Psychotherapy is a complex, shifting, neurobiological exchange or “dyadic dance” between two human beings. How we “dance” is determined by unconscious body and emotional memories of our early attachment experiences that have determined patterns of eye contact, proximity or distance, autonomic arousal, internal sense of safety or danger, trust and mistrust. When their early experience includes neglect and abuse, our clients find themselves driven by conflicting wishes and fears of relationship. While wishing to trust or tolerate disappointment and misattunement in the therapy, powerful emotional memories of threat, humiliation, hurt, and betrayal invade the therapeutic relationship. Rather than making things better, the therapist’s expressions of empathy or attempts to process what happened in the transference often seem to make things worse. Interpersonal neurobiology offers therapists a new window into how we can change the post-traumatic “dance” without the need to process empathic failures and misattunements intellectually. Maintaining a smooth dance rhythm with our clients requires knowing how to monitor and regulate our own nervous systems and somatic experience, as well as theirs. Utilizing insights gleaned from the field of interpersonal neurobiology and from Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, a body-centered talking therapy for attachment and trauma, we can learn to facilitate moments of attunement and connection even with our most challenging clients. OBJECTIVES Describe the concepts of the “dyadic dance” and “interpersonal neurobiological regulation” Summarize the effects of implicit memory and dysregulated autonomic arousal Identify somatic signs that client and/or therapist is becoming dysregulated Describe somatic interventions for therapist self-regulation and interactive regulation of the client’s nervous system OUTLINE Interpersonal neurobiology and attachment behavior: a new lens for understanding transference behavior Traumatic attachment, transference, and countertransference Right brain to right brain communication as an essential ingredient in good trauma therapy ABOUT THE SPEAKER Janina Fisher, Ph.D., is a licensed clinical psychologist and instructor at Dr. Bessel van der Kolk’s Trauma Center in Boston, a faculty member of the Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Institute, and a former instructor at Harvard Medical School. She is the author of numerous articles on trauma and trauma treatment and frequently lectures on integrating the neuroscience and attachment research with somatic approaches to treatment that can be integrated into traditional psychotherapies. Continuing Education Information: For U.S. and Canadian customers, CE is available for $9.99 USD per participant. International CE rates may vary; please contact PESI Customer Service at 1-800-844-8260 for more details.
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