When people live through interpersonal trauma, there is a tendency for many to stay silent about their experiences. Reasons can include loyalty to close others, or the wish to keep family secrets. As a means of protecting others and themselves from the pain of traumatic experiences, many rely on a variety of coping strategies to neutralize or cut off painful memories. For example, some may rationalize away traumatic events, use intellectualization as a defense, or dissociate and keep trauma-related feelings at bay. But silence about the painful past is both emotionally costly, and ultimately unsustainable. How can clinicians help these clients feel safe enough to start opening up about their traumatic histories?
https://nefesh.org/workshops/HelpingChallengingTraumaClientstoOpenUp/view
FREE WEBINAR
Helping Challenging Trauma Clients to Open Up
Previously Recorded
Presenter: Robert T. Muller PhD
Course Length: 2 Hours
Learning Objectives:
- Practitioners will be able to create safety in the therapeutic relationship early on.
- Practitioners will be able to recognize client ambivalence about their trauma stories.
- Practitioners will be able to help people in therapy pace the process of opening up.
- Practitioners will be able to recognize their feelings in the treatment (e.g., the wish to rush into trauma work, or the wish to avoid it).
This workshop Offers 2 Continuing Education Credits
This webinar is recorded and will not grant live credits.
When people live through interpersonal trauma, there is a tendency for many to stay silent about their experiences. Reasons can include loyalty to close others, or the wish to keep family secrets. As a means of protecting others and themselves from the pain of traumatic experiences, many rely on a variety of coping strategies to neutralize or cut off painful memories. For example, some may rationalize away traumatic events, use intellectualization as a defense, or dissociate and keep trauma-related feelings at bay. But silence about the painful past is both emotionally costly, and ultimately unsustainable. How can clinicians help these clients feel safe enough to start opening up about their traumatic histories?
Learning Objectives:
- Practitioners will be able to create safety in the therapeutic relationship early on.
- Practitioners will be able to recognize client ambivalence about their trauma stories.
- Practitioners will be able to help people in therapy pace the process of opening up.
- Practitioners will be able to recognize their feelings in the treatment (e.g., the wish to rush into trauma work, or the wish to avoid it).
Agenda:
1. Doing phase-based trauma work 15 Minutes
2. How family secrecy "protects" clients 25 Minutes
3. How survivors suppress their own trauma stories 35 Minutes
4. What to do when trauma stories appear very early in the therapy 30 Minutes
5. What to do when clients rush into trauma stories 15 Minutes
This presentation is open to:
- Social Workers
- Professional Counselors
- Therapists
- Psychologists
- Licensed Mental Health Practitioners
- Medical Doctors and Other Health Professionals
- Other professionals interacting with populations engaged in mental health based services
- New practitioners who wish to gain enhanced insight surrounding the topic
- Experienced practitioners who seek to increase and expand fundamental knowledge surrounding the subject matter
- Advanced practitioners seeking to review concepts and reinforce practice skills and/or access additional consultation
- Managers seeking to broaden micro and/or macro perspectives
Participants will receive their certificate electronically upon completion of the webinar and course evaluation form.
- NEFESH International is recognized by the New York State Education Department's State Board for Social Work as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed social workers #SW-0048.
- NEFESH International is recognized by the New York State Education Department's State Board for Mental Health Practitioners as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed marriage and family therapists #MFT-0046
- NEFESH International is recognized by the New York State Education Department's State Board for Mental Health Practitioners as an approved provider of continuing education for Mental Health Counselor #MHC-0082
- NEFESH International, Inc. is recognized by the New York State Education Department's State Board for Psychology as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed psychologists #PSY-0116.