- Topic Areas:
- Trauma | Workshop
- Category:
- Brief Therapy Conference | Brief Therapy Conference 2010
- Faculty:
- Bessel van der Kolk, MD
- Duration:
- 2:05:52
- Format:
- Audio Only
- Original Program Date :
- Dec 10, 2010
Description
Description:
The study of psychological trauma has been accompanied by an explosion of knowledge about how experience shapes the central nervous system and the formation of the self. We have learned that most experience is automatically processed on a subcortical level, i.e. by “unconscious” interpretations that take place outside of awareness. Insight and understanding have only a limited influence on the operation of these subcortical processes. When addressing the problems of traumatized people who, in a myriad of ways, continue to react to current experience as a replay of the past, there is a need for therapeutic methods that do not depend exclusively on understanding and cognition. This workshop surveys current research on how people’s brains, minds and bodies respond to traumatic experiences, and will specifically address the use of affect modulation techniques, EMDR, yoga, theater, and neurofeedback in overcoming various aspects of the destabilization and disintegration caused by trauma.
Educational Objectives:
- Describe three new approaches in the treatment of trauma.
- Describe the differences between how ordinary memories are stored contrasted with the memory processing of traumatic experiences.
- List the theories on why “re-played” events are sometimes worse than the original traumatic event.
*Sessions may be edited for content and to preserve confidentiality*