[Download Now] Nicabm – Rethinking Trauma

[Download Now] Nicabm – Rethinking Trauma

[Download Now] Nicabm – Rethinking Trauma

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[Download Now] Nicabm – Rethinking Trauma

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Rethinking the treatment of trauma

The past year has seen the discovery of new methods for dealing with trauma. They have provided us with so much more than we knew.

A year ago.

Five years ago, we didn’t know that the lower brain had the ability to shut down. We didn’t know how important the role of neuroscience was to the process of feeling safe.

How can we calm the fear in the brain?

Your patients’ nervous system may be making decisions without their “permission.”

There are many more options to help our patients. We now know how trauma affects the nervous system and the brain.

Techniques that once fell flat can be adjusted to work better with unresolved trauma.

Understanding the brain’s role can bring depth and power to our interventions.

It allows us to give our patients the skills they need to be stable. We can clear a way for the deeper work of healing.

Our patients can experience fewer symptoms, get better sleep, and become more self-reflective by using what we are learning.

The brain is where it all begins.

There’s nothing like the confidence, energy, and deep satisfaction of seeing clients make progress.

Imagine your client pausing in a moment of reactivity and calling on the skills you taught them for self-soothing, developing greater stability and resilience, not just in your office, but during the rest of their week as well.

Imagine them with a sense of agency and self-esteem.

It is a huge boost to confidence when our interventions succeed.

It is hard to beat seeing a client’s life open back up.

The joy of the work we do makes us feel less burnt out and drained.

New techniques, like limbic system therapy, neurofeedback, and other brain and body-oriented approaches…

It is possible to provide more targeted treatments to help trauma patients manage dissociation, reactivity, and instability.

That’s why the best practitioners invest in their professional development.

We have put together a new series of webinars to show you how to treat trauma from the pioneers in the field.

In Rethinking Trauma, we will look at big picture developments as well as the details of specific techniques that you can take back to your office.

The treatment of trauma is being reconsidered. This 6-webinar series has the latest breakthrough.

Understanding the role of memory in trauma therapy is important. Peter Levine is a doctor. Director of The Somatic Experiencing Trauma Institute and author of In An Unspoken Voice: How the Body Releases Trauma and Restores Goodness.

There are strategies that can help your clients. How trauma cascades from one generation to the next. There are consequences of bias in trauma therapy. How can we help trauma survivors relive their memories? Helping clients cope with trauma can be learned from animal reactions. The traumatic experience can be caused by different types of memory. It is a useful strategy that can help your clients work through trauma.

Applying the latest strategies to speed healing and reduce symptoms for even the most traumatized clients is how to work with the traumatized brain. The MD is Bessel van der Kolk. Medical Director of the Trauma Center at Justice Research Institute and co-author of The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma.

There are three big differences between a brain with a traumatic brain injury and one without. Trauma can have a profound effect on patients’ lives. How to bring the three parts of the brain that play the biggest roles in trauma back online is the topic of The Smoke Detector, the Cook, and the Watch Tower. There are key strategies that can help clients. The body has a trauma response. A different approach to calm clients so they can process traumatic memories more effectively is called limbic system therapy. The Self-Reflective part of the Brain can be trained.

Polyvagal Theory can be used to help patients recover from trauma. Stephen Porges is a PhD student. The author is a professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Polyvagal Theory can be applied to patients to free them from a victim mentality. There is a personal risk detector in the nervous system. Feelings of safety in trauma therapy can be helped by using voice, gesture, and engagement. The ability to feel safe is impaired by trauma. Strategies for working with the nervous system are effective. Social engagement is important in trauma therapy.

What it looks like in practice is key for treating traumatized patients. Pat Ogden is a doctor. The founder and director of The Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Institut is the author of Trauma and the Body.

The thinking brain can be brought back online following trauma. Helping patients develop flexibility when their response patterns change. Normalizing the body’s reaction to trauma. How to see the story of the body on your own. Finding and working with the real storytellers is the implicit self. There are 5 types of body movement. Helping clients discover resources to soothe themselves is what reframing trauma therapy is about.

Brain science can lead to more targeted interventions for patients healing from trauma. Daniel Siegel is a doctor. The Executive Director of the Mindsight Institute is also the author of Brainstorm: The Power and Purpose of the Teenage Brain.

The impact of trauma on the brain can be affected by age. Abuse for a child’s brain may be worse than developmental trauma. The effects of trauma on the brain. There is a reason that flashbacks feel like present experience. Dissociation causes the links in the brain to break. There are three areas of the brain that are most affected by trauma. There is an effect of trauma across generations.

A new intervention is changing trauma treatment. Sebern Fisher is in MA. A psychologist specializing in attachment issues. The author works with the fear-driven brain in the treatment of trauma.

Neuroscience can be a game-changing therapy for trauma patients. Brain WavesContribute to Trauma Symptoms What our patients’ brain waves tell us about their symptoms. Attachment can be re-established through brain wave training. There is fear in a traumatized brain.

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