Title: CORE SKILLS CURRICULUM
1CORE SKILLS CURRICULUM
-
- Understanding the Complexity of Traumatic
Experience(s) - Gateway to Intervention
2The Complexity of Traumatic Experience(s) The
Gateway to Intervention
- Objectives
- Enhance understanding of the complex components
of child and adolescent traumatic experiences. - Increase capacity to listen, using a systematic
framework - Increase recognition of omissions and difficult
moments - Enhance clinical confidence to engage children in
trauma narrative work - Appreciate the capacity and courage of children
in meeting the challenge of trauma narrative work
3Danger Apparatus
- Traumatic experiences need to understood within a
broader context of danger. - The human brain and body are geared to recognize
and respond to dangers. - Danger takes a priority over normal activities of
daily functioning. - There is a developmental ontogenesis of danger
and response. - Culture helps define appraisal of threat and
possible responses. - Experience molds expectations of danger and
selections of interventions.
4Danger Apparatus
- Appraisal of the Magnitude of External and
Internal Danger. - Emotional and Physiological Activation
Valence, Intensity,
Acceleration. - Efforts at Emotional Regulation, including
Suppression or Override of Inhibitions. - Estimation and Efficacy of Protective
Intervention by Self/Others/Social Agents.
5Danger
- Secondary Appraisal of the Magnitude of External
and Internal Danger (Actualized threats,
near misses and false alarms). - Secondary Efforts at Emotional Regulation.
- Reconsiderations of Preventive and Protective
Intervention by Self/Others and Social Agents.
6When Danger Becomes Trauma
- Failure of the danger apparatus to prevent an
injurious outcome. - Moment(s) of true physical helplessness.
- Convergence of external and internal dangers.
7The Complexity of Traumatic Experiences
- Context
- Multiple traumatic moments occur, even within a
relatively circumscribed situation. - Changes foci of attention or concern.
- Radical shift in attention or concern when
physical integrity is violated. - Additional traumatic moments after cessation of
violence or threat. - Additional dimensions to traumatic experiences.
- Disturbances in evolving developmental
expectations regarding danger. - .
Pynoos, Steinberg Aronson, 1997
8The Complexity of Traumatic Experiences
- CONTEXT
- A. Circumstances
- B. Affective state
- C. Cognitive preoccupations
- D. Developmental concerns
Pynoos, Steinberg Aronson, 1997.
9The Complexity of Traumatic Experiences
- MULTIPLE TRAUMATIC MOMENTS Even within a
relatively circumscribed situation. - Moment-to-moment perceptual, kinesthetic and
somatic registration.
10The Complexity of Traumatic Experiences
- MULTIPLE TRAUMATIC MOMENTS Even within a
relatively circumscribed situation. - B. Ongoing appraisal of external internal
threats.
11The Failure Of Developmental Expectations
- Alarm Reactions
- Social Referencing
- Searching
- Protective Shield
- Resistance to Coercive Violation
- Basic Affiliative Assumptions
- Emerging Catastrophic Emotions
- Socially Modulated World
- Surrender Moment of Unavoidable Danger
12The Complexity of Traumatic Experiences
- MULTIPLE TRAUMATIC MOMENTS Even within a
relatively circumscribed situation. - C. Ongoing efforts to address the situation in
behavior, thought and fantasy
13The Complexity of Traumatic Experiences
- MULTIPLE TRAUMATIC MOMENTS Even within a
relatively circumscribed situation. - D. Continuous efforts to manage emotional and
physiological reactions.
14The Complexity of Traumatic Experiences
- CHANGES IN FOCI OF ATTENTION OR CONCERN
- Attention drawn away from ones own safety out of
concern for danger or injury to other. - Moment of estrangement from others when immediate
threat or injury to self. - Sudden preoccupation with concerns about severity
of injury. Rescue or repair after injury to self
or other. - Inhibition of wishes to intervene or suppression
of retaliatory impulses from fear of provoking
counter-retaliatory behavior.
Pynoos, Steinberg Aronson, 1997.
15The Complexity of Traumatic Experiences
- RADICAL SHIFT IN ATTENTION OR CONCERN WHEN
PHYSICAL INTEGRITY IS VIOLATED - Attention directed towards fears/fantasies about
nature/extent of psychic/physical harm. - Engagement of self-protective mechanisms to meet
internal threats and pain (including
Dissociative physiological responses and
fantasies). - Efforts to invoke or disclaim of affiliative
needs/desires in order to mitigate fear or ward
off sense of active participation.
Pynoos, Steinberg Aronson, 1997.
16The Complexity of Traumatic Experiences
- ADDITIONAL TRAUMATIC MOMENTS AFTER CESSATION OF
VIOLENCE OR THREAT - Efforts to aid injured or attend to dead family
members or friends. - Efforts to seek outside help (e.g., police,
paramedics). - Experiences during acute medical or surgical
care. - Acute separation from significant others,
including injured or dead family members or peers.
Pynoos, Steinberg Aronson, 1997.
17The Complexity of Traumatic Experiences
- V. ADDITIONAL DIMENSIONS TO TRAUMATIC
EXPERIENCES - Worry about safety of significant others whose
well-being is unknown. - Reactivation of previous danger/fear/anxieties
from prior experiences. - Acute grief reactions to witnessing death or
destruction even while threat to self continues.
Pynoos, Steinberg Aronson, 1997.
18A "Worst" Moment The Convergence of External
and Internal Threats (Layne, Saltzman, Pynoos)
Individual efforts or ability to take protective
action fail
- Efforts by the individual and/or others to take
protective action fail, including attempts to - Prevent/avoid the trauma before it occurs,
- Protect/defend oneself and/or others during the
trauma, - Repair or reverse injury/damage/loss after it has
been inflicted. - This leads to the subjective experience of
- defenselessness, vulnerability, helplessness.
Others efforts or ability to take protective
action fail
19- WEAKENED VERSION
- Proximity to the Violence
- Lethality of the Instrument
- Intentionality
- Object of Violence
- Seriousness of Injury
20Intervention Fantasies
- To Alter the Precipitating Events
- To interrupt The Traumatic Action
- To Reverse The Lethal or Injurious Consequences
- To Gain Safe Retaliation (Fantasies of Revenge)
- To Prevent Future Trauma
Pynoos, Steinberg Aronson, 1997.
21National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSN)