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Trauma, PTSD & Traumatic Grief
Jamie Marich, Ph.D., LPCC-S, LICDC-CS
Youngstown/Warren, OH
Affiliate Faculty, International Association of Trauma Professionals
@jamiemarich
@dancingmindful
About Your Presenter
• Licensed Supervising Professional Clinical Counselor
• Licensed Independent Chemical Dependency Counselor
• Affiliate Faculty, International Association of Trauma Professionals
(IATP)
• 13 years of experience working in social services and counseling;
includes three years in civilian humanitarian (Bosnia-
Hercegovina)
• Specialist in addictions, trauma, EMDR, dissociation,
performance enhancement, grief/loss, mindfulness, and pastoral
counseling
• Author of EMDR Made Simple, Trauma and the Twelve Steps,
and Trauma Made Simple (forthcoming)
• Creator of the Dancing Mindfulness practice
What led you to today’s workshop?
Learning Objectives
• Describe the etiology and impact of traumatic stress on the client
utilizing evaluation tools.
• Assess a client’s reaction to a traumatic event, Acute Stress
Disorder and PTSD
• Explain the DSM-5® changes as they relate to both PTSD and grief-
related disorders
• Implement interventions to assist a client in dealing with the physical
manifestations of trauma/PTSD/traumatic grief
• Utilize appropriate evidence-based interventions to assist a client in
dealing with the psycho/socio/emotional manifestations of
trauma/PTSD/traumatic grief
• Explain the effect of trauma on the structure and function of the
brain
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t
Trauma
“Once you’ve been bitten by a snake,
you’re afraid even of a piece of rope.”
-Chinese Proverb
Etymology
What does the word trauma
mean?
Etymology
• Trauma comes from the
Greek word meaning wound
• What do we know about
physical wounds and how
they heal?
Etymology
Appreciating the wound metaphor is
the heart of understanding
emotional trauma and how to treat
it.
DSM
• PTSD entered into the DSM-III in 1980,
largely as a result of the Vietnam War
• Other names had been used unofficially in
the field over the years:
soldier’s heart
shell shock
battle fatigue
operational exhaustion
hysteria
DSM-IV-TR Nutshell Definition of PTSD
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
(APA, 2000)
• Actual or perceived threat of injury or death-
response of hopelessness or horror (Criterion A)
• Re-experiencing of the trauma
• Avoidance of stimuli associated with the trauma
• Heightened arousal symptoms
• Duration of symptoms longer than 1 month
• Functional impairment due to disturbances
DSM-5® Nutshell Definition of PTSD
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
(APA, 2013)
• Exposure to actual or threatened a) death, b) serious
injury, or c) sexual violation: direct experiencing,
witnessing
• Intrusion symptoms
• Avoidance of stimuli associated with the trauma
• Cognitions and Mood: negative alterations
• Arousal and reactivity symptoms
• Duration of symptoms longer than 1 month
• Functional impairment due to disturbances
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder:
DSM-5® Criteria
A. Exposure to actual or threatened death, serious injury, or
sexual violence, in one (or more) of the following ways:
1. Directly experiencing the traumatic event(s).
2. Witnessing, in person, the traumatic event(s) as it occurred to
others.
3. Learning that the traumatic event(s) occurred to a close family
member or close friend; cases of actual or threatened death must
have been violent or accidental.
4. Experiencing repeated or extreme exposure to aversive details of
the traumatic event(s) (e.g., first responders collecting human
remains; police officers repeatedly exposed to details of child
abuse); this does not apply to exposure through electronic media,
television, movies, or pictures, unless this exposure is work-
related.
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder:
DSM-5® Criteria
B. Presence of one (or more) of the following intrusion symptoms
associated with the traumatic event(s), beginning after the
traumatic event(s) occurred:
1. Recurrent, involuntary, and intrusive distressing memories of the traumatic event(s).
(Note: In children older than 6 years, repetitive play may occur in which themes or
aspects of the traumatic event(s) are expressed.)
2. Recurrent distressing dreams in which the content and/or affect of the dream are
related to the traumatic event(s). (Note: In children, there may be frightening
dreams without recognizable content.)
3. Dissociative reactions (e.g., flashbacks) in which the individual feels or acts as if
the traumatic event(s) are recurring. (Such reactions may occur on a continuum,
with the most extreme expression being a complete loss of awareness of present
surroundings.) (Note: In children, trauma-specific reenactment may occur in play.)
4. Intense or prolonged psychological distress at exposure to internal or external cues
that symbolize or resemble an aspect of the traumatic event(s).
5. Marked physiological reactions to internal or external cues that symbolize or
resemble an aspect of the traumatic event(s).reminders of the traumatic event(s)
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder:
DSM-5® Criteria
C. Persistent avoidance of stimuli associated with the traumatic
event(s), beginning after the traumatic event(s) occurred, as
evidenced by one or both of the following:
1. Avoidance of or efforts to avoid distressing memories, thoughts, or
feelings about or closely associated with the traumatic event(s).
2. Avoidance of or efforts to avoid external reminders (people, places,
conversations, activities, objects, situations) that arouse
distressing memories, thoughts, or feelings about or closely
associated with the traumatic event(s).
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder:
DSM-5® Criteria
D. Negative alterations in cognitions and mood associated with
the traumatic event(s), beginning or worsening after the
traumatic event(s) occurred, as evidenced by two (or more) of
the following:
1. Inability to remember an important aspect of the traumatic event(s) (typically
due to dissociative amnesia and not to other factors such as head injury,
alcohol, or drugs)
2. Persistent and exaggerated negative beliefs or expectations about oneself,
others, or the world (e.g., “I am bad,” “No one can be trusted,” "The world is
completely dangerous,“ “My whole nervous system is permanently ruined”).
3. Persistent, distorted cognitions about the cause or consequences of the
traumatic event(s) that lead the individual to blame himself/herself or others.
4. Persistent negative emotional state (e.g., fear, horror, anger, guilt, or shame).
5. Markedly diminished interest or participation in significant activities.
6. Feelings of detachment or estrangement from others.
7. Persistent inability to experience positive emotions (e.g., inability to experience
happiness, satisfaction, or loving feelings).
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder:
DSM-5® Criteria
E. Marked alterations in arousal and reactivity associated with
the traumatic event(s), beginning or worsening after the
traumatic event(s) occurred, as evidenced by two (or more) of
the following:
1. Irritable behavior and angry outbursts (with little or no provocation)
typically expressed as verbal or physical aggression toward people
or objects.
2. Reckless or self-destructive behavior.
3. Hypervigilance.
4. Exaggerated startle response.
5. Problems with concentration.
6. Sleep disturbance (e.g., difficulty falling or staying asleep or
restless sleep).
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder:
DSM-5® Criteria
F. Duration of the disturbance (Criteria B, C, D, and E) is more
than 1 month.
G. The disturbance causes clinically significant distress or
impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of
functioning.
H. The disturbance is not attributable to the physiological effects
of a substance (e.g., medication, alcohol) or another medical
condition.
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder:
DSM-5® Criteria
Specify whether:
With dissociative symptoms: The individual’s symptoms meet the criteria for posttraumatic
stress disorder, and in addition, in response to the stressor, the individual experiences
persistent or recurrent symptoms of either of the following:
1. Depersonalization: Persistent or recurrent experiences of feeling detached from, and as
if one were an outside observer of, one’s mental processes or body (e.g., feeling as
though one were in a dream; feeling a sense of unreality of self or body or of time
moving slowly).
