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The Neuroscience and Psychology of Resilience. Daniel Ellenberg, PhD Linda Graham, MFT Community Institute for Psychotherapy October 19, 2013. All the world is full of suffering; It is also full of overcoming. - Helen Keller. Resilience. Capacities innate in the brain
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The Neuroscience and Psychology of Resilience Daniel Ellenberg, PhD Linda Graham, MFT Community Institute for Psychotherapy October 19, 2013
All the world is full of suffering; It is also full of overcoming. - Helen Keller
Resilience Capacities innate in the brain Hard-wired in by evolution Learned in responses to experiences and interactions encoded in neural circuitry Kindles maturation of brain, especially pre-frontal cortex – CEO of resilience
It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is the most adaptive to change. - Charles Darwin
The field of neuroscience is so new, We must be comfortable not only Venturing into the unknown, But into error. - Richard Mendius, M.D.
Conditioning • Experience causes neurons to fire • Repeated experiences, repeated neural firings • Neurons that fire together wire together • Strengthen synaptic connections • Connections stabilize into neural pathways • Conditioning is neutral, wires positive and negative
Neuroplasticity • Growing new neurons • Strengthening synaptic connections • Myelinating pathways – faster processing • Rebuilding brain structure • Re-organizing functions of structures • ….lifelong
Evolutionary legacy • Genetic loading • Family of origin conditioning • Norms-expectations of culture-society • Who we are and how we cope… • …is not out fault
Given neuroplasticity and choices of self-directed neuroplasticity Who we are and how we cope… …is our responsibility Self-directed neuroplasticity Choosing new experiences to rewire for Resilience and well-being
The brain is shaped by experience. And because we have a choice about what experiences we want to use to shape our brain, we have a responsibility to choose the experiences that will shape the brain toward the wise and the wholesome. - Richard J. Davidson, PhD Center for Investigating Healthy Minds University of Wisconsin - Madison
Pre-Frontal Cortex • Executive center of higher brain • Evolved most recently – makes us human • Development kindled in relationships • Matures the latest – 25 years of age • CEO of resilience
Functions of Pre-Frontal Cortex • Regulate body and nervous system • Quell fear response of the amygdala • Manage emotions • Attunement – tuning into feelings • Empathy – making sense of experience • Insight and self-knowing • Response flexibility
Effective Agents of Brain Change • Mindfulness (Attention Circuit) • Empathy ( Resonance Circuit) • Strengthen Pre-Frontal Cortex • CEO of Resilience
Mindfulness Focused attention on present moment experience without judgment or resistance
Mindfulness • Pause, become present • Notice and name • Step back, dis-entangle, reflect • Shift perspectives • Discern options • Choose wisely
Mindfulness and Psychotherapy • Even-hovering attention • Unconditional positive regard • Observing ego • “What are you noticing now?” • Strengthens structure to see clearly • Insula, anterior cingulate cortex, corpus callosum, pre-frontal cortex
Resonance Circuit • Resonance – brain stem • Attunement – limbic system, insula, right hemisphere, mirror neurons • Empathy – frontal lobes • Compassion – left hemisphere, motor cortex • Self-Acceptance – whole brain
The roots of resilience are to be found in the felt sense of existing in the heart and mind of an empathic, attuned, self-possessed other. - Diana Fosha, PhD
Mechanisms of Brain Change • New conditioning • Reconditioning • Deconditioning
New Conditioning • Choose new experiences • Create new learning, new memory • Encode new wiring • Install new patterns of response
Reconditioning • “Light up” neural networks • Juxtapose old negative with new positive • De-consolidation – Re-consolidation • New rewires old
Deconditioning • De-focusing • Loosens grip • Create mental play space • Plane of open possibilities • New insight, new behaviors
Modes of Processing Focused Self-referential Tasks and details Constellate a representation New conditioning and Reconditioning
Modes of Processing • Defocused • Default network • Fertile neural background noise • Plane of open possibilities • Mental play space • Deconditioning
Five Practices to AccelerateBrain Change • Presence • Intention • Perseverance • Refuges • Resources
Six C’s of Coping Calm Compassion Clarity Connections to resources Competence Courage
Serenity is not freedom from the storm but peace amidst the storm. - author unknown
SNS – fight-flight-freeze Relational and resilient Calm and relaxed, engaged and alert WINDOW OF TOLERANCE Baseline physiological equilibrium Equanimity PNS – appease, numb, collapse
CALM – Hand on the Heart • Touch – oxytocin – safety and trust • Deep breathing – parasympathetic • Breathing ease into heart center • Brakes on survival responses • Coherent heart rate • Being loved and cherished • Oxytocin – direct and immediate antidote to cortisol
Reconditioning throughSoothing, Comforting, Caring Hand on the Heart Progressive Muscle Relaxation Friendly Body Scan Movement
Compassion • Respond to pain or suffering with an open heart, an interested mind, and a natural willingness to help. • Open to experience, activate care-giving, prime ourselves to act. • “Left shift” in brain – more neural activity in left hemisphere – approach stance toward experience. • Overcome negativity bias; become more optimistic, more flexible, better resources, better able to find solutions.
