happening. But it’s not the only thing that has ever happened to me; other things could be happening. I can become an effective agent in my own behalf and act to change what’s happening or how I’m responding to it.” As the client moves through new attachment and awareness to conscious self- reflection, the self awareness creates options, choices for new behaviors, new learning. The new choices, the new experiences, the new learning, reinforced often enough, re-wire the brain. That’s what neural plasticity does. New experiences (not blocked by old defenses) creates new neuronal firing; repeated firings strengthen the synaptic connections and creates new pathways that become the new habits of responding. Conscious habits at first, but eventually unconscious habits of new competencies. A learning model I learned from Dan Clurman is useful here: Unconscious incompetence: We don’t know how to do something, and we don’t even know that we don’t know; clueless. Conscious incompetence: We know we don’t know how to do something; sometimes we are painfully aware of our incompetence. Conscious competence: We master something; we become skillful and adept. Unconscious competence: We know how to do something so well we don’t even have to think about it any more. David’s model, by the way, moves from being unaware and stuck in an embedded perspective of “me” through the self-aware, reflective and choiceful perspective of “I” to mindful awareness and choiceless awareness of “non-self” which can completely dissolve old stuck patterns, not just re-condition or re-wire them. (That’s another talk on Mindfulness and Psychotherapy.) How does the social engagement system that regulates us into physiological balance fit in? When we feel safe in relationship, our sympathetic nervous system is not aroused. Our natural tendency as human beings to move toward remains operative. We engage, we interact, we bond. The functioning of our higher social brain, our middle pre-frontal cortex, stays on line. If we feel safe in engaging, interacting, bonding in relationship, even when there is a perceived threat or danger, we will still move toward. We will engage with a safe other to regulate our emotional distress. That is the essence of secure attachment. This connection-bonding releases the oxytocin that calms down the amygdala; the fear center stops firing its signals of alarm and we relax. I saw most powerful example of this in a documentary on Mother Teresa and her nuns working around the world with the displaced and the outcast. This scene was in Beirut, a nun holding a young child about 14 months old while Beirut was being bombed. The child was terrified, screaming, crying and thrashing around. His eyes were darting everywhere, no focus at all. The nun held the child in one arm and placed her other hand on his heart. She spoke to him in a soft soothing voice with a steady eye gaze. In less than two minutes child’ eyes locked on hers, his crying stopped. His breathing slowed down; his body relaxed. He was connected and safe. The cortex came back on line. That is the magic in less than 2 minutes; one brain engaging with and regulating another brain. When we can’t or won’t use the social engagement system – eye contact, emotional connection and empathy, soothing voice, hand on heart – then we regulate through the limbic system. No more “high road” regulation of distress. The cortex goes off line and fight-flight, moving against or moving away, takes over. (The anxious or avoidant attachment styles). At least there is still vagal tone, there is still movement. This is where earlier embedded patterns of coping show up. Under stress we contract and react in old habitual ways rather than the new healthier ways we have learned since. If the amydala is signaling us that this relationship is not only threatening or dangerous but life threatening, fight or flight won’t work; we freeze. This is the response of the brain stem. Freeze, numb out, shut down, play dead so the lion won’t eat you. Even action tendencies of the amygdala go off line. We become paralyzed. There is profound dissociation, no contact; this is disorganized attachment. When clients go into this state, the priority is to get them back into contact, back into connection, even if its into conscious fear or conscious anger. The limbic regulation of insecure attachment is at least an organized state of attachment. Then, of course, we continue to work to bring the of unconscious embedded patterns into conscious self awareness and self reflection so the cortex is engaged again and the client can make conscious skillful choices. Eye gaze is such a key part of the social engagement system to regulate emotions and maintain a sense of connection. We orient to eye contact within hours of birth. Steve Porges found, when there is eye contact and connection and then a sudden break in the eye contact, the rupture immediately triggers a “separation distress response” in our brain stem, unconscious and hard-wired in. So, in secure attachment, when we are self regulating through the higher cortical part of our brain, we seek eye contact with a safe other. We seek engagement, connection, acceptance, refuge looking by into the eyes of another. When the higher cortical regulation goes off line or never happened, when we are regulating from the amygdala, the fight flight system we tend to look at the other person’s mouth – am I going to be eaten? If we are responding from our brainstem, which gets down to a shame based survival strategy, we look down or away, hiding from the other. When we experience re-connection, acceptance again, where there is relief or hope, our eyes tend to look up, heavenward. So leading the clients toward secure attachment is not just “How do you imagine I am experiencing you?” but “What do you see when you look in my eyes?” A helpful hint from Allan Schore: we can look into the client’s left eye – which is most connected to the right hemisphere of the brain – to get more accurate read of their emotions. Their right eye is more connected to the left hemisphere and will give us info about what they are thinking rather than feeling. The two can be quite different. This social engagement system is especially relevant when working with couples or families, where partners or members of family are dysregulating each other and not soothing one another. Sue Johnson’s Emotion Focused Therapy for Couples is hallmarked by having couples present a typical example of how they interact with one another to bring into the room and into awareness the approach-avoid behaviors of insecure attachment, though called pursuer-distancer, or blame-attack – withdraw. Once the elements of that relational dance are identified, the therapist helps each partner in the couple speak to and feel the emotional needs underlying that behavior, usually tremendous longings for safety and closeness, but also deep fear of being rejected, being found inadequate, or being ignored. EFT therapy addresses the attachment longings, injuries, and fears; it helps each partner be able to be honest and vulnerable about their own fears and receive-believe the fears of the partner. With defenses down and hearts open, the couple creates a change event, a new experience of each other, a more secure attachment that becomes the new benchmark for relating from now on. One of the things Stan Tatkin suggests doing with couples, based on the neuroscience of emotional regulation, is rather than have an arguing couple take a time out and separate for 20 minutes on their own to re-regulate their cortisol level – cortisol is the stress hormone; it blocks the cortex from functioning properly, have you noticed? If it’s safe he has them hug for 20 seconds instead. A full- body, 20 second hug will release oxytocin in the brain and calm down the limbic system. The partners are regulating each other rather than going off by themselves to self-regulate, and that builds attachment.
