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Seeing The Whole Elephant: Integrating Biologically Informed/Body Oriented Interventions into Standard Practices. By Matthew Carter, MFT. Thoughts. Feelings. Behavior. Environment. Attachment. Genes. The Body as “Container” . All human experience has a biological correlate.
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Seeing The Whole Elephant:Integrating Biologically Informed/Body Oriented Interventions into Standard Practices By Matthew Carter, MFT
Thoughts Feelings Behavior Environment Attachment Genes
The Body as “Container” • All human experience has a biological correlate. • Experiences (activation) repeated over time will become biological patterns. • These patterns will organize around survival, our body’s prime directive, • and ultimately drive thoughts, feelings, and behavior.
Community • Family
Therefore, changing maladaptive thinking, feeling, or behavioral patterns requires changing the underlying biological patterns, which means changing experiences over time.
Arousal Definition: The body’s level of reactivity to stimuli. Calm
Visual Thalamus Visual Cortex Amygdala Scientific American The Hidden Mind, 2002, Volume 12, Number 1
Vigilance Calm
Fight or Flight Threat Vigilance Calm
. Threat Oppositional Vigilance Calm
Overwhelm . Threat Oppositional Vigilance Calm
. Overwhelm . Avoidant Threat Oppositional Vigilance Calm
. . Overwhelm . Aggressive Avoidant Threat Oppositional Vigilance Calm
“The traumatized brain has a distinctly different physiology from a non-traumatized brain.” - Peter Levine
. . Overwhelm . Aggressive Avoidant Threat Oppositional Vigilance Calm
Dissociation . . . Overwhelm . Aggressive Avoidant Threat Oppositional Vigilance Calm Dissociation
Calm . Compliance
Calm . . Compliance Dissociation
Calm . . . Compliance Dissociation Fainting
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder • Trauma is encoded as an abnormal form of memory, as images and sensations… • …in subcortical areas of the brain. • Thus treating PTSD requires activating and reprocessing these memories… • …which means more direct work with the trauma narrative.
Visual Thalamus Visual Cortex Amygdala Scientific American The Hidden Mind, 2002, Volume 12, Number 1
Overwhelm Threat Vigilance Calm
Lowered Tolerance Overwhelm Threat Vigilance Calm
Hypervigalence Overwhelm Threat Vigilance . Calm
Cardio. Disease
Depression Cardio. Disease
Obesity Depression Cardio. Disease
ADHD Obesity Depression Cardio. Disease
Asthma ADHD Obesity Depression Cardio. Disease
Asthma ADHD Obesity Depression Cardio. Disease
Changing Biological Patterns • Promoting mindfulness • Practicing coping skills • Building capacity (raising threshold for overwhelm) • Lowering baseline arousal • Changing maladaptive behavioral patterns
Promoting Mindfulness Overwhelm . Threat Vigilance . Calm
Orienting To the Body • Psychoeducation • Developing a vocabulary of sensation. • Process vs content vs activation • Working with moment-to-moment activation.
Markers of physiological changes • Wetness in the eyes • Shaking foot/leg • Swallowing • Gasps/sighs • Eyebrows
Practicing Coping Skills Overwhelm . Threat Vigilance . Calm
Coping Skills • Conscious breathing (focusing on outbreath) • Observation (mindfulness) • Distraction (thinking about something else, counting) • Sublimation (walking away, stretching, squeezing something)
Building Capacity Overwhelm Threat Vigilance . Calm
Overwhelm Threat Vigilance . Calm
Overwhelm Threat