Courtney Armstrong – New Rules for Treating Trauma, Integrating Neuroscience for Resilience

11,850.00

Memory reconsolidation is a recent neuroscience breakthrough that revealed a new way to clear trauma at its roots by process of recalling and updating a memory.

Courtney Armstrong – New Rules for Treating Trauma, Integrating Neuroscience for Resilience

Were you taught to use medication, CBT, exposure and other traditional therapy approaches to treat trauma? Did you know that these approaches can be limited when it comes to healing trauma at the deeper, emotional level of the brain?
Memory reconsolidation is a recent neuroscience breakthrough that revealed a new way to clear trauma at its roots by process of recalling and updating a memory.
During this recording, I’ll provide you with step-by-step instructions and techniques you can use in each phase of trauma treatment. This is the trauma training that specifically gives you skills in the phenomena of memory reconsolidation. Let me show you why memory reconsolidation is necessary for transforming your trauma work with clients. I will give you a simple protocol to use to reconsolidate a traumatic memory in as little as one session!
Don’t get the impression that you have to get lengthy, expensive training and certification in certain modalities in order to be able to successfully treat trauma. This recording will let you walk away knowing exactly what to do to help your clients reclaim their lives after trauma!
Courtney Armstrong, LPC, MHSP

Summarize how a clients’ emotional trauma is processed in the brain as it relates to case conceptualization.
Analyze why the use of clinical exposure techniques alone are not enough to relieve post-traumatic stress symptoms.
Breakdown the three phases of trauma-informed treatment put to practical use in-session.
Compile recent neuroscience discoveries regarding memory reconsolidation and its clinical implications for treating trauma.
Characterize the five steps that several evidence-based trauma therapies have in common.
Utilize two experiential techniques that can be used to resource, uplift, and empower clients to reduce feelings of shame and helplessness.
Apply two interventions you can use to help clients reconnect to a healthy sense of self, relationships, and the world.

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The Emotional Brain: A User-Friendly Guide

Simple ways to understand the brain
A healthy emotional brain & how it develops
7 primary emotional systems
How trauma and disrupted attachment alter the brain
3 neuroscience breakthroughs that change how we treat trauma
Resilience, connection and post-traumatic growth

The 3-Phase Model of Trauma- Informed Treatment

Interventions for Assessment, Safety and Stabilization

5 simple questions to assess for PTSD
Beyond words: build trust and safety with right brain to right brain communication
Help clients understand trauma responses
Calm fear with mindfulness and imagery techniques
Deal with dissociation: practical tools for grounding and orienting
Shift shame and nurture self-compassion
Defuse anger with play and humor
Empower with movement and metaphor

Reprocessing Traumatic Memories: A Less Painful Approach

Revise not relive: why exposure can retraumatize
Memory reconsolidation: a mechanism for healing trauma
5 simple steps for reconsolidating a traumatic memory
Create the future-self template and the brain’s blueprint for healing
Neutralize negative beliefs with resourceful emotional states
Facilitate corrective emotional experiences with powerful imagery, metaphor, music and movement techniques

Facilitating Post-Traumatic Growth

The 3 qualities of post-traumatic growth
Create a positive post-trauma identity
Nurture a secure attachment system after trauma
Find meaning and purpose after trauma
Happiness and the power of intention

Applications for Special Populations

Sexual trauma survivors
Childhood abuse and neglect
Traumatic grief after sudden or violent deaths
Medical trauma, car accidents and disasters
Military, police and first responders
Children and adolescents after trauma
Cultures and faith traditions
Prevent burnout and vicarious trauma