4. Here are practical take-aways: what clients can do with you or on their own to change their brains.
1. Help clients interact with other healthy brains. “All this talk therapy is just an excuse to hang out long enough for the relationship to do the healing.” – SEPI conference on Attachment and Relationships, 2002 Because our brains are social brains, developing most efficiently in interactions with other brains, it’s essential that clients hang out with other healthy brains besides you one hour a week in the consulting room. Mary Main and Erik Hesse discovered that if one partner in a relationship has a secure attachment style, the other less-than-secure partner can grow into earned secure attachment in 3-5 years without therapeutic intervention. We are learning how to accelerate that process. Support groups, therapy groups are excellent adjunctive resources. Group experiences like Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction or yoga classes, where there is valuing of awareness and acceptance, can be excellent. Personal growth workshops can help clients learn to experience, process, manage, express their own emotions and challenge them to skillfully process the emotions of others, strengthening the circuits of empathy and self-reflection. Expressive arts workshops and authentic movement classes can help clients express deep emotional experiences without words, without conscious processing. 2. Help clients improve their brain functioning. Mindfulness, as a process of intra-personal attunement, uses and strengthens the same resonance circuits that empathy does and develops all nine functions of the PFC. Mindfulness trains the brain to focus attention on the felt sense of direct experience in the moment with acceptance and compassion. There doesn’t have to be any spiritual or transcendent overtones to do this. Mindful awareness of experience changes the brain. One of the more dramatic discoveries of modern neuroscience is that mindfulness causes a “left shift” in brain functioning. Over time, mindfulness activates the innate positive bias of the left hemisphere, so that experiences are processed in a more positive slant. The body scan form of mindful awareness is easily taught and can also be useful. For most of us, even stopping long enough to do a practice like mindfulness or body scan will slow down the bio-rhythms of our stressed out lives, bringing us into more ANS balance and better vagal tone. Deep breathing, progressive muscle relaxation, even placing a hand on one’s heart, as the nun did for the child in Beirut, improves functioning of the deeper parts of our brain we don’t pay enough attention to. Self-empathy, self-compassion, self-acceptance can be strengthened at home by a loving kindness practice, a gratitude practice, a forgiveness practice, a practice of taking in the good. Neurofeedback is a relatively new technique to improve brain functioning. It doesn’t work on attachment per se or any symptom or issue per se. The mild electrical stimulation of the brain through electrodes placed on the scalp stimulate parts of the brain that are under-firing and calm down parts of the brain that are over-firing. Neurofeedback promotes more synchrony of neural firing in the brain. More parts of the brain firing together in an integrated harmony results in better brain functioning in general. 3. Harnessing neural plasticity Guided visualizations that use imagery and imagination are powerful tools of brain change. Not just positive affirmations using the words of the left hemisphere to antidote negative messages of the right hemisphere. Guided visualizations use the right hemisphere mode of processing – images – to re-wire old patterns in the brain We can teach clients to imagine and evoke a felt sense of their Wiser Self, or a Wise Guide, or a safe haven, all of which can be powerful resources for their internal secure base. We can teach clients to create an intra-psychic secure attachment between their own Wiser Self and any part of themselves – wounded inner child or inner parts or inner voices work – that needs safe holding, soothing and acceptance. We can use Gestalt techniques to teach clients to visualize a True Other to their True Self. The True Other could be us or anyone else that holds them with unconditional positive regard and helps release the flow of oxytocin in the brain. Oxytocin is the bonding hormone; the subjective of experience of it in body is profound oneness and OK-ness. We can use guided visualizations to create portrayals – where a client remembers a traumatic event, an attachment injury. They imagine the scene vividly and then begin to imagine a different outcome, a wished for outcome. Portrayals don’t re-write history, but they DO re-wire the brain. If you have questions about any of these, call me or e-mail me; I’m happy to discuss them and help you find resources. I hope you are encouraged to venture into the unknown with your clients, even venturing into error, as you use the amazing capacities of your brain and theirs to heal old attachment wounds, re-wire old patterns and help them move into more and more well-being and resilient relating.
Appendix A: Therapist as Attachment Figure and Sample AEDP Interventions
THERAPIST AS ATTACHMENT FIGURE
- Techniques of responsive parenting
- be present, attuned, curious, attuned, empathic
- accurately mirror client’s inner reality; reflect on that reality in room with us
- Moment-to-moment tracking of non-verbals
- 8-second moments
- vitality affects
- Privilege relational-emotional experiences in therapeutic dyad over relational experiences outside the room, over any other kind of experience/story outside the room; make focus explicit.
- Stop attacks; cultivate self-empathy, self-compassion
- create safe haven, internal secure base
- Soften, bypass, confront any defenses that block direct experience of emotion and/or connection. Acknowledge/honor usefulness of defenses at one time for survival; de-pathologize, reframe as necessary at one time but now getting in the way.
- Help client experience and regulate feelings they have warded off as too dangerous or shaming to experience on their own, including positive affects.
- Co-create relational-emotional “moments”
- present moments
- “now” moments
- “wow” moments
- Therapy creates new attachment experiences, thus new internal working models of relationship, regulation of affect, resilience. New experiences become reference points, comparison points to change old patterns of attachment and help client create internal secure base.
SAMPLE INTERVENTIONS
- Responsive parenting – becoming an attachment figure
- I sense you might be feeling a little nervous as we begin our session today. Is that right?
- You’re feeling discouraged about where you are in your life right now. Can you say more about that?
- As I hear your talk about your brother, I notice something starts to come up in me, right here, in my chest. Can I check that out with you? I’m feeling…an ache, maybe some sadness, a loneliness. Are you feeling anything like that right now?
- When you say you can’t trust your wife any more, is there something underneath? Some sadness underneath…some deep, deep sadness?
- Moment-to-moment tracking of non-verbals
- Something just shifted; did something just change for you? Can you let me know what you’re feeling in your body right now?
- I notice your hands shaking and scratching as we talk; is there something happening in your hands we need to know about? If your hands had a voice, what would they be saying to us right now?
- I notice your energy is different in your body now…more relaxed? Lighter? What’s your sense now?
- Privilege relational-emotional experiences in therapeutic dyad; make focus explicit
- What are you experiencing right now, here with me, as we sit together? What’s it like to be experiencing this here now with me?
- What are you feeling right now? Where are you feeling that in your body? What’s it like to feel that with me? What are you feeling between us right now?
- Is it hard for you to look me in the eyes as you share this with me? What happens as you try to look me in the eye? What do you see in my eyes as we experience this here together? What do you see in my eyes as I feel what you feel?
- Stop attacks; cultivate self-empthay, self-compassion
- Whoa! There’s that inner critic again. Can we just set that voice aside for now and go back to what you were feeling just before?
- What would happen if you let in that I care about you? That I am so deeply moved by the work you are doing?
- You can be so harsh o yourself for feeling upset with me! I feel so tender toward that part that feels upset, that needs to be upset with me. Can you feel some compassion for that part that feels upset, that needs to feel upset? If your daughter Kelly were that upset, how would you feel toward her? How would you comfort or soothe her?
- Soften, bypass, confront any defenses
- It seemed like you were about to respond to what I just said and then you backed off. What comes up as you begin to respond directly to me?
- Any time we begin to get near the emotions around your father leaving, you seem to change the subject. Is there something difficult about feeling those feelings and sharing them with me?
- If we could set the anxiety about being weak or vulnerable in front of me aside for just a moment, what would your heart want to say; what would your heart want me to know about you?
- Experience and regulate feelings
- You know I want to go back to something that happened just a moment ago. You were saying something about your boss and your eyes flinched, just for a moment, and I let it go by, but I wonder if something came up just in that moment that we should pay attention to?
- You seem angry right now, yet you’re holding back on letting that anger out. Can you let me know just how hard it is for you to let the anger out; what do you imagine would happen if you began to let your anger out?
- So much pain; so very much pain. I can feel the pain as we sit here. Can you let me feel that pain with you? Can you feel that pain with me, just let it be there?
- Let it come, let it come. It’s OK, I’m right here; it’s been wanting to come for such a long time.
- You’re not alone; I’m right here with you.
- Co-create and reflect on relational-emotional moments; meta-processing
- I’m feeling touched as I hear you say that. I’m so moved that you would share this with me.
- We’ve been through such a wave of grief here, and now….there seems to be something else. A letting go…a sigh of relief? What’s happening now?
- Whew! That was quite a ride! And what’s going on now? What are you feeling now?
- What’s your sense of what’s happened here today? How do you make sense of what we’ve experienced here together today?
- You’ve opened up and shared of much of your frustration and anger with me today. How do you feel about your anger now?
- You started out today by saying you weren’t sure what was going on with you, what to focus on. Then here we did this deep piece of work about the loss of your best friend in high school, and felt so much loss, so much loss. How are you feeling about yourself now, having experienced so much loss, really letting yourself feel it? What’s your sense of your self now?
- Create new attachment experiences
- Do you think you could stand up for yourself with your sister now the way you did to me last week about the fee?
- How can you remember what it’s like in here, trusting yourself to know how you feel and what you need, when you speak to your boss next week?
Linda Graham, MFT, is in full-time private practice in San Francisco and Corte Madera, CA, specializing in relationship counseling for individuals and couples. She offers consultation and trainings nationwide on the integration of relational psychology, mindfulness, and neuroscience. She publishes a monthly e- newsletter on Healing and Awakening into Aliveness and Wholeness, archived on www.lindagraham-mft.com, and is writing a book: Growing Up and Waking Up: The Dance of the Whole Self. Linda Graham, MFT 415-665-7765
lindagraham2@earthlink.net lindagraham-mft.com ************************************************** Safety can be described not only as important, but as a
need - necessary to healing.
