18-Jul-2018 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM - -
Childhood abuse necessitates self-alienation: we must disown that humiliating “bad child” and work harder to be the “good child” acceptable to our attachment figures. In the end, we survive trauma at the cost of disowning and dissociating from our most wounded selves. While longing to be feel safe and welcome, traumatized individuals find themselves in conflict: alternating between clinging and pushing others away, self-hatred or hostility toward others, yearning to be seen yet yearning to be invisible. Years later, these clients present in therapy with symptoms of anxiety, depression, low self-esteem, diagnoses of bipolar and borderline personality disorder, and a distorted or absent sense of identity. This workshop offers a practical “hand’s on” approach to traumatized clients with underlying issues of self-alienation and self-hatred by helping them to recognize how the trauma has left them fragmented and at war within their own minds and bodies.  Participants will learn how to help their clients observe the parts they have embraced and identified with as ‘me’ and the trauma-related parts they have disowned and judged harshly.   Using interventions drawn from a number of therapeutic approaches (including Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, Internal Family Systems, and ego state therapy), the focus is on helping clients observe and accept all aspects of self with mindfulness-based interest and curiosity.   As their young parts are identified and understood as ‘heros’ in the individual’s story of survival, clients are able to feel more warmly toward them, often for the first time.   Techniques will be demonstrated that increase the capacity to feel for and with each part, that foster the sense of caring for young wounded parts, and that pave the way for growing “earned secure attachment” to ourselves.  Even when our clients are unable to tolerate emotion, extend themselves compassion, or take in someone else’s caring, they can learn to feel protective of their younger selves and even learn to welcome home their ‘lost souls’ with warmth and self-compassion. In this course we will learn to identify signs and symptoms of fragmentation and internal conflict and to help clients put non-judgmental language to their trauma-related symptoms and inner experience. We will also cover how to decrease client phobias of emotion and inner experience by increasing mindfulness-based dual awareness and facilitate mindful tracking of fragmented parts of the self. The use of somatic interventions for regulating autonomic arousal and affect dysregulation to calm the body will be explored as well as how to integrate interpersonal neurobiology and social engagement techniques into the treatment. We will discuss how o increase self-compassion through growing empathy for wounded child parts and how to transform traumatic memory using somatic, visualization, and ego state techniques while fostering ‘earned secure attachment’. For more information or registration: http://www.jackhirose.com/workshop/fisher-banff-healing-2018/

Title:

Healing the Fragmented Selves of Trauma Survivors- Overcoming Self-Alienation Presented by Janina Fisher, Ph.D.

When:

July 18, 2018

Location:

Banff Park Lodge Resort Hotel and Conference Centre
Banff, Alberta, Canada

Type:

Workshop

Practice Area:

Mental Health, Clinical Focus

Contact Email:

registration@jackhirose.com

Contact Name:

Chantelle Ko

Contact Organization:

Jack Hirose & Associates Inc.

Contact Phone:

604.924.0296

Contact Website:

http://www.jackhirose.com/ 

Continuing Competency Code:

 

Date Posted:

March 28, 2018