Title: Somatic Interventions for Play Therapy with Traumatized Children
1Somatic Interventionsfor Play Therapy with
Traumatized Children
- Blackbird Family Therapy, Inc.
- A licensed marriage and family therapy
corporation.
2Outline
- Introduction to Somatic Therapy
- Basics of Somatic Trauma Therapy
- When and Why to Use Somatic Work in Play Therapy
- How to use Somatic Interventions in Play Therapy
3Intro What Is Somatic Therapy?
- Somatic therapy focuses on how emotions and
memories are expressed in the body. - Emphasis is on how things feel rather than what
one thinks - Client I know that I'm a good person, but I
don't feel that way. - Therapist Where do you feel that way in your
body? - Client I feel it like a heaviness in my heart.
- Therapist What is it like to place your hand
where it feels bad? - Client It feels a little better.
4Intro How does ST Work?
- Basic tools of somatic therapy include body
awareness and intentional use of the afferent
nervous system (from the body to the brain). - Although rarely advertised as such, many somatic
interventions resemble behavioral interventions
such as progressive relaxation,
counterconditioning, affect tolerance, and
exposure therapy.
5Intro What else is Somatic Therapy?
- Dance
- Athletics
- Meditation (e.g. Vipassana)
- Yoga
- Getting up Lying Down
- Talking Funny
- Patticake
- Laughing
- Skipping
- Horse Lips
- Blowing Raspberries
- Yawning
- Napping
- Rocking
- Jiggling
- Sighing
- Patting
- Humming
- Squatting
- Moaning and Growning
- Stretching
- Playful Retching
6Basics of Somatic Trauma Therapy
- Track conditioned physiological responses to
trauma in both therapist and client - Intervene with a resource that allows body
awareness (because all trauma responses involve a
lack of body awareness) - Teach client that s/he can handle similar
responses in the future (with kids, this often
done through modeling attachment work)
7Basics Responses to Trauma
- Fight we prepare to confront a potential
aggressor or predator anger, adrenaline, blood
flow to muscles - Flight we prepare to flee a potential aggressor
or predator fear, adrenaline, blood flow to
muscles - Freeze in situations where fight or flight are
either impossible, or where these strategies
fail, we freeze and prepare to survive the trauma
dissociation, endorphin release, blood flow to
head and chest - Children, and even therapists, often go into some
form these responses when they are triggered by
an internal or external cue that reminds them of
a trauma. Often, as compassionate and empathic
adults, we follow along with our clients
unconsciously as they are triggered.
8Basics Freeze States
- Freeze states often appear as combination of ANS
PNS symptoms, likely because the body is
simultaneously preparing for flight or fight
responses while also freezing - Like stepping on the gas and brakes at the same
time - Freeze states are more associated with people who
develop PTSD - PTSD symptoms resemble both the activation of the
SNS hypervigilence, startled response, as well
as PNS dissociation, numb feelings, memory loss
9Basics How To Pull Out of a Trauma Response
- Bring awareness to your whole body, especially
your hands and feet - Take slow, deep breaths, yawn
- Intensely look at something you can see right
now - Do something fun or different with your body...
10Basics What Does Somatic Therapy Feel Like?
- EMDR Light Stream Exercise
11Basics Other Ways to Pull Out of Trauma Response
- Dance
- Athletics
- Meditation (e.g. Vipassana)
- Yoga
- Getting up Lying Down
- Talking Funny
- Patticake
- Laughing
- Skipping
- Horse Lips
- Blowing Raspberries
- Yawning
- Napping
- Rocking
- Jiggling
- Sighing
- Patting
- Humming
- Squatting
- Moaning and Growning
- Stretching
- Playful Retching
12When to use Somatic Interventions in Play Therapy
- With Yourself and Caregivers
- When a child is stuck in a PTSD reaction such
as fear, dissociation, or aggression usually
the child is unable to express the theme of the
trauma in play - To consolidate gains and resource
13When Working with Yourself Caregivers
- Put on your own air mask before putting on your
child's. - Learning to regulate your own nervous system as a
way of non-verbally teaching a child to do the
same. - Winnicott and the holding environment
- Resolving attachment through connection to a safe
object vs. mirroring learned helplessness - Mirroring statements vs. mirroring affect
- Learning to unmirror or break a trauma habit.