The ‘need’ for safety is not only physical (i.e. physiological, biological, geographical, etc), it is also psychological and emotional.
The human body and brain has specific physiological needs.
Abraham Maslow identified a ‘hierarchy of needs’ (see Fig. 1) and asserted that we cannot move up the hierarchy until our most
basic needs have been met.
According to Maslow, physiological needs are the most important and need to be met
before safety ‘needs’ can become a focus. If a human body is deprived of breathable air, nourishing food, clean water, regular use of the bladder & bowel, or becomes unable to properly regulate the inner physical system (homeostasis) then psychological or emotional
‘safety’ is unlikely to be a priority.
1. Biological and Physiological needs - air, food, drink, shelter, warmth, sex, sleep, etc.
2. Safety needs - protection from elements, security, order, law, limits, stability, etc.
3. Belongingness and Love needs - work group, family, affection, relationships, etc.
4. Esteem needs - self-esteem, achievement, mastery, independence, status, dominance, prestige, managerial responsibility, etc.
5. Self-Actualization needs - realising personal potential, self-fulfillment, seeking personal growth and peak experiences.
Fig.1 Maslows’ Hierarchy of Needs
http://www.econsultant.com/articles/abraham-maslow-hierarchy-of-needs.html When I wrote this piece back in 2008, I also wrote that I did not agree with Maslow as his theory did not make sense to me. While watching "Into the Mind" on SBS TV tonight, I realised why - Maslow does not place enough importance on the bilogical and phisological need for attachment!! To a human child, attachment to one consitent, warm figure is vital to survival, as vital as air, food, drink, shelter, warmth, sex and sleep. Harlow et al proved this as did Bowlby, Maine and Ainsworth. Even if the attachment figure is the main source of distress, the child will seek out the attachment to them. I feel good now I know why I disagree with Maslow.
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<><><><><>The MHCC (Mental Health Co-ordinating Council) in collaboration with ASCA, ECAV and PMHCCN held a conference 23 & 24 June 2011 @ Four Seasons by Sheraton in Sydney called: Trauma Informed Care and Practice - Meeting The Challenge. I am attended the conference and am very grateful to have received a subsidy from MHCC so I can go. Thanks also to HFL for assisting me. <><><>
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Mental Health Coordinating Council (MHCC)
Collaborating Partners: Adults Surviving Child Abuse (ASCA); Education Centre Against Violence (ECAV); Private Mental Health Consumer Carer Network (Australia)
INTRODUCTION
I attended this conference very excitedly, as I first read about Trauma Informed Care Practices in 2009 when I read a paper by William Steele which I found using Google. Steele is the founder of the Trauma and Loss Institute (TIC) in USA which provides services for children who have been traumatised. TIC also developed the SITCAP model of healing which is now used and evidenced extensively in working with traumatised children in services and facilities across America. My initial excitement came from recognizing how closely aligned the philosophies of TIC Institute are with the Heal for Life Foundations’ (HFL) model of healing for survivors of childhood trauma and I have eagerly awaited the arrival of TIC into Australian mental health service practices. I have felt intuitively certain that Trauma Informed Care Practice (TICP) is going to be the next standard used in this country and now I feel my intuition has been validated. My expectations around attending this conference were around how much I could learn about TICP. To my astonishment, I did not learn any new skill but that is what has excited me the most – all of the information, proposed practice and needs of consumers presented at this conference are being used (and have been tested and proven) right here at HFL. So I can proudly and with certainty say, I attended a conference that, for me, supported the theory and practices used at HFL and I saw around 300 people embrace and get excited about learning to use it. HFL presented at the conference and also had an information table which was swamped continuously over the 2 days by workers wanting to know more about what we do and how we do it. There were workers from many sectors including: mental health, family, maternal health, child protection, community, CALD, Indigenous, as well as psychiatrists, psychologists, researchers, consumers, educators and policy makers, not to mention and opening address via video link from Mark Butler, Australia’s first Federal Member for Mental Health.
While I listened intently and took many notes, I realize my notes do not fully encapsulate the content of the conference for a few reasons, the first being my surprise at realising I already knew the theory behind TIC and have been use trained in and applying them for over 5 years already. The second reason is I began to feel there was no need to take notes about things I could not share with my HFL family to improve our service (coz there really was nothing new to note); and another reason was because I was, at times, surprised by the audience response to information, theory that I formerly took for granted every service worker would already know (I’m not sure why I thought that, it just came to me then). Fourthly, the conference was arranged in such a way that no person could attend each separate presentation in the last half day of the conference.
I present my notes below for no particular purpose other than to share the information and I hope they are useful to someone else.
Conference presenters:
Bronwyn Penrith – Gadigal Woman
The Hon Mark Butler MP
Jenna Bateman – Chief CEO MHCC
Debra Wells – Service User, Consultant and Educator, New Zealand
Lorna McNamara – Director, Education Centre Against Violence, Sydney
Merinda Epstein – Consumer Activist, Artist, Our Consumer Place, Victoria
Dr Richard Benjamin – Consultant Psychiatrist, Clarence and Eastern District Community Mental health Service, Tasmania
Dr Warwick Middleton – Adjunct Professor, School of Public Health, La Trobe University; Associate Professor in Psychiatry, University of Queensland
Professor Judy Atkinson – Jiman woman; Consultant, We-Ali Program
Dr Caroline Atkinson – of Jiman-Bundjalung heritage; Senior Lecturer, Gnibi College of Indigenous Australian Peoples, Southern Cross University
Dr Cathy Kezelman – Executive Director and CEO, ASCA
Kath Thornburn – Mental Health Education Consultant, Senior Occupational Therapist (Mental Health), Nepean Blue Mountains Local Health Network
Michelle Everett – Clinical Psychologist, Co-Ordinator post-graduate Adult Mental Health programs at the NSW Institute of Psychiatry and an Official Visitor under the NSW Mental Health Act
Professor Louise Newman AM – Professor of Developmental Psychiatry and Director of the Monash University Centre for Developmental Psychiatry and Psychology; Chair of Detention Expert Advisory Group
Dr Katherine Mills – Senior Lecturer, National Drug and Alcohol Research centre
Dr Antonia Quadara – Co-ordinator of the Australian Centre for the Study of Sexual Assault at the Australian Institute of Family Studies
Mary Stathopoulos – Research Officer with the Australian Centre for the Study of Sexual Assault…..(Mary became ill and was unable to present)
Philip Hilder – Psychologist specializing in Hakomi and Sensorimotor Psychotherapy (mindfulness based trauma therapy)
Rob Seaton – Regional Manager, Supported Accommodation Inner Sydney Services for Wesley Mission
Sage Saegenschnitter – Homeless Support Co-ordinator, HopeStreet, Woolloomooloo
Kathleen Guarino – Senior Program Associate, Clinical Design national Centre on Family Homelessness, USA (by video link)
Leticia Funston – Faces in the Street, Urban Mental Health Research Institute, St Vincent’s Hospital
Irena Quinn – ISHAR, the Multicultural Women’s Health Centre, WA
Laura Vidal – Salvation Army Safe House for Trafficked Women
Mandy Young – Director Victims Services for the Department of Justice and Attorney General (DJAG)
Lyn Mitchell – Acting Manager, Policy and Service Delivery, Victims Services
Chris hartly – Senior Policy Officer with the NSW Consumer Advisory Group (CAG)
Tara Dias - Policy Officer with the NSW Consumer Advisory Group (CAG)
Toni Ashmore - Education Centre Against Violence
Tina Smith – Senior Policy Officer, Mental Health Coordinating Council
Dr Megan Chambers – Director Redbank House, Westmead
Dr Gary Galambos – Consultant Psychiatrist, St John of God Hospital Burwood
Maria Quinn, PhD Candidate, La Trobe University
Lyn Romeo – Private Practitioner (Yoga)
Liz Mullinar AM – Founder and CEO at Heal for Life Foundation
Tanya Fox – Counsellor, Education and Training Coordinator at Heal for Life Foundation
Barry Roberts – Dhungutty/Bundjalung man, Case Manager with New Horizons Enterprises on the Gumargai indigenous Support Program
Lesley Hartley EN– Bundjalung woman, Case Manager with New Horizons Enterprises on the Gumargai indigenous Support Program
Professor Beverly Raphael AM – Professor of Population mental health and Disaster Response and resilience Research group, UWS School of Medicine
Karen Burns – Chair, Mental Health Coordinating Council; CEO United Care mental health
From my Notes:
· Federal initiatives - National Mental Health Research Committee (NMRC) and the National Mental Health Commission (NMHC)
· The National Center for Trauma-Informed Care (NCTIC) was created in 2005 by the Substance Abuse And Mental Health Services Administration SAMHSA (http://www.samhsa.gov/about/) in USA. · A national strategy for TICP is needed in Australia.