2. Derealization: Persistent or recurrent experiences of unreality of surroundings (e.g., the
world around the individual is experienced as unreal, dreamlike, distant, or distorted).
Note: To use this subtype, the dissociative symptoms must not be attributable to the
physiological effects of a substance (e.g., blackouts, behavior during alcohol intoxication) or
another medical condition (e.g. complex partial seizures).
Specify if:
With Delayed Expression: If the full diagnostic criteria are not met until at least 6 months
after the event (although the onset and expression of some symptoms may be immediate).
Subtype: PTSD in children younger than 6 years
DSM-5®:
Trauma & Stressor-Related Disorders
• Reactive Attachment Disorder
• Disinhibited Social Engagement Disorder
• Acute Stress Disorder
• Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
• Adjustment Disorders
• Other Specified Trauma-and-Stressor Related Disorder
• Unclassified Trauma-and-Stressor Related Disorder
Trauma: “small-t”
• Adverse life experiences
• Not necessarily life threatening, but definitely life-altering
• Examples include grief/loss, divorce, verbal
abuse/bullying, and just about everything else…
• The trauma itself isn’t the problem—rather, does it get
addressed? Is the wound given a chance to heal?
• If it was traumatic to the person, then it’s traumatic.
• According to the adaptive information processing model,
these adverse life experiences can be just as valid and
just as clinically significant as PTSD-eligible traumas.
BREAK TIME
Worden (2002/2008)
• Grief is the experience of loss in one’s life
• Bereavement defines the loss to which a
person is trying to adapt
• Mourning is the process one goes
through adapting to the loss
• Complicated mourning: when the
adaptation is insufficient, it leads to
functional impairment
George Engel, M.D. (1961)
“Loss of a loved one is psychologically
traumatic to the same extent that
being severely wounded or burned is
physiologically traumatic.”
 The process of mourning is parallel to the
process of physical healing.
Grief, Mourning & DSM-5®
• Removal of the bereavement exclusion
from the major depressive disorder
diagnosis
• New Section III Diagnosis:
Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder
Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder:
DSM-5® Criteria
A. The individual experienced the death of someone with whom he
or she had a close relationship.
B. Since the death, at least one of the following symptoms is
experienced on more days than not and to a clinically significant
degree and has persisted for at least 12 months after the death
in the case of bereaved adults and 6 months for bereaved
children:
1. Persistent yearning/longing for the deceased. In young children, yearning
may be expressed in play and behavior, including behaviors that reflect being
separated from, and also reuniting with, a caregiver or other attachment
figure.
2. Intense sorrow and emotional pain in response to the death.
3. Preoccupation with the deceased.
4. Preoccupation with the circumstances of the death. In children, this
preoccupation with the deceased may be expressed through the themes of
play and behavior and may extend to preoccupation with possible death of
others close to them.
Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder:
DSM-5® Criteria
C. Since the death, at least six of the following symptoms are
experienced on more days than not and to a clinically significant
degree, and have persisted for at least 12 months after the death
in the case of bereaved adults and 6 months for bereaved
children:
Reactive distress to the death
1. Marked difficulty accepting the death. In children, this is dependent on the
child’s capacity to comprehend the meaning and permanence of death.
2. Experiencing disbelief or emotional numbness over the loss.
3. Difficulty with positive reminiscing about the deceased.
4. Bitterness or anger related to the loss.
5. Maladaptive appraisals about oneself in relation to the deceased or the death
(e.g., self-blame).
6. Excessive avoidance of reminders of the loss (e.g., avoidance of individuals,
places, or situations associated with the deceased); in children, this may
include avoidance of thoughts and feelings regarding the deceased.
Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder:
DSM-5® Criteria
Social/Identity Disruption
7. A desire to die in order to be with the deceased.
8. Difficulty trusting other individuals since the death.
9. Feeling alone or detached from other individuals since the death.
10. Feeling that life is meaningless or empty without the deceased, or the
belief that one cannot function without the deceased.
11. Confusion about one’s role in life or a diminished sense of one’s identity
(e.g., feeling that a part of oneself died with the deceased).
12. Difficulty or reluctance to pursue interests since the loss or to plan for the
future (e.g., friendships, activities).
Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder:
DSM-5® Criteria
D. The disturbance causes clinically significant distress or
impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of
functioning.
E. The bereavement reaction is out of proportion to or
inconsistent with cultural, religious, or age-appropriate norms.
Specify if:
With Traumatic Bereavement: bereavement due to homicide or suicide with
persistent distressing preoccupations regarding the traumatic nature of the
death (often in response to loss reminders), including the deceased’s last
moments, degree of suffering and mutilating injury, or the malicious or
intentional nature of the death
The Classic Kübler-Ross (1969)
“Stages”
• Denial
• Anger
• Bargaining
• Depression
• Acceptance
Have you ever thought of a
client as being stuck in this
process?
A Client’s Perspective:
Lily Burana (2009)
“That whole Kubler-Ross thing? The
separate stages of Denial, Anger,
Bargaining, Dorothy and Toto, or
whatever? TOTAL CRAP. What you get
when someone dies is all those feelings
ALL AT ONCE, warping and spinning
around like grief’s bad trip.”
A Client’s Perspective:
Lily Burana (2009)
“PTSD means, in ‘talking over beer’ terms, that
you’ve got some crossed wires in your brain due
to the traumatic event. The overload of stress
makes your panic button touchier than most
people’s, so certain things trigger a stress
reaction- or more candidly- an over-reaction.
Sometimes, the panic button gets stuck
altogether and you’re in a state of constant alert,
buzzing and twitchy and aggressive.”
A Client’s Perspective:
Lily Burana (2009)
“Your amygdala- the instinctive flight, fight, or
freeze part of your brain- reacts to a trigger
before your rational mind can deter it. You can
tell yourself, ‘it’s okay,’ but your wily brain is
already ten steps ahead of the game, registering
danger and sounding the alarm. So you might
say once again, in a calm, reasoned cognitive-
behavioral-therapy kind of way, ‘Brain, it’s
okay…’
A Client’s Perspective:
Lily Burana (2009)
“But your brain yells back, ‘Bullshit kid, how
dumb do you think I am? I’m not falling for that
one again.’ By then, you’re hiding in the closet,
hiding in a bottle, and/or hiding from life,
crying, raging, or ignoring the phone and
watching the counter on the answering
machine go up, up, up, and up. You can’t
relax, and you can’t concentrate because the
demons are still pulling at your strings.”
A Client’s Perspective:
Lily Burana (2009)
“The long-range result is that the peace of
mind you deserve in the present is held
hostage by the terror of your past.”
Putting it Simply
• Cognitive-behavioral, talk therapies primarily target
the prefrontal regions of the brain (e.g., thinking,
judgment, and willpower).
• However, when a person gets activated or triggered
by traumatic memories or other visceral experiences,
the prefrontal cortex is likely to shut down and the
limbic brain (e.g., emotional brain) takes over.
• Just talking can activate the emotional, limbic brain,
but just talking is not very likely to calm it back down.
• What does not seem to change with traditional talk
therapy is that uncomfortable experience of being
triggered at a visceral level.
Putting it Simply
• Thus, our therapeutic interventions must
address the entire brain.
• Another way to look at processing is to think of
these three brains “linking up.”
What Does it Mean to
Process Something???
Trauma and the Adaptive
Information Processing Model (Part I)
 Memory networks are the basis of perception, attitude and
behavior…they inform the present.
