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Dr. Cloud's talk of “getting love on the inside.” “Attachment is when the baby learns by thousands of good experiences that stress is tolerable because it leads to reward opiates such as dopamine in our body, and that this pleasurable outcome is cathexsized to a person, Mom, who consistently attunes to it about this,” Perry said March 8 at UCLA. “When the baby feels distress, the attuned Mom feels distress and gets her own pleasure rewards by responding to the baby. So the infant brain weaves together the neurobiology of what interaction with another human being is, and connects it to stress relief, pleasure and safety, when this happens repeatedly. Ultimately, just seeing or hearing Mom makes you feel safe and pleasurable. Let a wounded combat soldier talk to his mom, and he'll require 45% less pain meds." Dr. Perry goes into a lot of neurobiology detail with his slide above showing an attentive mother creating attunement and attachment with her baby and you can hear it in his Sept. 5 talk. So what do we do now if we missed the boat as a kid? Hope and Healing
“Because the brain is organized in a hierarchical fashion, with symptoms of fear first arising in the brain stem and then moving all the way to the cortex, the first step in therapeutic success is brain stem regulation,” Perry said at UCLA. “An example of a repetitive intervention is positive, nurturing interactions with trustworthy peers, teachers, and caregivers, especially for neglected children who have not had the neural stimulation to develop the capacity to bond with others. “Others are dance, music, or massage, especially for children whose persisting fear state is so overwhelming that they cannot improve via increased positive relationships, or even therapeutic relationships, until their brain stem is regulated by safe, predictable, repetitive sensory input.” An hour here and there of even sensitive therapy is rarely enough. “Children with relational stability and multiple positive, healthy adults invested in their lives improve; children with multiple transitions, chaotic and unpredictable family relations, and relational poverty do not improve even when provided with the best "evidence-based" therapies. The healing environment is a safe, relationally-enriched environment," Dr. Perry continues. “The only way you can move from these super-high anxiety states, to calmer more cognitive states, is RHYTHM. Patterned, repetitive rhythmic activity: walk, run, dance, sing, repetitive meditative breathing – you use brain stem-related somato-sensory networks which make your brain accessible to relational reward and cortical thinking. “If you want a person to use relational reward, or cortical thought – they've got to be emotionally regulated first! We must regulate people, before we can possibly persuade them with a cognitive argument or compel them with an emotional affect. All our contingency-based models do nothing but merely escalate their negative arousal!” Sound stupid and ineffective, like your doctor saying “Scram and go calm down in the gym”?
I thought so – until I tried it. It works, big time. But what happened was so explosive, that's another blog for another day (I don't want to spoil the punchlines later in my book.) The take-away today is Step 1: Get informed about reality. Listen to Dr. Perry, figure out how your brain actually works, see if anything he says resonates inside. There is enormous healing simply in that – it can make you feel accepted, validated, and yes folks, finally “loved and wanted.” Then: stay tuned to find out how it played out for me. Or if you can't wait, as I've said before, find a really empathic, loving therapist who knows trauma inside out, and bring him that Peter Levine book. You'll need professional supervision when you do the exercises on the CD in the back of Levine's book, and look out world.6 Even if you're 92, you can grow parts of your brain. Daniel Siegel did it with a 92 year old lawyer.7 Stay tuned for more. Excerpts from Kathy's forthcoming book DON'T TRY THIS AT HOME: The Silent Epidemic of Attachment Disorder - How I accidentally regressed myself back to infancy and healed it all are posted here most Fridays, unless current events beg an interruption. Watch for the continuing series of excerpts from the rest of her book, in which she explores her journey of recovery and shares the people and tools that have helped her along the way. Series Table of Contents . Footnotes
- Perry, Bruce D. MD, PhD, "Helping Children Recover from Trauma," National Council LIVE, National Council on Behavioral Health, September 5, 2013; Dr. Perry is co-author of "The Boy Who Was Raised As A Dog," and "Born for Love: Why Empathy Is Essential--and Endangered." He presented live to SRO audiences at the 2013 National Council Conference in Las Vegas. He has appeared on Oprah, CNN, and NPR, and has been cited in Newsweek, the New York Times, and The New Yorker on empathy’s startling importance in human evolution and its significance for our children and our society. http://www.thenationalcouncil.org/events-and-training/webinars/
- Bruce Perry, Daniel Siegel, et.al, “Trauma, Brain & Relationship: Helping Children Heal,” (25 Minutes) www.youtube.com/watch?v=jYyEEMlMMb0 Introductory video on Attachment Disorder. A new understanding of how trauma effects the development of the mind-body system, and how it affects children's behaviors and social relationships. Copies can be purchased a www.postinstitute.com/dvds. Video originally by Santa Barbara Graduate Institute which no longer exists as a separate entity.
- Cloud, Henry, PhD, “Getting Love on the Inside,” Lecture, April 2002 (CD), Mariner's Church, Newport Beach CA, www.Cloud-Townsend Resources.com, [Coauthor with Townsend, John, PhD, of “Boundaries,” Zondervan, 2004]
- Perry, Bruce, MD, PhD, “Born for Love: The Effects of Empathy on the Developing Brain,” speech to Annual Interpersonal Neurobiology Conference “How People Change: Relationship & Neuroplasticity in Psychotherapy,” UCLA Extension, Los Angeles, March 8, 2013; Bruce D. Perry and Erin P. Hambrick, “The Neurosequential Model of Therapeutics,” Reclaiming Children and Youth Magazine, Fall 2008 vol 17. nr 3, www.reclaiming.com, (UCLA handout); Perry, Bruce, “Overview of Neuro-sequential Model of Therapeutics (NMT),” article on www.childtrauma.org, 2010
- McCauley, Kevin T., MD, "The Disease Model of Addiction," CD, (no year given) www.addictiondoctor.com/products.html
- Levine, Peter A., “Healing Trauma: A Pioneering Program for Restoring the Wisdom of Your Body,” 'Sounds True, Inc.,' Boulder CO, 2005; ISBN 1-159179-247-9
- Siegel, Daniel J., MD, “How Mindfulness Can Change the Wiring of Our Brains, National Institute for the Clinical Application of Behavioral Medicine (NICABM), www.nicabm.com, March 2011. Check for the passage on a 92 year old lawyer code-named “Stewart.”
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