Debra Wells:
· The A.C.E study(USA) – 18,000 participants: Adverse childhood experiences (ACE) are the main determinant of the health and social wellbeing of the nation. ACE have a profound effect even 50 years later – mental health services in Australia have largely ignored this.
· Some of the ‘lies’ or attitudes behind this ignorance are: ‘the child is too young to remember’; ‘you can just get over it’; ‘I was abused and it didn’t effect me’.
· Mental Health workers: are chronically over stressed; collectively traumatised by unsafe conditions and people; disempowered, helpless, hopeless; feel demoralized by lack of honouring from the system. The is a huge erosion of trust in services which are deemed to be fragmented and amnesic: not well coordinated and not learning lessons or from mistakes.
· Mental Health Workers need to STAND UP, PUSH FOR CHANGE, DO SOMETHING DIFFERENT!
· TICP has to be system wide – a new paradigm that acknowledges the needs of the client and the worker; is underpinned by policy, procedure and planning; recognizes all forms of trauma (the type of trauma does not matter as much as the effects of the trauma); always seeks to DO NO HARM; R.I.C.H.
Respect
Information
Connection (empathic attunement)
Hope
R.I.C.H is vital worker-to-worker and worker-to-client
Lorna McNamra:
· RELATIONSHIPS between worker/workers and workers/clients needs to change
· 17% of sexual assault victims reporting to Police are men (ABS 2002)
· 71% of people with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) have a Child Sexual Abuse (CSA) history
· Disbelief is the greatest fear of many victims of CSA – they want to be believed and treated with respect
Merinda Epstein:
· There is a new federal advisory committee for BPD
· Other names for BPD are: Bullshit Psychiatric Diagnosis (Asylum 2004), Mercurial Personality Disorder
· Labelling people with personality disorders (pathologising) is like saying there is something wrong with your soul (Epstein 2011)
· There are currently disability and suffering hierarchies and the bottom of the hierarchy is illness and trauma. This even occurs between sufferers/survivors
· Comparing and sharing stories makes many people feel inadequate, undeserving of help and ‘like trauma frauds’ (it’s very unhelpful and may even be harmful)
· There is a current idea among professionals that consumers can’t be ‘experts’ no matter what their qualifications!
Richard Benjamin:
· TICP engages both the L&R hemispheres of the brain
· Having diagnoses like schizophrenia and bi-polar may be traumatic in itself
o Protoconversation – Colwyn Trevarthen
§ Coupling
§ Matching
§ Amplification
§ Fabulous principles
o Facial action coding system – Paul Ekman
o Micro-expressions are unconscious affect ‘leakages’
· Alan Schore: The relationship between the infant and the mother creates a template which effects all other relationships throughout life
· When the mother is unresponsive or expressionless, the child will attempt to engage the mother. If this fails, the infant will become distressed within 2 minutes!
· The mother wires the brain and creates the software (hardware-neurons form through attachment to the mother; software-brain is programmed to respond and react to mothers affect)
· Problems with affect may be the precursor to dissociation
· The RH is dominant in the first 3-4 years of life
· Play, attachment, empathy and affect are important to mental health
· Some people do not develop the hardware or the software
· The current cost of child abuse in Australia is thought to be $10-30 billion per year
· The co-existence of PTSD is often missed during psychiatric diagnosis
· Disorders of Extreme Stress Not Otherwise Specified (DESNOS) is not recognized in DSM-IV-TR
· Lenore Terr wrote about Type 1 and Type 2 childhood trauma in 1991
· “The two different hemispheres have not merely different skills but wholly different perspectives on the world” (McGilchrist)
· The DSM was originally research that was ‘bastardised’ (Benjamin 2011) to become a diagnostic tool and is not being used for it’s original intended purpose
· Some people cannot ‘do it themselves’ as they may not have the hardware or software
· We need to use individual service plans (ISPs) and minimize the use ‘takedowns’
o NB: Take downs in a mental health facility means that when a p[atient]t shows inappropriate behavior (usually risk to self and or others) and other alternative measures do not work, the last resort available is to "take down" or swarm the patient. A swarm of people take control of the person and either put him/her in a special room, administer restraints, or admin cocktail of meds to adjust the inappropriate behavior. Obviously, the p[atient]t must be constantly monitored, offered food/water, and reevaluated. (info from Allnurses.com http://allnurses.com/lpn-lvn-corner/what-exactly-does-453911.html 25 June 2011 15:15 · Protected Therapeutic Time needs to be normal practice
· It can take decades to change a paradigm
· Books:
o Affect Regulations & the Origin of the Self - Alan Schore (1994)
o Affect Theory – Paul Ekman & Sylvan Thompkins
o The Master And His Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World by Iain McGilchrist
o Talking With Extremely Psychotic People by Len Bowers
· Conversational Model - Russel Meares & Robert Hobson anzap.web.com
· The unconscious (research) Emil Kraeplin
Warwick Middleton:
· Was the principal architect in establishing Australia’s first trauma and disoociation inpatient and day-hospital unit
· Be sure to use quantifiable evidence and research to back your theories
· Be non-threatening to other workers/services; be warm, inviting; sharing information and resources
· Establish international links (which doesn’t mean you have to embrace all that they do – be mindful)
· Have a good relationship with media
· Be non-derogatory to all, including other professions
· Be non-critical of other modalities
· Therapists have the same statistics of abuse and trauma as anyone else
· Chimpanzee society revolves around power; food & sex (notice the similarity?)
· Approx. 1in 8 patients with D.I.D are still being incestuously abused in adulthood
· Dissociation and DID were 1st recognized as disorders in DSM IV in 1980
· In one study, 29%of DID patients had been previously diagnosed with BPD
Judy and Caroline Atkinson – EDUCARE (Respect, Rights, Responsibilities, Reciprocity, Relatedness)
· Never forget that Australia was formed as a penal colony – a prison!! Prison creates a culture of violence and poverty.
· Colonisation - Incarceration of youth; removal of children; subjugation of indigenous people; fracturing families and communities.