 The information processing system moves disturbance to
an adaptive resolution…the events that don’t get
processed through adaptively give us problems later in life.
 Disruption of the information processing system causes
information (e.g., seen, heard, felt) to be unprocessed and
inappropriately stored as it was perceived.
(SOURCE: Shapiro, 2001; Shapiro & Solomon, 2008)
Unprocessed and inappropriately
stored as it was perceived =
STUCK material that causes
disturbance
How can something then get
“unstuck”?
Trauma and the Adaptive
Information Processing Model (Part II)
• Accessing information allows link between consciousness
and where information is stored
• Information processing transmutes through all accessed
channels of memory networks
• The unprocessed components/manifestations of memory
(image, thought, sound, emotions, physical sensations,
beliefs) change/transmute during processing to an
adaptive resolution
(SOURCE: Shapiro, 2001; Shapiro & Solomon, 2008)
Trauma and the Adaptive
Information Processing Model (Part III)
• Byproducts of reprocessing
include desensitization
(lessening of disturbance),
insights, changes in physical
and emotional responses
(SOURCE: Shapiro, 2001; Shapiro & Solomon, 2008)
A Client’s Perspective:
from Marich (2010)
Fadalia (pseudonym), a recovering heroin
addict with complex trauma reflected on
where she was at before receiving the
integrated treatment that led to her longest
sobriety to date (3 years):
“Before [treatment], my feelings, thoughts
and experiences were all tangled like a
ball of yarn. I needed something to
untangle them.”

From Jaycee Dugard (2011)
“This book might be confusing to some. But keep in mind
throughout my book that this was a very confusing world I
lived in. I think to truly begin to understand what it was like,
you would have had to be there, and since I wish that on no
one, this book is my attempt to convey the overwhelming
confusion I felt during those years and to begin to unravel
the damage that was done to me and my family.
From Jaycee Dugard (2011)
You might be suddenly reading about a character
that was never introduced , but that’s how it was
for me. It didn’t feel like a sequence of events.
Even after I was freed, moments are fragmented
and jumbled. With some help, I have come to
realize that my perspective is unique to abduction.
I don’t want to lose that voice, and therefore I have
written the book how it came to me naturally. I’m
not the average storyteller…I’m me…and my
experience is very uncommon. Yes, I jump around
with tangents, but that’s somehow the way my
mind works. If you want a less confusing story,
come back to me in ten years from now when I
sort it all out!” (p. viii).
Assessment as Intervention
• Primary Care PTSD Screen
• The PTSD Checklist
• Catalogue of Resources on the National
Center for PTSD Website
http://www.ptsd.va.gov/
How Do I Expand My Addiction
Knowledge,
Even If I’m Not an “Addiction”
Provider?
Ricci and Clayton (2008)
“Trauma may also disintegrate any sense of
a future, thus fostering a propensity for the
pursuit of instant gratification” (p. 42).
Assessment Strategy
The “Greatest Hits” List of Problematic Beliefs
The “Greatest Hits” List of Addiction-Specific
Beliefs
Sometimes it is difficult for clients to pinpoint one specific
memory in addressing trauma. However, they are more
likely to be able to select a pattern of thoughts they have had
about themselves after seeing these lists. This is often a
good starting point to developing a treatment plan.
"When tragedies strike we try to find someone
to blame, and in the absence of a suitable
candidate we usually blame ourselves.”
-Maggie Smith, as The Dowager Countess of
Grantham
“The Whitney I knew, despite her success and
worldwide fame, still wondered: Am I good enough?
Am I pretty enough? Will they like me?
It was the burden that made her great . . .
So off you go, Whitney, off you go . . . escorted by an
army of angels to your Heavenly Father. And when
you sing before Him, don’t you worry — you’ll be good
enough.”
-from Kevin’s Costner’s eulogy
February 20, 1968
Dear Mother—
From all indications I’m going to become rich and famous. All sorts of
magazines are asking to do articles and pictures featuring me. I’m going to
do every one. Wow, I’m so lucky- I just fumbled around being a mixed up
kid and then I fell into this. And finally it looks like everything is going to
work out for me.
I’m awfully sorry to be such a disappointment to you. I understand your
fears at my coming here and must admit I share them, but I really do think
there’s an awfully good chance I won’t blow it this time. There’s really
nothing more I can say now. Guess I’ll write more when I have more news,
until then, address all criticism to the above address. And please believe
me that you can’t possibly want for me to be a winner more than I do.
Love, Janis
Source: Joplin, L. (2004)
Best Practices for Assessment
• Do not re-traumatize!
• Do ask open-ended questions
• Do be genuine, build rapport from the first
greeting
• Do consider the role of shame in addiction,
trauma, and grief
• Do be non-judgmental
• Do make use of the stop sign when appropriate
• Do assure the client that they may not be alone
in their experiences (if appropriate)
• Do have closure strategies ready
Now It’s Your Turn
• Write up a brief case synopsis:
An actual client (using a pseudonym)
A composite client
A “famous” example (presenting for clinical
attention)
A fictitious case
Discussion:
Your Reactions and Experiences
“When we honestly ask ourselves which person in
our lives means the most to us, we often find that it
is those who, instead of giving advice, solutions, or
cures, have chosen rather to share our pain and
touch our wounds with a warm and tender hand.”
-Henri Nouwen
The Case of Anna: Qualities of a Good
Therapist (Marich, 2014)
• To know and understand a client’s diagnosis.
• To get to know you, where you're at (are you externally
and internally safe???), where you've come from
(historical context; triggers, traumas, what to be aware
of), and where you want to go (short- and long-term
goals).
• To be a person who believes in TEAMWORK. Both the
professional and the client do work, lots of it. There is
not an aggressor in the equation, ever. When/if it
happens, stop.
The Case of Anna: Qualities of a Good
Therapist (Marich, 2014)
• To have compassion and empathy—NOT PITY, ever. I
have seen pathological psychiatrists who don't like
humans. Pity is just destructive to what is supposed to
be happening: growth and healing. Pity is never a
foundation for that.
• To have a sense of connectedness. For people without
a diagnosis, when they're going through a hard time, the
baseline is to find someone you connect with.
• To never, never, never put their own moral thing (e.g.,
Christianity) above the code of treatment. Ever!!!!! No
dogma at all should be in the way of the client finding her
way.
The Case of Anna: Qualities of a Good
Therapist (Marich, 2014)
“Bad therapy is worse than no therapy. I
have learned this experientially.”
-Anna
Please Return by 1:00pm
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t
TREATMENT
From Dr. Bessel Van Der Kolk
“The purpose of trauma
treatment is to help a person feel
safe in his or her own body.”
-from the new documentary
Trauma Treatment for the 21st Century (Premier, 2012)
General Consensus Model of Trauma
Treatment
• PHASE I: Stabilization
• PHASE II: Processing of
Trauma
• PHASE III: Reintegration
Guiding Principles
• Before any clinician can engage in past-oriented trauma
treatments focused on resolution, a set of coping skills
must be in place.
• It is vital that a person has tools to cope with intense
affect, and it is equally vital that he/she will not come
“unglued” during processing/reprocessing work.
• Cultivation of resources, strengths, and other recovery
capital is also an essential function of reintegration
• Therapeutic relationship elements and boundary setting
are also imperative
Guiding Principles
• The stages are fluid. If you work in outpatient, you are
doing reintegration work all along. You may be in the
reprocessing stage and it becomes clear a person
cannot stabilize sufficiently at the end of sessions, so
you may need to go back into stabilization work.