Resonance Circuit • Resonance – vibe, emotional contagion • Outside of awareness • Attunement – felt sense, explicit, non-verbal • Empathy – verbal, cognition, coherent narrative • Compassion – caring, concern, help • Acceptance – pre-requisite for resilience
Self-Compassion • Threat-protection system • Cortisol driven • Pleasure-reward system • Dopamine driven • Caregiving-soothing-comfort system • Oxytocin system • Paul Gilbert, The Compassionate Mind
Self-Compassion • Notice this moment of suffering: • “Ouch! This hurts.” • What would be comforting here? • What would be helpful • Open to larger perspective: • I’m not the only one; I’m not alone
Self-Compassion Break • How am I doing? • Is there any suffering here? • How can I be mindful and compassionate in this moment? • May I be safe from inner and outer harm. • May I be free of suffering, all causes of suffering, and from causing any suffering.
Kindness is more important that wisdom, and the recognition of that is the beginning of wisdom. - Theodore Rubin
I have learned that people will forget what you said and people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel. - Maya Angelou
Resonance Circuit • Relationships kindle maturation of pre-frontal cortex • Re-parenting of therapy strengthens the PFC • True Other to True Self • Self-directed neuroplasticity • Client strengthens their own pre-frontal cortex
Love makes your soul Crawl out of its hiding place. - Zora Neale Hurston
Shame • Shame is the intensely painful feeling or experience of believing we are flawed and therefor unworthy of acceptance and belonging. • Shame creates feelings of fear, blame, and disconnection • We cannot change and grow when we are in shame, and we can’t use shame to change ourselves or others. • Shame erodes the part of ourselves that believes we are capable of change.
Shame • Shame: I am bad, flawed, unworthy, unfixable • Guilt: I did something bad, regrettable; leads to healthy remorse and amends • Embarrassment: triggered by event that is normal, fleeting, eventually even amusing • Humiliation: recognition that event is unfair, undeserved
Shame Reslience • 1. Recognize shame triggers, shame identities, shame defenses • 2. Contextualize – shame is not personal; it’s universal and a psycho-social construct • 3. Reach out – share the story with someone who has earned the right to hear it • 4. Speak the shame – ask for what is needed rather than acting out or shutting down
Reconditioning • Anchor in present moment awareness • Resource with acceptance and goodness • Start with small negative memory • “Light up the networks” • Evoke positive memory that contradicts or disconfirms • Juxtapose - simultaneous dual awareness (or toggle) • Refresh and strengthen positive • Let go of negative • Rest in, savor positive • Reflect on shifts in perspective
Wished For Outcome • Evoke memory of what did happen • Imagine new behaviors, new players, new resolution. • Savor and strengthen • Inner resources for reconditioning: • Wiser Self • Compassionate figure • Inner resources
Resources for Clients • Radical Acceptance by Tara Brach • Self-Compassion by Kristin Neff • The Gifts of Imperfection by Brene Brown
Connections to Resources • People • Love guards the heart from the abyss. - Mozart • Place • …I rest in the grace of the world….-Wendell Berry • Practices • As an irrigator guides water to his field, as an archer aims an arrow, as a carpenter carves wood, the wise shape their lives. • - Buddha
People as Resources • Presence – dyadic regulation • Circle of support • Imagination powerful, portable • Includes Wiser Self • Deep listening • Appreciation • Positivity Portfolio
Positivity Portfolio • Ask 10 friends to send cards • Positive appreciations • Assemble phrases on piece of paper • Tape to bathroom mirror or computer monitor • Carry in wallet or purse • Read phrases 3 times a day for 30 days • Savor and appreciate • Friendship and goodness
Places as Resources • Safe place, refuge • Nature – reset contraction • Nature - expansiveness
Practices as Resources • Paradigms – yoga, meditation, chi gong, prayer • Movement – exercise • Nutrition • Sleep • Laughter • Learning • Hang out with healthy brains