· People with childhood trauma histories make up almost our entire prison populations
· Aboriginal male prisoners said:
o Sharing the story for the first time helped
o Art and music helped me to feel and heal
o Reclaim culture as a source of strength and identity
o Increasing employment opportunities through healing of the trauma
o AOD education – relate it to trauma behaviours
o A genogram helped them to see ‘it stops with me’ Find and tell the stories
o Feeling feelings
o Making sense of the stories (CBT)
o Moving through the layers of loss and grief (where there is anger, there is always grief – Caroline Atkinson)
· Create a safe place through building a rapport – build a rapport including your own history where it’s relevant and appropriate
· Stages of healing:
o An awakening
o Community support
o Rebuilding a sense of safety and community
o The use of ceremony in healing
o Strengthening spirituality
· “Trauma-Informed Care and Practice is a strengths-based framework grounded in an understanding of and responsiveness to the impact of trauma, that emphasizes physical, psychological, and emotional safety for both providers and survivors, and that creates opportunities for survivors to rebuild a sense of control and empowerment.”
· Behaviours are challenging but make sense in the context of trauma
· The medical model:
§ Labels a disease
§ Patholgises
§ Studies symptoms rather than people
§ Works on the premise that something is wrong with a person rather than something happened to the person
· We need to ask the question: “What happened to you?”
· Establish safety
· Stabilization
· Establish a therapeutic relationship
· Developing skills
· Education
· Processing & integration
Michelle Everett and Kath Thorburn – The relationship between TRICP and Recovery Oriented Practice
· ”Recovery” was the first post institutionalisation model and has been used for the past 20 years
· We need to understand that TIC challenges long held beliefs and assumptions and some people will resist that change – this is normal
· TIC paradigm shift involves a fundamental change in thinking and practices
· Leadership and vision is necessary for change to occur in MHS delivery
· Book: Principled Leadership in Mental Health Systems and Programs by William A. Anthony & Kevin Ann Huckshorn
· Change needs:
o Partnership without power imbalance (non hierarchical) especially peer support
Louise Newman – Trauma and personality development
· “Psychic trauma occurs when a sudden, unexpected, intense, external experience overwhelms the individuals coping and defensive operations, creating the feeling of utter helplessness” (Lenore Terr 1987)
· Parents have a range of issues and conflicts when they attempt to parent – from anxiety to avoidant to repetition
· Children adapt to enduring stress according to developmental stage and capacities
· Vulnerability is greatest at stages of neurobiological organisation
· Maltreatment, abuse and exposure to violence in infancy are risk factors for later abusive behaviour and victimization
Antonia Quadara – women in the correctional system
· Prison is a ‘last stop’ for people who are usually already institutionalized
· Dissociation may be a fundamental element of complex trauma (Judith Herman definition)
o Judith Herman model of recovery – 3 phases a survivor needs to pass through
§ Establishing safety i-control over self/ii-self care/iii-control outside of self; restoring control, bodily safety and self-regulation, confidence, learning to connect
§ Rememberance and mourning – exploring and integrating the memories (therapy and healing)
§ Reconnecting with community & others
Kathleen Guarino
· Acute trauma; e.g. car crash, natural disaster
· Complex trauma; e.g. prolonged and repeated; e.g. child abuse, war
· In the USA-
o 51-98% of patients in the public mental health system
o 75% of patients in substance abuse programs
o 93% of patients in psychiatric institutions
o 92% of homeless mothers
- Have trauma histories including sexual and emotional abuse
· Responses to complex trauma mimic some mental health diagnosis but are not currently treated as trauma
· We (humans)are naturally designed to want to move toward growth and health
· Programs need to work with strengths-safety-control
· We need to demonstrate cultural competence, differences in cultural understanding, experiences and impacts
· BECOMING TRAUMA INFORMED
o 1) trauma education for all staff
o Gaining ‘buy-in’ – identify some ‘hooks’ or benefits to engage staff who may be resistant to change
o 2) evaluate your organisation (use a tool like the trauma informed care toolkit mentioned above)
o 3) implement changes
§ Staff development, supervision, self care, training
§ Training in attachment/child development; effects of trauma; relationships between trauma and substance abuse, behaviours, relationships, parenting
§ De-escalation strategies, identifying triggers
o Supervision and support
§ Topics related to trauma are addressed in team meetings
§ Needs to be regular, ongoing and needs-based
§ Supervisor who understands trauma and its’ effects on clients and staff
§ Provide opportunity for staff input
§ Agency helps staff debrief after a crisis
§ Supervisory relationship mirrors TIC Principles
o Self care
§ Is the responsibility of the individual, supervisors, team leaders and the organisation
§ Learn about, understand, train for and accept that Compassion Fatigue and vicarious traumatization are very real and expected in trauma work
§ Not having the resources to do your job well contributes to vicarious traumatization
Barry Roberts & Lesley Harley
· Indigenous trauma includes colonization and trans-generational trauma as well as cultural-bound syndromes
· Programs need a culturally safe and holistic approach engaging elders and community in planning and implementation
· Understand importance of spiritual healing
o The land is central to social, family, individual and community healing
o If we can’t heal the land, we can’t heal the people
o Feed the spirit, no the flesh
· Needs interagency collaboration in consultation with elders
· Sustainability
· Home based model of healing within the context of the family (not like the current so-called ‘intervention’
· Ongoing consultation
· Networking and resource availability
· Access to respite care
· Back to country – the land is the mother of all
As I stated earlier, there was a lot that I didn’t note as I was trying to note what I felt important and I’m sure others would note differently. I have used references where they were provided by presenters and I suggest that if you want references, make an effort to contact the presenters or ask Mr. Google as I do not have time to do this now. I hope you do find this information useful in some way and I look forward to ushering in a new dawn of ‘accepted’ mental health reform however long it takes.
June Parkin 25 June 2011
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For ESD 189 Only! INSTRUCTIONS:
Read the following article.
Email the following information to steele@tlcinst.org
Your Name
Date
ESD 189
And answer these two questions:
1. Indicate one statement that stood out for you from the general article.
2. Indicate one statement that stood out for your from Trauma Informed Care in Groups.
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Trauma Informed Care
A History of Helping: A History of Excellence
Lessons Learned Since 1990
William Steele, MA, MSW, PsyD
Copyright July, 2007 Dr. Steele founded the National Institute for Trauma and Loss in Children (TLC) in 1990 long before children were included in the diagnostic category of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). He began developing and researching trauma specific interventions in 1990 beginning with a one-session trauma specific intervention. Today his model Structured Sensory Interventions for Traumatized Children, Adolescents and Parents (SITCAP) is used in thousands of schools and agencies across the country all the while undergoing continual field testing and rigorous evidenced based research. Outcomes have consistently demonstrated remarkable, statistically significant reductions of trauma and associated mental health symptoms. Over 5,000 professionals have been certified as Trauma and Loss Specialists by TLC under Dr. Steele’s supervision. He encourages you to visit TLC’s website (www.tlcinst.org) for more detailed information.
The following lessons learned have been integrated into TLC’s evidenced based SITCAP programs. They represent what we know about trauma as an experience and provide the core sensory focus trauma specialists must use to guide and structure their interventions. Intervention must be very structured and directed at sensory/implicit functions that lead to the diminishing and eventual replacement of the trauma related sensory memories in order to reframe those experiences in ways traumatized children can first accept and then
order in ways they can manage as well as call upon as a resource in their ongoing efforts to survive.
These lessons learned then are the starting point for helping traumatized children regardless of the format used – individual or group intervention - regardless of the setting – school setting, agency, community mental health, detention, residential settings. Many of these lessons are presented in various publications by Dr. Steele. Attached is a partial reference list of other leaders in the field of trauma who have guided Dr. Steele’s work the past 17 years. (References earlier than 1995 are not listed yet discoveries about children’s’ responses especially to traumatic violent exposure remain relevant today.)
Trauma as an Experience You want to relate to trauma as an experience, not as a diagnostic category. One word that best captures the experience of trauma is terror. We define the experience of terror as feeling unsafe and powerless to do anything about these situations. Therefore, all intervention must be directed at the restoration of a sense of safety and power.
- Helping the child experience safety is critical to relieving the experience of trauma.
- However, safety cannot be experienced through cognitive processes, it must be first experienced at a sensory, implicit level in the mid-brain rather than the neocortex.
- When a traumatized child’s behavior does not make sense to you remember the experience of trauma. The one word that best describes the experiences of trauma is terror and terror is feeling totally unsafe and powerless to do anything about the situation. The trauma child’s behavior, as illogical as it may seem, is an attempt to gain power over the who or what in his life that is perceived to be a threat and or to get to a safe place that implicitly leaves him with a sense of safety and control (this may be from our view self defeating behavior but is one that is familiar to the child).
- Trauma is the inability to move the sensory memories of those traumatic experiences from implicit to explicit memory where the child can reframe it in ways he can now manage, use as a resource and look at his life with new meaning.
- Keep in mind that because the experience of trauma is sensory/implicit, the way we look, approach the child, the pitch of our voice, etc. can remind that child of the bad person who did that bad thing to him. We may be very skilled trauma specialists just not the right person in that child’s sensory memory. In trauma work, we need to work in teams when possible so that the child has a choice as to whom he lets help him to feel safer. There is no such thing as resistance in trauma.
- In the same manner, living in the trauma experience children are unable to cognitively distinguish that the threat is over. In trauma treatment, therefore, we must help the child with the “then” and the “now”. Whenever we make a reference to the “then” of his experience we must always bring him to the “now” of his experience this week and/or today. The more frequently we do this, the more the child begins to engage in the same internal process for himself which then allows for an ending to the current stressful experience that is different from the past traumatic experience.
- Furthermore, the more frequently the traumatized child can distinguish the present from the past the more opportunities we have to help him reconnect to the future. We must continue to remind every traumatized child that, “today is followed by tomorrow and tomorrow you will…” Here we must be patient and also help the child experience patience for what he hopes for and plans for tomorrow and weeks later.
- The more often we can help the child identify what he would like to experience tomorrow (keep it realistic and in manageable increments) the more he can begin to move out of the past and move forward to the next day in his life. Point out to him, day after day, the many opportunities he has each day to make choices to do things a little differently or the same things as well.
- One cannot reduce the mid-brain dominance via cognitive processes alone. These processes are located within the neocortex not in the midbrain where trauma is experienced and stored. The child must first be taught that his body is a resource he can call upon to reduce the psycho physiological experiences of arousal. There are many activities; the simplest being teaching the child to recognize the difference in his body when stressed versus relaxed.
- By repetitive body conditioning the child can learn that although he may still face difficult situations he can manage his arousal response.
- Body awareness and control leads to self-regulation, which diminishes mid-brain dominance allowing for frontal cortex development (executive functions, etc.).
- In trauma treatment children must be directed to their body’s response to any stressor, so they can learn to use this response as a control point to begin to reduce their arousal/anxiety via use of past repetitive practice of moving in and out of stressed/relaxed body states. This repetitive process helps him to distinguish good stress from bad stress, which is an executive function. Problem solving can then be more easily engaged.
- Increasing a child’s time devoted to play, positive fantasies (especially about self as empowered) and increased use of imagination become excellent strategies for reducing midbrain dominance as well as increasing empowerment.
- In trauma work there is no such thing as resistance – either a child feels safe or he does not. Our responsibility is to be a safe person to be with and to engage in treatment strategies that the child feels safe and in control enough to engage/experience.
- From a neurological stance, safe experiences strengthen new neuronal connections and repetition of these safe experiences will in time replace the unsafe, sensory memories.
- Reduction of posttraumatic stress symptoms can be experienced without focusing on symptoms. Begin to restore a sense of safety and power in the child and symptoms will begin to diminish.
- In trauma treatment we must always provide the child with choice if we are going to help him develop a sense of empowerment.
- When working at the sensory level we must work hard to see what the child now sees as he looks at himself and the world around as a result of traumatic exposures. We need to see how he now views himself and others, to truly know how to best help as well as not over intervene.
- It is critical that we do not make assumptions about how that child has been impacted by any experience we think should be traumatic. Remember that an experience is only traumatic if the child’s experience of it is one of feeling totally unsafe and powerless to do anything about that situation.
- We can actually over intervene and induced greater amounts of anxiety then that actually experienced by the child when we assume that we know what it must be like for the child. Ask two children exposed the same situation what worries them the most since this happened. One will reply, “Does this man we can’t go on our field trip?” while the other replies, “Is mommy going to die too?” One exposure, two different experiences, two different interventions.
- In trauma, behaviors reflect the sensory experience. These sensory experiences cannot be changed by cognitive interventions alone, as most are not stored in the neocortex but the midbrain. Sensory memories must be changed through sensory interventions if traumatic behavior is to change.
- When memory cannot be linked linguistically in a contextual framework it remains at a symbolic level where there are no words to describe it. To retrieve that sensory memory so it can be encoded, given a language and then integrated into executive functioning and explicit process (neocortex), it must first be retrieved and externalized in its symbolic, perceptual (iconic) form, an implicit process. This can only be accomplished through sensory interventions.
- For sensory interventions to be effective they must be structured so each session begins and ends in a safe place while in the middle of the session sensory interventions direct themselves to the specific experiences or themes of trauma: fear and terror, worry, hurt, anger, revenge, accountability, feeling unsafe, powerless and trapped by victim thinking versus survivor thinking.
- It is critical that the child be actively involved in his own healing process by providing the child the opportunity to:
- Focus on internal resources (sensory)
- Re-work the experience while at the same time experiencing sensory relief from the terror of that experience(s).
- Experience positive, sensory reattachment to their own bodies.
- Experience at a sensory level a renewed sense of safety and power as a result of engaging in sensory directed experiences.
- Translate this renewed sense of safety and power into a “cognitive” identity as a survivor and thriver.
- Cognitive behavioral intervention alone is not as effective as intervention that integrates sensory and cognitive processes. However, cognitive processing must flow from what is first learned by the child at the sensory level.
- Attempts to cognitively reframe what is not first experienced at a sensory level will not make real sense to the traumatized child simply because the dominant process of the traumatized brain is sensory, not cognitive so understanding, logic, reasoning are difficult to access.
- Attempts to introduce the reframing statements and thoughts that are not directly related to a sensory experience cannot be internalized. You tell me I can run a marathon but after ten minutes of jogging for the first time I start having side stitches and have to stop because I’m out of breath. What am I going to believe? The cognitive conviction flows from the sensory experience. If you had told me I could jog for ten minutes I would have believed you because my body proved it. When you tell me after a few ten-minute body successes that I can now jog for fifteen minutes I will be eager to try because my body, my sensory experience supports the possibility.
- To cognitively accept oneself as a survivor/thriver, the child must first discover repeatedly, at the sensory level, the ability to regulate his responses to his environment, to his day-to-day interactions within that environment and the situations created by that environment.
- Cognitively children will generally be far behind their peers as the learning centers do not develop or are not engaged when attempting to survive which is primarily a mid-brain experience. Once the mid-brain is no longer the predominant processor of daily life, children can often learn at three times the rate compared to when engulfed in trying to survive.
- Positive reinforcement is often perceived to be very threatening to the traumatized child because he perceives it to be our way of gaining power over him. When he perceives us to have the power he “knows” (sensory memory) he will be hurt by us. Don’t be surprised by his response to your positive exchange.
- We must be genuine with our positive reinforcements but we also must provide them far more frequently then we would normal children. If you have ever been rear-ended you know it takes months to stop looking in your car’s rearview mirror every two seconds. It takes months for the body not to tense up the moment you turn the ignition on, to not be easily startled by every strange noise. You cognitively know the odds are unlikely that you will be rear-eneded again yet your sensory memory tells you differently. Positive reinforcement must be frequent before that traumatized child’s sensory memory can be replaced.
- Educating the child/parent/guardian to the differences between grief and trauma, the way they alter the brain’s functions and then normalizing their many reactions within the context of trauma is very critical to do as an initial intervention.
