The impact of trauma is so profound that it is felt not just in the mind, but in the body as well. Survivors carry the effects of the traumatic events in their tissues, negatively affecting their ability to rest, to remember and process, and to achieve a state of regulation.
To successfully work with these clients, you need to utilize embodied practices that incorporate mind-body connection into your clinical practice. Mounting evidence points to yoga as a complimentary tool that you need in your arsenal to effectively work with trauma survivors.
Michele Ribeiro has been using yoga and mindfulness with trauma survivors for over 20 years, and she wants to show you how to reenergize your own work. Find out how simple yoga poses and techniques can be introduced to help clients become aware of and then remove traumatic imprints through mind-body purifying processes. Teach clients how to send revitalizing, healing energy throughout their body. Discover the benefits of Yoga Nidra and how to help clients reach this state of relaxation and restoration.
This recording is your “how-to” guide for incorporating evidence-based yoga poses and techniques into your practice in a manner that is effective, ethical, and appropriate for your scope of practice.
You do not have to be a yoga therapist to apply what is learned in this recording to your own trauma work. You only need to have a desire to see transforming healing occur in the lives of your clients.
- Explain why embodiment in psychotherapy matters and how to incorporate it successfully into treatment with traumatized clients.
- Determine effective ways to help trauma clients focus their perception and mind on what is happening in the body as a result of the trauma.
- Evaluate trauma’s effects on the brain and how to use yoga to mitigate them.
- Apply Yoga Nidra and iRest scripts to help trauma clients achieve impactful states of relaxation and restoration.
- Utilize the key themes of trauma-informed yoga appropriately in both individual and group sessions.
- Practice various yoga postures and movements, including chair-focused trauma yoga, in preparation to use them in sessions with clients.
The Promise of Yoga for Treating Trauma
- Trauma prevalence
- Adverse childhood experiences
- Socio-cultural impacts of trauma
- Yoga research outcomes with veterans
- Higher retention, satisfaction and acceptability rates with yoga
- Why embodiment in psychotherapy treatment matters
- Risk and limitations of research
Bring Traditional Yoga Components to Contemporary Trauma Treatment
- The 4 pillars and 8 limbs
- Focus on rejuvenating the body
- Moral and ethical conduct considerations
- Established observances, including contentment and self-study
- Emphasis on internal and external purification
- Ascension of energy/vitality through asana and pranayama
- Ability to focus perception and mind on what is happening in the body
Bring Practical Neuroscience Applications to Contemporary Trauma Treatment
- Brainwaves and patterns and their interface with yoga practices
- The Triune Brain Left and right brain functions in understanding trauma
- Managing anxiety with a focused attention meditation method
Yoga as a Therapy Tool
- Teach the brain and body to work in harmony
- Learn to stretch some parts of the body and relax other parts
- Yoga’s impact on controlling the effect of the brain on the body
- Diffuse vital, healing energy throughout the body
Yoga Nidra (Changing States of Consciousness)
- Conscious entry into non-REM sleep
- IRest (Integrative Restoration)
- Core principles 10 tools 8, 15, and 30-minute script examples of practice sessions*
Trauma-Sensitive Yoga Scripts; Physical Movements and Forms
- Expand capacity for self-awareness and selfregulation
- Standing, seated, supine, and prone postures and forms with supports*
- Shifting relationship with self to foster patience, internal sense of safety, a felt sense of control, and personal agency
- Key themes in trauma-informed yoga for individual and group work
- Experiencing the present moment (example with Tadasana/Mountain pose)*
- Making choices (example with simple neck rolls)*
- Taking effective action (Example with present moment awareness and making changes)*
- Creating rhythms (example with cat pose/form and exploring rhythm between movement and breathing)*
- Chair-Focused Trauma Yoga
- Focused meditation*
- Seated neck rolls/seated shoulder circles*
- Seated mountain*
- Sun breath*
- Seated twists*
- Seated forward folds*
- Facilitating a group therapy session
- Informed consent
- Match goals with postures and forms
- Provide resources
*Social workers: Please note that ACE credit is not available for yoga instruction/guided experience activities.
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