• It is hard to put trauma work into a “neat stage model”
What Types of Coping Skills Work
Best???
• Muscle relaxation
• Breath work
• Pressure Points/Tapping
• Yoga
• Imagery/Multisensory Soothing
• Anything that incorporates the body in a
positive, adaptive way!!!
Progressive Muscle Relaxation
Breathing Basics
”The mind controls the body, but the
breath controls the mind.“
B.K.S. Iyengar
Breathing Basics
”Teaching breathing exercises to your client is
like teaching a teenager when to accelerate and
when to brake the car.“
Amy Weintraub
Practicing Awareness of Breath
Breathing Basics
• Diaphragmatic breathing
• Complete breathing
• Ujjayi breathing
Breathing Basics
• Dr. Andrew Weil (2010)
http://www.drweil.com/drw/u/ART00521/thr
ee-breathing-exercises.html
• A-B-C of Yoga (2010)
http://www.abc-of-yoga.com/pranayama/
Breathing Basics
• Clients who are easily activated may not feel
comfortable closing their eyes during breath work.
Reiterate that it is not necessary to close the eyes
during these exercises.
• Start slowly…if a client is not used to breathing
deliberately, don’t overwhelm him. Starting with a few
simple breaths, and encouraging repetition as a
homework assignment, is fine.
• If a client has a history of respiratory difficulties, make
sure to obtain a release to speak with her medical
provider before proceeding.
Pressure Points
Sea of Tranquility
Letting Go/Butterfly Hug
Gates of Consciousness
Third Eye (and variations)
Karate Chop
Yoga
• Dr. Bessel Van Der Kolk is a leading research proponent
of using yoga as a primary and adjunctive treatment for
PTSD
• Yoga, if integrated safely and appropriately, is at very
least, an ideal coping skill technique in traumatized
individuals
• Many high profile addiction treatment centers throughout
the world offer yoga
Yoga
• Recommendation:
Guided Imagery
• The purpose of guided imagery as a stabilization
coping exercise is to provide the client with a
safe, healthy mental escape that he/she can
access when needed
• If you do not feel comfortable to develop your
own guided imageries, there are many free
scripts available online, use with caution to
context
• Avoid “place” guided imageries until you see
how a client is going to respond
Variations Other Than Imagery
• Sound
• Smell
• Touch/Tactile
• Taste
Mindfulness
Mindfulness means paying attention in a particular
way: on purpose, in the presence of the moment,
and non-judgmentally.
-Jon Kabat-Zinn (2011)
Acceptance
• acceptance as Buddhist mindfulness
principle
• 12-step recovery (Alcoholics Anonymous,
2001; p. 417)
• ”radical acceptance” (from dialectical
behavioral therapy)
• Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
(ACT)
Empowerment
• Encourage that change is possible, no matter
how chronic the relapser… be sincere about it
(Marich, 2010).
• Foster identification as a survivor, not a victim
(Hantman & Solomon, 2007)
• Promote choice at every junction
(Marich, 2014)
Recommendations
Recommendations
BREAK TIME
Factors to Consider Before Going Farther
• Does the client have a reasonable amount of
coping skills to access?
• Is there a sufficient amount of positive material in
the client’s life?
• What is the nature of the living situation (safety)?
• Have you looked at the picture with drug/alcohol
use, including psychotropic medication?
• Is the client willing (and ready) to look at past
issues?
• Have you assessed for secondary gains and other
related issues?
• Have you considered number of sessions
Review: (Re)Processing
• I am not good enough 
• I am good enough

So, What Works for Trauma Processing?
• A meta-analysis examining all studies on bona
fide treatments for PTSD (e.g., desensitization,
hypnotherapy, PD, TTP, EMDR, Stress
Inoculation, Exposure, Cognitive, CBT, Present
Centered, Prolonged exposure, TFT, Imaginal
exposure) conducted between 1989-2007 found
no statistical significance amongst the treatments
(Benish, Impel, & Wampold, 2008).
• The only factor leading to any statistically
significant impact was therapist allegiance.
Bisson & Andrew (2007)
• Meta-analysis of over 30 studies about PTSD
over an 8 year period (1996-2004)
• Past-oriented PTSD treatments were far
superior to coping skill only PTSD treatments
• Past-oriented or trauma-oriented treatments
can include past-oriented cognitive behavioral
therapy, exposure therapy, hypnosis, or
EMDR
The Common Factors
• Client and extratherapeutic factors
• Models and techniques that work to
engage and inspire the participants
• The therapeutic relationship/alliance
• Therapist factors
Source: Duncan, B.L., Miller, S.D., Wampold, B.E., Hubble, M.E. (2009). The
heart and soul of change: Delivering what works in psychotherapy. (2nd ed.)
Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association.
This Leaves You with the Following Options:
Accelerated Experiential Dynamic
Psychotherapy
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
Art Therapy
Dialectical Behavioral Therapy
The Developmental Needs Meeting
Strategy
Emotional Freedom Technique
EMDR
Energy Psychology
Equine-Assisted/Pet Therapy
Exposure Therapy
Focusing
Gestalt Therapy
Hakomi
Hypnosis & Hypnotherapy
Internal Family Systems Therapy
Interpersonal Neurobiology
Life Span Integration Therapy
Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy
Narrative Therapy
Neurofeedback
Neurolinguistic Programming
Neuroemotional Technique ®
Play Therapy
Psychodrama/Drama Therapy
Psychodynamic therapy
Sensorimotor Psychology ®
Somatic Experiencing ®
Stress Innoculation
Systematic Desensitization
Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Yoga Therapy
Where Am I at With Trauma?
Why it Matters
• The literature in general traumatic stress
studies suggests that the therapeutic alliance
between client and clinician is an important
mechanism in facilitating meaningful change
for clients with complex PTSD (Fosha, 2000;
Fosha & Slowiaczek, 1997; Courtois &
Pearlman, 2005; Keller, et al., 2010)
Qualities of a Good Trauma Therapist
Parnell (2007)
• Good clinical skills
• Ability to develop rapport with clients
• Comfort with trauma and intense affect
• Well-grounded
• Spacious
• Attuned to clients
Qualities of a Good EMDR/Trauma Therapist
Marich (2010)
caring
trustworthy
intuitive
natural good common sense
connected smart
comfortable with trauma work consoling
skilled validating
accommodating gentle
magical nurturing
wonderful facilitating
Beutler, et al. (2005)
On the Connection Between Therapist Traits & Client
Outcomes
• Effective therapists are interested in people as
individuals
• Have insight into their own personality
characteristics
• Have concern for others
• Intelligent
• Sensitive to the complexities of human
motivation
• Tolerant
• Able to establish warm and effective
relationships with others
Charman (2005)
• mindful
• not having an agenda
• having concern for others
• intelligent
• flexible in personality
• intuitive
• self-aware
• knows own issues
• able to take care of self
• open
• patient
• creative
Intense Affect & Abreaction
• “The therapeutic process of bringing
forgotten or inhibited material (i.e.,
experiences, memories) from the
unconscious into consciousness, with
concurrent emotional release and discharge
of tension and anxiety.”
APA Dictionary of Psychology; VandenBos (2007)
For Continued Development
• How many of the qualities on these lists do I
possess?
• How do I handle intense affect and abreaction?
• What are my personal barriers with grief and
trauma?
