Thank you & Great News!!

Chris, Yvette, and I want to thank you for your support throughout this year. It’s been a merry go round with the pandemic.

Luckily we adapted by bringing you RT Online training.

What a blessing. Stoked to have been privileged to meet more therapists worldwide. Wonderful new connections with dedicated caring helping professionals like yourself.

We hope our Parts seminars, videos, and now the Resourceful Therapist was useful. More to come in 2021 see below. ?‍♀️

So honoured to have connected with you during the year. We are a community, such healing in that especially with enforced isolation and distancing measures.

A special thanks to all our trainees attending Secrets to Successful Bridging, the Foundation, Clinical, and Advanced Clinical/ Train the Trainer programs. We appreciate all the enthusiasm, energy, and talent you show up with !!

Special announcement – I am delighted to introduce our first online group of newly minted trainers graduating. What a perfect ending to the year. Oh and of course to those that received the newsletter – the COVID test was negative ?

Resource Therapy's first online graduates of the Advanced Clinical / Train the Trainer Program welcomedåç

Please give a warm welcome to Ronelle, Trina, Donna, Jaz, Cindy, Kirsten, and Andy.

Great News

Save the date! New advanced seminar:

Working with Borderline Personality Disorder & Complex Childhood PTSD Presentations

When : Friday 26 February 2021 9.30-5 pm

Presenters Mel Canning & Philipa Thornton

Watch the Resourceful Therapist YouTube Channel for a preview. ?

Here’s the link – 2021 Seminars https://resourcetherapy.com.au/resource-therapy-foundation-training-online-philipa-thornton-sydney/

Thank you lovely, kind people of the world.

Introducing the Somatic Bridge for Trauma Therapists and Specialists.

Bridging to the Initial Sensitising Event is crucial to emotional processing the root cause of clients anxiety. The somatic bridge offers a new way for Resource Therapists to access the Part who is in need.

Bridging is a essential element of emotional processing necessary for treating Post traumatic stress, underlying anxieties. These Parts are the ones when at the helm bring with them overwhelm, anxiety and feelings low self worth.

Healing the origins of our pain, allows us to live our highest potential.

Integral to healing is finding the root cause of the issue. Resource Therapists apply Action step 2 the Vivify Specific protocol. RT Action step 2 gets the part we need to be working with out in the conscious. Out on deck for us to facilitate access to the original sensitizing event.

I have recorded a 3 part series of a new option for bridging. Bridging is an essential part of the Resource Therapy Vaded State Protocol. These Resource Therapy Actions are at the heart of healing PTSD, anxiety, phobias, poor self esteem for clients and ourselves. When we reach the Initial Sensitizing Event (I.S.E), we have floated back to the original trauma. As we know when we knock out the roots of the tree it dies out.

What this means for trauma if we get to the earliest event, empower and heal the Part with the issue it is resolved. This Resource part no longer needs to act out or has overwhelming emotions from this past. It is returned to a state of health and well-being.

We know this from the research and work of Bessel Van De Kolk; Pat Ogden, Janina Fisher and Peter Levine.

Please watch all three parts for the complete picture. I need your help as I haven’t quite decided on a name yet.

What would you call this bridging technique – the Somatic bridge, the Sensorimotor bridge or other bridge?

Thanks for again for completing the whole three videos and please share to others who would be interested in Resource Therapy and it’s uses in treating trauma effectively.

Here is the YouTube Channel of Resource Therapy please subscribe.

Resource Therapy and Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Complimentary Models.

Pat Ogden applies a Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Approach to working with Complex PTSD.

So excited to have attended Pat Ogden’s Sydney workshop Wisdom of the Body, Lost & Found. A Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Approach, with Yvette Allen recently.

Pat Ogden applies a Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Approach to working with Complex PTSD.
Pat Ogden applies a Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Approach to working with Complex PTSD.

Pat was truly inspirational, it is heartening ot hear of including the bodies wisdom into psychotherapy. The content and video examples of her work were awesome, not to mention her humility and contextualisation.

This fits in so well with Resource Therapy and can help many inform many RT Actions. Vivify Specific, Bridging and especially Expression, Removal And Relief Protocols. I’d love to hear anyone else’s experience.

What I found fascinating was Pat’s use of our innate gestures. How a facial expression is fairly empty without the body psoture informing it. In particular how we reach, grasp, pull, push and yield. One of the exercises was to reach out your arms. These were the only instructions given. I would encourage you to do this right now and just notice this.  Babies instinctly do all the above movements. I asked a friend who has suffered family violence to do this. Her arms went out limply with her hands limp and down cast. As I saw this I said wow, it looks like you don’t expect anyone to be there. She said “No, I don’t beleive, I will get any help.” All that meaning from a simple gesture.

Naturally I wanted to apply this to Resource Therapy in my sessions tentatively. As I work with both couples and complex PTSD. Indeed RT is so effective for trauma processing, I continue to be amazed.

Working with a couple on when the wife said clearly to her husband  “I need support.” I asked her to let her body posture show this. She immediately nestled into his side, where he put his arm around her. They both remarked, “Oh we used to do this all the time earlier in our relationship, it feels good to do it again.”  Exploring this connection with them in this moment was a power intervention.  Very heartening work!

To assist with Vivifying and Bridging, I suggested to people allow their body to really exaggerate or collapse ( using their words) the sense of helpless and hopelessness or whatever they expressed.

In a parts mapping session, this lead to working with a six month old part who was scared and alone. In the Relief section I got “Dad” who was there for nurturing ( I love RT action 6, as it totally works for attachment related trauma)  to use the body to show him. The clients arms encircled himself in a big hug and you certainly could see the relief this provided and I would suggest amplified.

I have also played with using gesture and movement in RT sessions working with parts vaded in fear and rejection.  One client I suggested she push back the responsility she felt in healed form back to the person it belonged to, in this case a parental introject.  I watched as she scraped the heel of her hands along her thighs away from her in a pushing motion that looked like sewere psuhing away a real heaviness. In the debrief she spoke of how it felt like she were moving concrete rubble and could hear the sound of this as she was doing it, and her tears felt like concrete tears in that moment. This was said as she was crying tears of relief, she said felt like water bombs of joy at the session end.

For me Resource Therapy being a brief parts therapy has so many applications in psychotherapy change. Adding brief touches of Senorimotor Psychotherapy appeared to enhance clients processing and to use Pat’s  Ogden’s terminology may have opened their window of tolerance.

I certainly believe Resource Therapy to be complimentary to effective practice.  So practice practice your artfulness today!

A Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Approach to working with Complex PTSD
A Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Approach to working with Complex PTSD

 

 

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