- Parents/guardians of traumatized children often have trauma histories that are likely to be activated by that child. In these cases they too need to have trauma intervention so as to learn new ways (sensory) to help their child survive while deactivating their own sensory memories When this does not happen traumatized parents will ignore their child’s fears and worries, ignore their need for protection and comfort, minimize or even criticize their child’s responses all of which further victimize the child (secondary wounding). Educating the parent and system to these experiences of trauma can help prevent further victimization of the child.
- Working with traumatized children in groups helps children quickly learn they are not alone, that their “problems” are not at all unusual given what they were or are continually exposed to and they can self-regulate their reactions and responses to one another which will be reinforced many times over in the group setting.
- The group provides for repetitive self-regulating opportunities, which strengthen the sense of empowerment, reduces arousal and the sensory memories, resulting in reaction reduction.
- However, keep in mind, a group setting may be far too activating for some children dictating the need for individual intervention.
Trauma Informed Care in Group Settings
- Services for trauma survivors must be based on concepts, policies, and procedures that provide safety, voice and choice and, like all good care, must be individualized/personalized. Trauma services must focus first and foremost on an individual’s physical and psychological safety. Services to trauma survivors must also be flexible, individualized, culturally competent, promote respect and dignity and be based on best practices (SAMHSA, 2005).
- Conducting thorough trauma assessment at admission and throughout a child’s treatment process is critical to avoiding those strategies that re-traumatize.
- All staff must be trained to distinguish trauma related behaviors from other behaviors, the importance of distinguishing between explicit and implicit processes, the neuro-developmental impact of trauma, the importance of titrating interventions, the body's role in healing from trauma, what is meant by “trauma as an experience” versus “trauma as a diagnostic category”, why cognitive interventions are limited in their success, knowing how the traumatized child perceives us, the importance of being active not reactive, knowing precisely how our behavior can further victimize the traumatized child.
- Trauma informed care is not about creating a milieu the traumatized child can fit into, but allowing the child to discover those parts of the milieu that physiologically/neurologically feel the safest and present the child with choices and opportunities to have access to those “parts” of the milieu.
- Obviously we want to maintain a safe environment at all times but for the traumatized child what might be safe from our view is not safe from his view.
- There is no such thing as a milieu that brings safety to every child, it is the child who brings his “safe place”, "safe poise”, “safe interaction” to the milieu and this is reflected in external and internal processing that often presents itself to be “problematic behavior”.
- We cannot possibly assume we know what is best for a traumatized child until we can see a) what he sees when he looks at himself b) see what he sees as he looks at those around him, and c) what he sees when he looks at his environment.
- This “view” cannot be accomplished by clinical observation alone. There are trauma symptoms that are not always observable and sensory memories for which children have no words to describe.
- If a child’s behavior does not make sense to you, it does not mean that it does not make sense for the child. If we have to ask why behaviors are being repeated, we need to remember the experiences of trauma being one where the child feels unsafe and powerless and that all his efforts are driven by the need to survive (find a safe place, safe person, be able to feel empowered to get what he needs in his world – control).
- Trauma surviving says, “I must do something to let you know I’m terrified…I will do whatever I need to do to control you and control your responses in order to survive…I will fight any experience, any activity, any person that I see as a threat to me…any person that tries to “control” me because if I let you control me I am vulnerable to your abuse, abandonment, again and again…”
- To the traumatized child we can be perceived to be a real physical (safety) threat therefore either he avoids us (flight) at all cost or he strikes out assaultively (fights) in hopes of gaining power over us. We can be perceived not as a physical safety threat but a threat to keeping him from what he wants. When this is his perception he will then engage in a wide variety of behaviors to control our actions/interactions with him.
- We can be perceived to be no threat at all and as someone the child can get whatever he wants from, whenever he wants. He sees us as easy to manipulate.
- And then we can be perceived to be of no use to him.
- To bring about healthy change, trauma informed care dictates that we must all be relevant to that traumatized child. To be relevant we cannot be perceived to be a physical/safety threat, or easily manipulated but someone who is safe and has power, who will not hurt the child yet insist that he engage in behaviors that are rewarded with what he wants when that is appropriate, realistically available or doable.
- To eventually be in the position to give that child new sensory experiences that replaces the old trauma sensory memories and allows him to experience a restoration of that sense of safety and power, we must become the dominant individual in that child’s life.
- To be dominant not controlling (avoiding power struggles) we must, a) be a safe person to be with b) be in control of our emotions, c) provide clearly expressed expectations to that child, d) daily demonstrate our confidence to that child that we can be of help and, e) that we consistently follow through (In agency settings, traumatized children often spend the majority of their time with adults who themselves have experienced trauma and are easily activated. These are the adults that children perceive to be either a physical/safety threat or easily manipulative, or of no use. These are the adults who will find it difficult to consistently engage the previously describe criteria for establishing dominance.)
- If traumatized children are viewing us and life as a threat, we need to engage sensory interventions to replace that trauma sensory view.
- Although engaging sensory activities to calm an aroused child is the intervention of choice, in no way will this prevent the repetition of future arousal responses.
- To reduce these arousal behaviors we must alter the traumatic sensory memories by changing the child’s “iconic” (sensory) identity of self as powerless. Once we can restore that sense of power, a sense of safety follows and thereafter reduction in trauma symptoms and trauma related behaviors.
- Trauma symptoms and related behaviors are driven by sensory memories not reason, logic, and executive functions. “I am driven by my iconic representation of me” (a victim, powerless, vulnerable, at no time safe).
- We must replace the body’s memory of those traumas with sensory memories that say, “My experience now is safe and empowering.”
- The traumatized child’s body will quickly recall those physiological, emotional manifestations of terror, of feeling unsafe and powerless when elements of the environment and peoples actions trigger these memories. Therefore, we need to know as much as possible about the details of those experiences to identify what elements, behaviors may activate the child.
- The child’s behavior to these triggers in the past may have protected him – he may have run out of the house. However, in a residential setting running can be construed to be truant, uncontrollable, impulsive behavior. In fact, it is behavior that worked in the past. Knowing this, we must now help the child find other acceptable (escape) behavior(s) when he feels threat.
- However, the first step in changing behavior is to teach the child he can regulate these physiological and emotional reactions by using his body as a resource. Traumatized children need to constantly be directed to their body’s response during stressful difficult times as well as during relaxing periods (safe periods). They need to be taught how to control the physiological manifestations of arousal by inducing the physiological manifestations of safety. It is a skill that must be repeated many times, practiced many times until the child becomes confident that he can call upon this resource at any time.
- This however is only the first step to helping the child find relief from his tenacious, iconic and sensory trauma memories. These must be replaced by the iconic and sensory experience of self as a survivor and thriver. This can only be accomplished through trauma focused sensory interventions and later cognitively supported by reframing those thoughts about self and life that he has experienced at a sensory level.
- Finally, it is critically important that systems overseeing the care of traumatized children also become witnesses to what life is really like for the child. Systems cannot be held accountable for supporting appropriate services and resources until they experience the child and his experiences in the same “sensory” way we as trauma specialists experience that child.
Conclusion If the lessons learned presented in this paper are not the footing and foundation that supports our interventions with traumatized children there will be little change in the children, little change in the way we interact with the children. TLC’s evidenced based research has clearly documented, without question, the remarkable, outstanding, statistically significant gains that traumatized children can see when we meet them in their sensory world whether that be in individual sessions, group sessions, schools, agencies, residential settings. It is not the setting that brings about these changes but focused sensory based trauma interventions that initiate new management of those past experiences through the help of trauma informed staff capable of supporting the trauma principles presented in this article. For further about TLC’s evidenced based intervention programs and certification for Trauma and Loss Specialists do contact us at www.tlcinst.org or toll-free 1-877-306-5256.