• What factors may inhibit me from being effective
with someone struggling with trauma and/or grief?
• When is the best time to use collaborative
referrals?
www.traumamadesimple.com/powerpoin
t
To contact today’s presenter:
Jamie Marich, Ph.D., LPCC-S, LICDC-CS
www.mindfulohio.com
jamie@jamiemarich.com
Twitter:
@jamiemarich
@dancingmindful
Phone: 330-881-2944

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Trauma, PTSD & Traumatic Grief

  • 1. Trauma, PTSD & Traumatic Grief Jamie Marich, Ph.D., LPCC-S, LICDC-CS Youngstown/Warren, OH Affiliate Faculty, International Association of Trauma Professionals @jamiemarich @dancingmindful
  • 2. About Your Presenter • Licensed Supervising Professional Clinical Counselor • Licensed Independent Chemical Dependency Counselor • Affiliate Faculty, International Association of Trauma Professionals (IATP) • 13 years of experience working in social services and counseling; includes three years in civilian humanitarian (Bosnia- Hercegovina) • Specialist in addictions, trauma, EMDR, dissociation, performance enhancement, grief/loss, mindfulness, and pastoral counseling • Author of EMDR Made Simple, Trauma and the Twelve Steps, and Trauma Made Simple (forthcoming) • Creator of the Dancing Mindfulness practice
  • 3. What led you to today’s workshop?
  • 4. Learning Objectives • Describe the etiology and impact of traumatic stress on the client utilizing evaluation tools. • Assess a client’s reaction to a traumatic event, Acute Stress Disorder and PTSD • Explain the DSM-5® changes as they relate to both PTSD and grief- related disorders • Implement interventions to assist a client in dealing with the physical manifestations of trauma/PTSD/traumatic grief • Utilize appropriate evidence-based interventions to assist a client in dealing with the psycho/socio/emotional manifestations of trauma/PTSD/traumatic grief • Explain the effect of trauma on the structure and function of the brain
  • 7. “Once you’ve been bitten by a snake, you’re afraid even of a piece of rope.” -Chinese Proverb
  • 8. Etymology What does the word trauma mean?
  • 9. Etymology • Trauma comes from the Greek word meaning wound • What do we know about physical wounds and how they heal?
  • 10. Etymology Appreciating the wound metaphor is the heart of understanding emotional trauma and how to treat it.
  • 11.
  • 12. DSM • PTSD entered into the DSM-III in 1980, largely as a result of the Vietnam War • Other names had been used unofficially in the field over the years: soldier’s heart shell shock battle fatigue operational exhaustion hysteria
  • 13. DSM-IV-TR Nutshell Definition of PTSD Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (APA, 2000) • Actual or perceived threat of injury or death- response of hopelessness or horror (Criterion A) • Re-experiencing of the trauma • Avoidance of stimuli associated with the trauma • Heightened arousal symptoms • Duration of symptoms longer than 1 month • Functional impairment due to disturbances
  • 14. DSM-5® Nutshell Definition of PTSD Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (APA, 2013) • Exposure to actual or threatened a) death, b) serious injury, or c) sexual violation: direct experiencing, witnessing • Intrusion symptoms • Avoidance of stimuli associated with the trauma • Cognitions and Mood: negative alterations • Arousal and reactivity symptoms • Duration of symptoms longer than 1 month • Functional impairment due to disturbances
  • 15. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: DSM-5® Criteria A. Exposure to actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence, in one (or more) of the following ways: 1. Directly experiencing the traumatic event(s). 2. Witnessing, in person, the traumatic event(s) as it occurred to others. 3. Learning that the traumatic event(s) occurred to a close family member or close friend; cases of actual or threatened death must have been violent or accidental. 4. Experiencing repeated or extreme exposure to aversive details of the traumatic event(s) (e.g., first responders collecting human remains; police officers repeatedly exposed to details of child abuse); this does not apply to exposure through electronic media, television, movies, or pictures, unless this exposure is work- related.
  • 16. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: DSM-5® Criteria B. Presence of one (or more) of the following intrusion symptoms associated with the traumatic event(s), beginning after the traumatic event(s) occurred: 1. Recurrent, involuntary, and intrusive distressing memories of the traumatic event(s). (Note: In children older than 6 years, repetitive play may occur in which themes or aspects of the traumatic event(s) are expressed.) 2. Recurrent distressing dreams in which the content and/or affect of the dream are related to the traumatic event(s). (Note: In children, there may be frightening dreams without recognizable content.) 3. Dissociative reactions (e.g., flashbacks) in which the individual feels or acts as if the traumatic event(s) are recurring. (Such reactions may occur on a continuum, with the most extreme expression being a complete loss of awareness of present surroundings.) (Note: In children, trauma-specific reenactment may occur in play.) 4. Intense or prolonged psychological distress at exposure to internal or external cues that symbolize or resemble an aspect of the traumatic event(s). 5. Marked physiological reactions to internal or external cues that symbolize or resemble an aspect of the traumatic event(s).reminders of the traumatic event(s)
  • 17. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: DSM-5® Criteria C. Persistent avoidance of stimuli associated with the traumatic event(s), beginning after the traumatic event(s) occurred, as evidenced by one or both of the following: 1. Avoidance of or efforts to avoid distressing memories, thoughts, or feelings about or closely associated with the traumatic event(s). 2. Avoidance of or efforts to avoid external reminders (people, places, conversations, activities, objects, situations) that arouse distressing memories, thoughts, or feelings about or closely associated with the traumatic event(s).
  • 18. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: DSM-5® Criteria D. Negative alterations in cognitions and mood associated with the traumatic event(s), beginning or worsening after the traumatic event(s) occurred, as evidenced by two (or more) of the following: 1. Inability to remember an important aspect of the traumatic event(s) (typically due to dissociative amnesia and not to other factors such as head injury, alcohol, or drugs) 2. Persistent and exaggerated negative beliefs or expectations about oneself, others, or the world (e.g., “I am bad,” “No one can be trusted,” "The world is completely dangerous,“ “My whole nervous system is permanently ruined”). 3. Persistent, distorted cognitions about the cause or consequences of the traumatic event(s) that lead the individual to blame himself/herself or others. 4. Persistent negative emotional state (e.g., fear, horror, anger, guilt, or shame). 5. Markedly diminished interest or participation in significant activities. 6. Feelings of detachment or estrangement from others. 7. Persistent inability to experience positive emotions (e.g., inability to experience happiness, satisfaction, or loving feelings).
  • 19. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: DSM-5® Criteria E. Marked alterations in arousal and reactivity associated with the traumatic event(s), beginning or worsening after the traumatic event(s) occurred, as evidenced by two (or more) of the following: 1. Irritable behavior and angry outbursts (with little or no provocation) typically expressed as verbal or physical aggression toward people or objects. 2. Reckless or self-destructive behavior. 3. Hypervigilance. 4. Exaggerated startle response. 5. Problems with concentration. 6. Sleep disturbance (e.g., difficulty falling or staying asleep or restless sleep).
  • 20. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: DSM-5® Criteria F. Duration of the disturbance (Criteria B, C, D, and E) is more than 1 month. G. The disturbance causes clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning. H. The disturbance is not attributable to the physiological effects of a substance (e.g., medication, alcohol) or another medical condition.
