У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно Understanding Containment in Trauma Recovery with Clients with Complex Trauma или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
Thomas Zimmerman, Ms.Ed., LPCC, offers EMDR Foundational Training in Cleveland, Ohio, and online. We can also train your whole agency. See: http://EMDRCleveland.com What Do Container Resources Do? Long story short, containers help you expedite the process of returning difficult content to the limbic brain. Library metaphor. Containers very often are a cognitive strategy or intention not to engage with something right now. A container can also be a somatic strategy, because if we only address the cognitive aspects of rumination we may be leaving a lot of distress in the body, which can reactivate the mind. Containers are also a helpful ritual in pivoting away from activation. It’s a ritual that signifies something to parts. However, the reasons why we need to container matter. Many, many, problems with containment come from the assumptions that clients make about what containment means… what it means to current functioning, what it means for their past, and what it means for their recovery. For example, many clients say “wait a minute, Tom… I have locked this stuff up all of my life… I come to see you to get it all out… and you’re telling me to do something I’m coming to you stop doing.” Again, we need to explain that the reasons why we container are very important. Ultimately, we want to emphasize that it’s okay to container because we have a plan to resolve this issue in an effective way at a later date (a transformational psychotherapy) Containment is one of the best adaptations of human evolution. The limbic brain is a container. I tell my clients that the reason we’re not all in the psychiatric hospital all of the time is because of the containering qualities of the limbic brain. We are information processing systems and when we encounter information that we cannot assimilate because we were too shut down, too overwhelmed, or lacked the needed adaptive information at the time, it is helpful to have a place to put it until we can try again to assimilate it. Clients often come to us with a lot of ambivalence about carrying a lot of containered experiences. On one hand, they have been consciously and unconsciously trying to process (or at least manage) this information using incredibly ineffective strategies likely all of their lives. One the other, they have visceral experiences (all of them bad) from trying to purposefully interact with containered information. Containering isn’t a neutral activity. Imagining something like a container is a creative task and that’s a part of the brain that isn’t strongly online when our nervous system thinks we’re at war. Again, very few works of great literature were written in the trenches of Europe. There is a podcast episode on EMDR’s Third Weekend that focuses on accommodations you can make when client’s struggle to visualize. These accommodations include actual containers and outsourcing the visualization of the container to videos of photos. https://emdrthirdweekend.com/posts/cl... Sometimes the problem with visualization isn’t related to the container itself but in identifying what to container. Again, trying to find a “handle” on the material. One of the things we might container are our body-based reactions from the activation. In the Four Blinks Version of Flash, we manage that activation with the ShopVac resource (I’ll publish a script for this separately): Test the Container with Something Other than Trauma When working with clients with complex trauma, one of the common mistakes I see in many scripts is in asking people to test the container using chunk of actual trauma during the same time that you are developing the container. Sensory Grounding (And Other Resources) Are also Containment Strategies If we think about what is broadly happening with containment, there are many ways that we may be able to do it other than using the standard Shapiro container resource. Sensory grounding is also a containment strategy in the sense that a lot of rumination and trauma activation happen in an abstracted (perhaps even partially dissociated) state. Finding our way into the “safety” of the present can help create the conditions that can quickly allow material in awareness to find its way back into the trauma containers of the limbic brain.