14When Working with Caregivers
- After you teach a parent or caregiver to put on
their own mask, it can be helpful to teach them
to do the following both in session (if
applicable) and at home - Therapeutic Touch
- Stroking, soothing
- Hugging, rocking
- Coaching parent to stay present in their body
with child to model how to do so for child
15When Attachment Work
- Children always heal from trauma in the context
of a safe and secure attachment bond. - By strengthening the attachment bond, you are
working on the trauma itself. - You can train a caregiver to be able to handle a
traumatized child's emotional dysregulation as
well as questions about an event. - Play therapy that involves the caregiver, along
with somatic touch related interventions, are
best.
16When A child is stuck
- Flight a child is scared
- Fight a child is angry
- Freeze a child is scared and frozen or spacey,
can also be over cooperative - The child is unable to express their situation in
play, and instead acts out their situation
concretely in relationship to you and others. - The goal is to intervene to allow the child the
ability to use play to work through the trauma.
17When Resource Consolidate Gains
- Resource something that was not available to the
child at the time of the traumatic event that is
available now strength, loving adults, ability
to say no and tell adults, etc. - Building and developing resources helps children
feel that they could handle the trauma if it
happened again - Resources can be internal superheroes, good
feelings, and external, actual people. - Resources can be physical acts and sensations.
18How To Use ST In Play Therapy for Trauma
- Identify the Trauma Response Flight, Fight,
Freeze, through countertransference and/or
observation - Bring in a resource
- Complete the trauma response and/or choose a more
appropriate one
19How Working with Fear / Flight
- Fear often mobilizes energy for us to run from a
situation, often in the legs, but also in the
muscles in general.
20How Working with Fear / Flight
- Completing the Response
- Where do you feel the fear in your body?
- If in the legs, what would be like if we got up
and ran around with that energy in a circle? - Changing the Response
- Yell no at the fear and push it away with your
arms.
21How Fear Resources
- Tell me about someone who could handle this
without being afraid? (Superheroes, family,
cartoon video game figures) - Draw a picture of this person, show me how s/he
acts - Imagine that you are that person, how does that
feel in your body? Notice that feeling.
22How Working with Aggression
- Aggression often mobilizes muscles in the
shoulders, arms, and chest. There is often a
great deal of upper body readiness. - The goal is often to complete the response, so
the person can feel that they are able to protect
themselves and feel safe.
23How Working with Aggression
- Pushing Away with Arms
- Saying no
- Patticake
- Stomping feet
24How Working with Freeze
- Freeze states show up as dissociation, lack of
body awareness, numbness, going into your head - Freeze states often happen in combination with a
flight or fight response, like pushing on the gas
and breaks at the same time - The goal is to bring the client back into body
awareness, and then complete a different response
such as flight or fight. - Freeze states are associated with PTSD and are
very common with sexual abuse.
25How Working with Freeze
- Activity of any kind is the key, as well as body
awareness. Almost any somatic exercise will work
with a freeze state. - Jumping up and down, running around
- It can be nice to choose an activity that would
represent a different response or complete one,
such as kicking or pushing for aggression, or
running or walking for fear. - Pleasant, fun, and goofy activities are good too.
26Final Exercise
- Pair up with one other person here who you don't
know - Tell each other who each you used as your
difficult person in the last exercise - Decide who will go first
- Each of you will choose an appropriate play
therapy somatic intervention for the other from
the handout - Take turns performing your assigned interventions
- Check in and see what happened.
27More Information
- You can download this presentation on the Web
- http//matthewlindgren.com/EMDR-classes-consultati
ons/somatic-play-workshop.html - The first activity with the light visualization
is from the very first part of the EMDR protocol,
in which you prepare clients for work by
resourcing. - The activities for the final exercise are from
Embodying Well Being, by Julie Henderson. - The information about trauma responses and
physiology are from Somatic Experiencing
trainings.