  • 21. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: DSM-5® Criteria Specify whether: With dissociative symptoms: The individual’s symptoms meet the criteria for posttraumatic stress disorder, and in addition, in response to the stressor, the individual experiences persistent or recurrent symptoms of either of the following: 1. Depersonalization: Persistent or recurrent experiences of feeling detached from, and as if one were an outside observer of, one’s mental processes or body (e.g., feeling as though one were in a dream; feeling a sense of unreality of self or body or of time moving slowly). 2. Derealization: Persistent or recurrent experiences of unreality of surroundings (e.g., the world around the individual is experienced as unreal, dreamlike, distant, or distorted). Note: To use this subtype, the dissociative symptoms must not be attributable to the physiological effects of a substance (e.g., blackouts, behavior during alcohol intoxication) or another medical condition (e.g. complex partial seizures). Specify if: With Delayed Expression: If the full diagnostic criteria are not met until at least 6 months after the event (although the onset and expression of some symptoms may be immediate). Subtype: PTSD in children younger than 6 years
  • 22. DSM-5®: Trauma & Stressor-Related Disorders • Reactive Attachment Disorder • Disinhibited Social Engagement Disorder • Acute Stress Disorder • Posttraumatic Stress Disorder • Adjustment Disorders • Other Specified Trauma-and-Stressor Related Disorder • Unclassified Trauma-and-Stressor Related Disorder
  • 23. Trauma: “small-t” • Adverse life experiences • Not necessarily life threatening, but definitely life-altering • Examples include grief/loss, divorce, verbal abuse/bullying, and just about everything else… • The trauma itself isn’t the problem—rather, does it get addressed? Is the wound given a chance to heal? • If it was traumatic to the person, then it’s traumatic. • According to the adaptive information processing model, these adverse life experiences can be just as valid and just as clinically significant as PTSD-eligible traumas.
  • 25. Worden (2002/2008) • Grief is the experience of loss in one’s life • Bereavement defines the loss to which a person is trying to adapt • Mourning is the process one goes through adapting to the loss • Complicated mourning: when the adaptation is insufficient, it leads to functional impairment
  • 26. George Engel, M.D. (1961) “Loss of a loved one is psychologically traumatic to the same extent that being severely wounded or burned is physiologically traumatic.”  The process of mourning is parallel to the process of physical healing.
  • 27. Grief, Mourning & DSM-5® • Removal of the bereavement exclusion from the major depressive disorder diagnosis • New Section III Diagnosis: Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder
  • 28. Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder: DSM-5® Criteria A. The individual experienced the death of someone with whom he or she had a close relationship. B. Since the death, at least one of the following symptoms is experienced on more days than not and to a clinically significant degree and has persisted for at least 12 months after the death in the case of bereaved adults and 6 months for bereaved children: 1. Persistent yearning/longing for the deceased. In young children, yearning may be expressed in play and behavior, including behaviors that reflect being separated from, and also reuniting with, a caregiver or other attachment figure. 2. Intense sorrow and emotional pain in response to the death. 3. Preoccupation with the deceased. 4. Preoccupation with the circumstances of the death. In children, this preoccupation with the deceased may be expressed through the themes of play and behavior and may extend to preoccupation with possible death of others close to them.
  • 29. Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder: DSM-5® Criteria C. Since the death, at least six of the following symptoms are experienced on more days than not and to a clinically significant degree, and have persisted for at least 12 months after the death in the case of bereaved adults and 6 months for bereaved children: Reactive distress to the death 1. Marked difficulty accepting the death. In children, this is dependent on the child’s capacity to comprehend the meaning and permanence of death. 2. Experiencing disbelief or emotional numbness over the loss. 3. Difficulty with positive reminiscing about the deceased. 4. Bitterness or anger related to the loss. 5. Maladaptive appraisals about oneself in relation to the deceased or the death (e.g., self-blame). 6. Excessive avoidance of reminders of the loss (e.g., avoidance of individuals, places, or situations associated with the deceased); in children, this may include avoidance of thoughts and feelings regarding the deceased.
  • 30. Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder: DSM-5® Criteria Social/Identity Disruption 7. A desire to die in order to be with the deceased. 8. Difficulty trusting other individuals since the death. 9. Feeling alone or detached from other individuals since the death. 10. Feeling that life is meaningless or empty without the deceased, or the belief that one cannot function without the deceased. 11. Confusion about one’s role in life or a diminished sense of one’s identity (e.g., feeling that a part of oneself died with the deceased). 12. Difficulty or reluctance to pursue interests since the loss or to plan for the future (e.g., friendships, activities).
  • 31. Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder: DSM-5® Criteria D. The disturbance causes clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning. E. The bereavement reaction is out of proportion to or inconsistent with cultural, religious, or age-appropriate norms. Specify if: With Traumatic Bereavement: bereavement due to homicide or suicide with persistent distressing preoccupations regarding the traumatic nature of the death (often in response to loss reminders), including the deceased’s last moments, degree of suffering and mutilating injury, or the malicious or intentional nature of the death
  • 32. The Classic Kübler-Ross (1969) “Stages” • Denial • Anger • Bargaining • Depression • Acceptance Have you ever thought of a client as being stuck in this process?
  • 33. A Client’s Perspective: Lily Burana (2009) “That whole Kubler-Ross thing? The separate stages of Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Dorothy and Toto, or whatever? TOTAL CRAP. What you get when someone dies is all those feelings ALL AT ONCE, warping and spinning around like grief’s bad trip.”
  • 34.
  • 35. A Client’s Perspective: Lily Burana (2009) “PTSD means, in ‘talking over beer’ terms, that you’ve got some crossed wires in your brain due to the traumatic event. The overload of stress makes your panic button touchier than most people’s, so certain things trigger a stress reaction- or more candidly- an over-reaction. Sometimes, the panic button gets stuck altogether and you’re in a state of constant alert, buzzing and twitchy and aggressive.”
  • 36. A Client’s Perspective: Lily Burana (2009) “Your amygdala- the instinctive flight, fight, or freeze part of your brain- reacts to a trigger before your rational mind can deter it. You can tell yourself, ‘it’s okay,’ but your wily brain is already ten steps ahead of the game, registering danger and sounding the alarm. So you might say once again, in a calm, reasoned cognitive- behavioral-therapy kind of way, ‘Brain, it’s okay…’
  • 37. A Client’s Perspective: Lily Burana (2009) “But your brain yells back, ‘Bullshit kid, how dumb do you think I am? I’m not falling for that one again.’ By then, you’re hiding in the closet, hiding in a bottle, and/or hiding from life, crying, raging, or ignoring the phone and watching the counter on the answering machine go up, up, up, and up. You can’t relax, and you can’t concentrate because the demons are still pulling at your strings.”
  • 38. A Client’s Perspective: Lily Burana (2009) “The long-range result is that the peace of mind you deserve in the present is held hostage by the terror of your past.”
  • 39.
  • 40.
  • 41.
  • 42. Putting it Simply • Cognitive-behavioral, talk therapies primarily target the prefrontal regions of the brain (e.g., thinking, judgment, and willpower). • However, when a person gets activated or triggered by traumatic memories or other visceral experiences, the prefrontal cortex is likely to shut down and the limbic brain (e.g., emotional brain) takes over. • Just talking can activate the emotional, limbic brain, but just talking is not very likely to calm it back down. • What does not seem to change with traditional talk therapy is that uncomfortable experience of being triggered at a visceral level.
  • 43. Putting it Simply • Thus, our therapeutic interventions must address the entire brain. • Another way to look at processing is to think of these three brains “linking up.”