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Recently learned: In-breath activates sympathetic nervous system (SNS - fight or flight), out-breath activates parasympathetic nervous system (PNS - rest and digest).
There is also another (the enteric nervous system) which involves digestion and switches off completely during fight, flight or freeze!!!
Interview with Peter A Levine about trauma!!!
Setting Functional Boundaries
by Pia Mellody
author of Facing Codependence
Boundary systems are invisible and symbolic "fences" that have three purposes:
to keep people from coming into our space and abusing us
to keep us from going into the space of others and abusing them
to give each of us a way to embody our sense of "who we are
Boundary systems have two parts: external and internal. Our external boundary allows us to choose our distance from other people and enables us to give or refuse permission for them to touch us. Our internal boundary protects our thinking, feelings, and behavior and keeps them functional.
Personal Boundaries
A boundary is a system of setting limits that enhances a person's ability to have a sense of self. Boundaries control the impact of reality on the self and others. The purpose of a boundary is to contain and protect reality.
Reality is composed of four components. These are:
the body or what we look like
thinking or how we give meaning to incoming data
feelings or our emotions
behavior or what we do or do not do
There are three components of boundaries. These are an external system, an internal system, and a spiritual system. The External System protects the body and controls distance and touch. The Internal System protects thinking, feelings, and behavior. It acts like a block or filter and functions in conjunction with the External System. The Spiritual System occurs when two people are being intimate with one another and both are using their external and internal systems.
Creation of Personal Boundaries
Boundaries are created by:
· Visualization of External and Internal Systems
· Memorization of statements which create the External Physical Boundary, External Sexual Boundary, and the Internal Boundary.
The statement used to create the External Physical Boundary is:
I have a right to control distance and non-sexual touch with you, and you have the same right to do so with me.
The statement used to create the External Sexual Boundary is:
I have a right to determine with whom, when, where, and how I am going to be sexual. You also have the same right to do so with me.
The statement used to create the Internal Boundary is:
I create what I think and feel and am in control of what I do or do not do. The same is true for you. We need only to note the impact of our reality on the other. If a person acts as a major offender, the person doing the offending is accountable for the impact and owes the other person an amends.
Three Guidelines to Boundary Procedures
External Physical Boundary
You create the "self protective" part of your external boundary when someone is approaching you. You do this by determining how close you allow the person to stand to you and whether or not you are going to allow him/her to touch you.
You create the "other protective" part of your external physical boundary when you are physically approaching another person. You do this by being respectful of an eighteen inch social distance between you and the other person and by not touching him/her without his/her permission.
External Sexual Boundary
You create the "self protective" part of your external boundary when someone is sexually approaching you. You do this by deciding for yourself if you want to be sexual with this person by asking yourself if it is in your best long term interest to do so. If you agree to be sexual, you then negotiate the issues regarding when, where, and how with him/her.
You create the "other protective" part of your External Sexual Boundary when you are asking a person to be sexual with you. You do this by directly asking the person if he/she wants to be sexual with you and if the person agrees to be sexual by negotiating the issues of when, where, and how with him/her.
Internal Boundary
You establish the "self protective" part of your internal boundary when someone is talking. First, set your personal boundary. Then, say to yourself that the other person is responsible for creating what he/she is saying. You only take into yourself what is the truth for you. Block the rest by following this procedure:
If it is true, let the information in, embrace it, and allow yourself to have feelings about it.
If you determine that the information is not true, allow it to bounce off your boundary.
If the data is questionable, gather data regarding the information.
As you observe and analyze the information, you can determine if the information is "true" or "not true". If it is true, filter the information and have feelings about it. If the information is not true, block it and remove it from your boundary.
True: Filter/Filter & Feel
Not True: Block/Block
Questionable: Filter/Block & Gather Data
You establish the "other protective" part of your Internal Boundary when you are verbally sharing yourself. As you share your thoughts and feelings, you say to yourself, "I have created what I am saying and feeling. I am the only one responsible for my thoughts and feelings.
Physical Boundary Violations
· Standing too close to a person without his/her permission.
· Touching a person without his/her permission.
· Getting into a person's personal belongings and living space such as one's purse, wallet, mail, and closet.
· Listening to a person's personal conversations or telephone F. conversations without his/her permission.
· Not allowing a person to have privacy or violating a person's right to privacy.
· Exposing others to physical illness due to your having a contagious disease.
Sexual Boundary Violations:
· Touching a person sexually without his/her permission.
· Not negotiating when, where, and how to engage in sexual activity.
· Demanding unsafe sexual practices.
· Leaving pornography where others who do not wish to or should not see it may see it.
· Exposing oneself to others without their consent.
· Staring or looking at another person lustily (voyeurism) without his/her permission.
· Exposing visually and/or auditorily others to your sexual activities without their consent.
Internal Boundary Violations
· Yelling and screaming
· Name calling
· Ridiculing a person
· Lying
· Breaking a commitment
· Patronizing a person
· Telling a person how he/she should be or what he/she should do
· (Negative Control)
· Being sarcastic
· Shaming a person
From: R&M Seminars Handout on Boundaries
When you give up boundaries in a relationship, you:
1 Are unclear about your preferences
2 Do not notice unhappiness since enduring is your concern
3 Alter your behaviour, plans, or opinions to fit the current moods or circumstances of another (live reactively)
4 Do more and more for less and less
5 Take as truth, the most recent opinion you have heard
6 Live hopefully while wishing and waiting
7 Are satisfied if you are coping and surviving
8 Let the others’ minimal improvement maintain your stalemate
9 Have few hobbies because you have no attention span for self-directed activities
10 Make exceptions for a person for things you would not tolerate in anyone else and accept alibis
11 Are manipulated by flattery so that you lose objectivity
12 Try to create intimacy with a narcissist
13 Are so strongly affected by another that obsession results
14 Will forsake every personal limit to get sex or the promise of it
15 See your partner as causing your excitement
16 Feel hurt and victimised but not angry
17 Act out of compliance and compromise
18 Do favours that you inwardly resist (will not say no)
19 Disregard intuition in favour of wishes
20 Allow your partner to abuse your children, family members, or friends
21 Mostly feel afraid and confused
22 Are enmeshed in a drama that is beyond your control
23 Are living a life that is not yours, and that seems unalterable
24 Commit yourself for as long as the other needs you to be committed (no bottom line)
25 Believe you have no rights to secrets
When boundaries are intact in a relationship, you:
1 Have clear preferences and act upon them
2 Recognise when you are happy/unhappy
3 Acknowledge moods and circumstances around you while remaining centred (living actively)
4 Do more when that gets results
5 Trust your own intuition while being open to other peoples’ opinions
6 Live optimistically while co-working on change
7 Are only satisfied if you are thriving
8 Are encouraged by sincere, ongoing change for the better
9 Have excited interests in self-enhancing hobbies and projects
10 Have a personal standard, albeit flexible, that applies to everyone and asks for accountability
11 Appreciate feedback and can distinguish it from attempts to manipulate/abuse
12 Relate only to partners with whom mutual love is possible
13 Are strongly affected by your partners’ behaviour and take it as information
14 Integrate sex so that you can enjoy it but never at the cost of your integrity
15 See your partner as stimulating your excitement
16 Let yourself feel anger, say ‘ouch’ and embark upon a program of change
17 Act out of agreement and negotiation
18 Only do favours you choose to ( will say no)
19 Honour intuitions and distinguish them from wishes
20 Insist others’ boundaries be as safe as your own
21 Mostly feel secure and clear
22 Are always aware of choices
23 Are living a life that mostly approximates what you always wanted for yourself
24 Decide how, to what extent, and how long you will be committed
25 Protect your private matters without having to lie or be surreptitious
from: ‘The California Therapist’ July/August 1990
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