Self-Destructive & Suicidal Behaviour: A Traumatic Attachment Disorder

Self-Destructive & Suicidal Behaviour: A Traumatic Attachment Disorder

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6 CPD hours

 

Research over the last thirty years has demonstrated a clear-cut relationship between suicidal and self-harming behaviour and childhood abuse.  In the context of abuse and trauma, attachment failure is inevitable, leaving a lasting imprint on all future relationships.  Rather than experiencing others as a haven of safety, traumatized individuals are driven by powerful wishes and fears of relationship.  Their intense emotions and impulsive behavior make them vulnerable to self-destructive attempts to gain relief regardless of the consequences.

In this presentation, we will address the impact of traumatic attachment on the ability of individuals to tolerate emotions (their own and those of others) and how self-destructive tendencies can be best understood as a trauma-related disorder.  Exploring the effects of traumatic attachment opens up new ways of working with clients who struggle to manage their traumatic and emotional responses.

The suicidal, self-harming client is not at war with the therapist.   He or she is caught up into an internal battle:  Do I trust or not trust?  Do I live or do I die?   Do I love or do I hate?  Understanding these clients as fragmented and at war with themselves transforms the therapeutic relationship and the treatment.

This webinar series combines lecture and video to explore the impact of trauma on attachment behavior, the value of re-interpreting suicidal and self-harm as an attachment disorder, and how to help clients make sense of their internal battles and better manage their dysregulated emotional and autonomic states.  New approaches and interventions drawn from Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, Internal Family Systems, and mindfulness-based therapies can transform what it means to treat unsafe clients.

Program outline

  • The effects of trauma on attachment formation in children
    • When parents are ‘frightened and frightening’
    • Trauma-related internal conflicts between closeness and distance
    • Disorganized attachment status in adulthood
  • Understanding unsafe behavior as a trauma-related disorder
    • Differentiating personality disorder symptoms from trauma responses
    • Using psychoeducation to make sense of the symptoms
  • A ‘Traumatic Attachment Disorder:  how does it change the treatment?
    • Transforming the focus from behavior change to trauma resolution
    • Understanding splitting as dissociative, not manipulative
    • Transference and countertransference implications
  • Stabilization of unsafe behavior
    • “Waking up” the prefrontal cortex
    • Increasing client ability to be mindful rather than reactive
    • Re-interpreting impulsive behavior as fight/flight responses
    • Helping clients dis-identify from suicidal beliefs and impulses
  • Addressing issues of clinging, separation anxiety and anger
    • Working from a trauma-based parts perspective
    • Facilitating internal attachment relationships
  • The use of mindfulness-based and body-centered interventions
    • Learning to observe rather than react
    • Using somatic interventions to calm the body and emotions
  • A “right brain to right brain” approach to healing attachment wounding
    • Facilitating internal compassion
    • Helping clients ‘repair’ the past rather than remember it
    • Creating internal secure attachment

Learning objectives

  • Participants will be able to describe the effects of trauma-related attachment on affect regulation
  • Participants will be able to identify the effects of disorganized attachment on interpersonal relationships
  • Participants will be able to describe the Structural Dissociation model and its application to the treatment of unsafe behavior
  • Participants will be able to employ right brain-to-right brain techniques to help clients tolerate and benefit from psychotherapy
  • Participants will be able to apply body-centered and mindfulness-based interventions to help clients increase affect tolerance and decrease impulsive behavior

About Dr Janina Fisher

Janina Fisher, Ph.D. is a licensed clinical psychologist and a former instructor, Harvard Medical School. An international expert on the treatment of trauma, she is an Executive Board member of the Trauma Research Foundation and a Patron of the John Bowlby Centre.

Dr. Fisher is the author of Healing the Fragmented Selves of Trauma Survivors: Overcoming Self-Alienation (2017 ), Transforming the Living Legacy of Trauma: a Workbook for Survivors and Therapists (2021), and The Living Legacy Instructional Flip Chart (2022), as well as numerous peer-reviewed journal articles.

She is best known for her work on integrating mindfulness-based and somatic interventions into trauma treatment. Her treatment model, Trauma-Informed Stabilization Treatment (TIST), is now being taught around the world. More information can be found on her website: www.janinafisher.com .

Janina has presented for Delphi in 2010 – 2014 – 2019 – 2021 – 2022 – 2023 2024. Her 2021 – 2022 – 2023 – 2024 webinars are available On-Demand. She will be presenting two new trainings in 2025.

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