  • 44. What Does it Mean to Process Something???
  • 45. Trauma and the Adaptive Information Processing Model (Part I)  Memory networks are the basis of perception, attitude and behavior…they inform the present.  The information processing system moves disturbance to an adaptive resolution…the events that don’t get processed through adaptively give us problems later in life.  Disruption of the information processing system causes information (e.g., seen, heard, felt) to be unprocessed and inappropriately stored as it was perceived. (SOURCE: Shapiro, 2001; Shapiro & Solomon, 2008)
  • 46. Unprocessed and inappropriately stored as it was perceived = STUCK material that causes disturbance
  • 47. How can something then get “unstuck”?
  • 48. Trauma and the Adaptive Information Processing Model (Part II) • Accessing information allows link between consciousness and where information is stored • Information processing transmutes through all accessed channels of memory networks • The unprocessed components/manifestations of memory (image, thought, sound, emotions, physical sensations, beliefs) change/transmute during processing to an adaptive resolution (SOURCE: Shapiro, 2001; Shapiro & Solomon, 2008)
  • 49. Trauma and the Adaptive Information Processing Model (Part III) • Byproducts of reprocessing include desensitization (lessening of disturbance), insights, changes in physical and emotional responses (SOURCE: Shapiro, 2001; Shapiro & Solomon, 2008)
  • 50. A Client’s Perspective: from Marich (2010) Fadalia (pseudonym), a recovering heroin addict with complex trauma reflected on where she was at before receiving the integrated treatment that led to her longest sobriety to date (3 years): “Before [treatment], my feelings, thoughts and experiences were all tangled like a ball of yarn. I needed something to untangle them.”
  • 51.
  • 52. From Jaycee Dugard (2011) “This book might be confusing to some. But keep in mind throughout my book that this was a very confusing world I lived in. I think to truly begin to understand what it was like, you would have had to be there, and since I wish that on no one, this book is my attempt to convey the overwhelming confusion I felt during those years and to begin to unravel the damage that was done to me and my family.
  • 53. From Jaycee Dugard (2011) You might be suddenly reading about a character that was never introduced , but that’s how it was for me. It didn’t feel like a sequence of events. Even after I was freed, moments are fragmented and jumbled. With some help, I have come to realize that my perspective is unique to abduction. I don’t want to lose that voice, and therefore I have written the book how it came to me naturally. I’m not the average storyteller…I’m me…and my experience is very uncommon. Yes, I jump around with tangents, but that’s somehow the way my mind works. If you want a less confusing story, come back to me in ten years from now when I sort it all out!” (p. viii).
  • 55. • Primary Care PTSD Screen • The PTSD Checklist • Catalogue of Resources on the National Center for PTSD Website http://www.ptsd.va.gov/
  • 56. How Do I Expand My Addiction Knowledge, Even If I’m Not an “Addiction” Provider?
  • 57. Ricci and Clayton (2008) “Trauma may also disintegrate any sense of a future, thus fostering a propensity for the pursuit of instant gratification” (p. 42).
  • 58. Assessment Strategy The “Greatest Hits” List of Problematic Beliefs The “Greatest Hits” List of Addiction-Specific Beliefs Sometimes it is difficult for clients to pinpoint one specific memory in addressing trauma. However, they are more likely to be able to select a pattern of thoughts they have had about themselves after seeing these lists. This is often a good starting point to developing a treatment plan.
  • 59. "When tragedies strike we try to find someone to blame, and in the absence of a suitable candidate we usually blame ourselves.” -Maggie Smith, as The Dowager Countess of Grantham
  • 60. “The Whitney I knew, despite her success and worldwide fame, still wondered: Am I good enough? Am I pretty enough? Will they like me? It was the burden that made her great . . . So off you go, Whitney, off you go . . . escorted by an army of angels to your Heavenly Father. And when you sing before Him, don’t you worry — you’ll be good enough.” -from Kevin’s Costner’s eulogy
  • 61. February 20, 1968 Dear Mother— From all indications I’m going to become rich and famous. All sorts of magazines are asking to do articles and pictures featuring me. I’m going to do every one. Wow, I’m so lucky- I just fumbled around being a mixed up kid and then I fell into this. And finally it looks like everything is going to work out for me. I’m awfully sorry to be such a disappointment to you. I understand your fears at my coming here and must admit I share them, but I really do think there’s an awfully good chance I won’t blow it this time. There’s really nothing more I can say now. Guess I’ll write more when I have more news, until then, address all criticism to the above address. And please believe me that you can’t possibly want for me to be a winner more than I do. Love, Janis Source: Joplin, L. (2004)
  • 62. Best Practices for Assessment • Do not re-traumatize! • Do ask open-ended questions • Do be genuine, build rapport from the first greeting • Do consider the role of shame in addiction, trauma, and grief • Do be non-judgmental • Do make use of the stop sign when appropriate • Do assure the client that they may not be alone in their experiences (if appropriate) • Do have closure strategies ready
  • 63. Now It’s Your Turn • Write up a brief case synopsis: An actual client (using a pseudonym) A composite client A “famous” example (presenting for clinical attention) A fictitious case
  • 65. “When we honestly ask ourselves which person in our lives means the most to us, we often find that it is those who, instead of giving advice, solutions, or cures, have chosen rather to share our pain and touch our wounds with a warm and tender hand.” -Henri Nouwen
  • 66. The Case of Anna: Qualities of a Good Therapist (Marich, 2014) • To know and understand a client’s diagnosis. • To get to know you, where you're at (are you externally and internally safe???), where you've come from (historical context; triggers, traumas, what to be aware of), and where you want to go (short- and long-term goals). • To be a person who believes in TEAMWORK. Both the professional and the client do work, lots of it. There is not an aggressor in the equation, ever. When/if it happens, stop.
  • 67. The Case of Anna: Qualities of a Good Therapist (Marich, 2014) • To have compassion and empathy—NOT PITY, ever. I have seen pathological psychiatrists who don't like humans. Pity is just destructive to what is supposed to be happening: growth and healing. Pity is never a foundation for that. • To have a sense of connectedness. For people without a diagnosis, when they're going through a hard time, the baseline is to find someone you connect with. • To never, never, never put their own moral thing (e.g., Christianity) above the code of treatment. Ever!!!!! No dogma at all should be in the way of the client finding her way.
  • 68. The Case of Anna: Qualities of a Good Therapist (Marich, 2014) “Bad therapy is worse than no therapy. I have learned this experientially.” -Anna
  • 72. From Dr. Bessel Van Der Kolk “The purpose of trauma treatment is to help a person feel safe in his or her own body.” -from the new documentary Trauma Treatment for the 21st Century (Premier, 2012)
  • 73. General Consensus Model of Trauma Treatment • PHASE I: Stabilization • PHASE II: Processing of Trauma • PHASE III: Reintegration
  • 74. Guiding Principles • Before any clinician can engage in past-oriented trauma treatments focused on resolution, a set of coping skills must be in place. • It is vital that a person has tools to cope with intense affect, and it is equally vital that he/she will not come “unglued” during processing/reprocessing work. • Cultivation of resources, strengths, and other recovery capital is also an essential function of reintegration • Therapeutic relationship elements and boundary setting are also imperative
  • 75. Guiding Principles • The stages are fluid. If you work in outpatient, you are doing reintegration work all along. You may be in the reprocessing stage and it becomes clear a person cannot stabilize sufficiently at the end of sessions, so you may need to go back into stabilization work. • It is hard to put trauma work into a “neat stage model”
  • 76. What Types of Coping Skills Work Best??? • Muscle relaxation • Breath work • Pressure Points/Tapping • Yoga • Imagery/Multisensory Soothing • Anything that incorporates the body in a positive, adaptive way!!!
  • 78. Breathing Basics ”The mind controls the body, but the breath controls the mind.“ B.K.S. Iyengar
  • 79. Breathing Basics ”Teaching breathing exercises to your client is like teaching a teenager when to accelerate and when to brake the car.“ Amy Weintraub
  • 81. Breathing Basics • Diaphragmatic breathing • Complete breathing • Ujjayi breathing
  • 82. Breathing Basics • Dr. Andrew Weil (2010) http://www.drweil.com/drw/u/ART00521/thr ee-breathing-exercises.html • A-B-C of Yoga (2010) http://www.abc-of-yoga.com/pranayama/
  • 83. Breathing Basics • Clients who are easily activated may not feel comfortable closing their eyes during breath work. Reiterate that it is not necessary to close the eyes during these exercises. • Start slowly…if a client is not used to breathing deliberately, don’t overwhelm him. Starting with a few simple breaths, and encouraging repetition as a homework assignment, is fine. • If a client has a history of respiratory difficulties, make sure to obtain a release to speak with her medical provider before proceeding.
  • 84. Pressure Points Sea of Tranquility Letting Go/Butterfly Hug Gates of Consciousness Third Eye (and variations) Karate Chop
  • 85. Yoga • Dr. Bessel Van Der Kolk is a leading research proponent of using yoga as a primary and adjunctive treatment for PTSD • Yoga, if integrated safely and appropriately, is at very least, an ideal coping skill technique in traumatized individuals • Many high profile addiction treatment centers throughout the world offer yoga
  • 87. Guided Imagery • The purpose of guided imagery as a stabilization coping exercise is to provide the client with a safe, healthy mental escape that he/she can access when needed • If you do not feel comfortable to develop your own guided imageries, there are many free scripts available online, use with caution to context • Avoid “place” guided imageries until you see how a client is going to respond
  • 88. Variations Other Than Imagery • Sound • Smell • Touch/Tactile • Taste
  • 89. Mindfulness Mindfulness means paying attention in a particular way: on purpose, in the presence of the moment, and non-judgmentally. -Jon Kabat-Zinn (2011)
  • 90. Acceptance • acceptance as Buddhist mindfulness principle • 12-step recovery (Alcoholics Anonymous, 2001; p. 417) • ”radical acceptance” (from dialectical behavioral therapy) • Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)
  • 91. Empowerment • Encourage that change is possible, no matter how chronic the relapser… be sincere about it (Marich, 2010). • Foster identification as a survivor, not a victim (Hantman & Solomon, 2007) • Promote choice at every junction (Marich, 2014)
  • 95. Factors to Consider Before Going Farther • Does the client have a reasonable amount of coping skills to access? • Is there a sufficient amount of positive material in the client’s life? • What is the nature of the living situation (safety)? • Have you looked at the picture with drug/alcohol use, including psychotropic medication? • Is the client willing (and ready) to look at past issues? • Have you assessed for secondary gains and other related issues? • Have you considered number of sessions
  • 96. Review: (Re)Processing • I am not good enough  • I am good enough
  • 97.
  • 98. So, What Works for Trauma Processing? • A meta-analysis examining all studies on bona fide treatments for PTSD (e.g., desensitization, hypnotherapy, PD, TTP, EMDR, Stress Inoculation, Exposure, Cognitive, CBT, Present Centered, Prolonged exposure, TFT, Imaginal exposure) conducted between 1989-2007 found no statistical significance amongst the treatments (Benish, Impel, & Wampold, 2008). • The only factor leading to any statistically significant impact was therapist allegiance.
  • 99. Bisson & Andrew (2007) • Meta-analysis of over 30 studies about PTSD over an 8 year period (1996-2004) • Past-oriented PTSD treatments were far superior to coping skill only PTSD treatments • Past-oriented or trauma-oriented treatments can include past-oriented cognitive behavioral therapy, exposure therapy, hypnosis, or EMDR
  • 100. The Common Factors • Client and extratherapeutic factors • Models and techniques that work to engage and inspire the participants • The therapeutic relationship/alliance • Therapist factors Source: Duncan, B.L., Miller, S.D., Wampold, B.E., Hubble, M.E. (2009). The heart and soul of change: Delivering what works in psychotherapy. (2nd ed.) Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association.
  • 101. This Leaves You with the Following Options: Accelerated Experiential Dynamic Psychotherapy Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Art Therapy Dialectical Behavioral Therapy The Developmental Needs Meeting Strategy Emotional Freedom Technique EMDR Energy Psychology Equine-Assisted/Pet Therapy Exposure Therapy Focusing Gestalt Therapy Hakomi Hypnosis & Hypnotherapy Internal Family Systems Therapy Interpersonal Neurobiology Life Span Integration Therapy Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy Narrative Therapy Neurofeedback Neurolinguistic Programming Neuroemotional Technique ® Play Therapy Psychodrama/Drama Therapy Psychodynamic therapy Sensorimotor Psychology ® Somatic Experiencing ® Stress Innoculation Systematic Desensitization Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Yoga Therapy
  • 102. Where Am I at With Trauma?
  • 103. Why it Matters • The literature in general traumatic stress studies suggests that the therapeutic alliance between client and clinician is an important mechanism in facilitating meaningful change for clients with complex PTSD (Fosha, 2000; Fosha & Slowiaczek, 1997; Courtois & Pearlman, 2005; Keller, et al., 2010)
  • 104. Qualities of a Good Trauma Therapist Parnell (2007) • Good clinical skills • Ability to develop rapport with clients • Comfort with trauma and intense affect • Well-grounded • Spacious • Attuned to clients
  • 105. Qualities of a Good EMDR/Trauma Therapist Marich (2010) caring trustworthy intuitive natural good common sense connected smart comfortable with trauma work consoling skilled validating accommodating gentle magical nurturing wonderful facilitating
  • 106. Beutler, et al. (2005) On the Connection Between Therapist Traits & Client Outcomes • Effective therapists are interested in people as individuals • Have insight into their own personality characteristics • Have concern for others • Intelligent • Sensitive to the complexities of human motivation • Tolerant • Able to establish warm and effective relationships with others
  • 107. Charman (2005) • mindful • not having an agenda • having concern for others • intelligent • flexible in personality • intuitive • self-aware • knows own issues • able to take care of self • open • patient • creative
  • 108. Intense Affect & Abreaction • “The therapeutic process of bringing forgotten or inhibited material (i.e., experiences, memories) from the unconscious into consciousness, with concurrent emotional release and discharge of tension and anxiety.” APA Dictionary of Psychology; VandenBos (2007)
  • 109. For Continued Development • How many of the qualities on these lists do I possess? • How do I handle intense affect and abreaction? • What are my personal barriers with grief and trauma? • What factors may inhibit me from being effective with someone struggling with trauma and/or grief? • When is the best time to use collaborative referrals?
  • 111. To contact today’s presenter: Jamie Marich, Ph.D., LPCC-S, LICDC-CS www.mindfulohio.com jamie@jamiemarich.com Twitter: @jamiemarich @dancingmindful Phone: 330-881-2944

Editor's Notes

  1. NOTE TO SELF….Address this in terms of the shame piece 