Merete Holm Brantbjerg: A gentle, resource-oriented approach to stress & trauma
Merete Holm Brantbjerg talks about working with low energy states and our “invisible parts” in the context of Relational Trauma Therapy.
The conversations are for therapists, and about therapy. In chronological order, most recent on top.
See also list of ALL podcasts: Chronological and Alphabetical.
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Merete Holm Brantbjerg talks about working with low energy states and our “invisible parts” in the context of Relational Trauma Therapy.
We touch upon the personal and embodied impact of the polarized mind (or fixation on a single point of view to the utter exclusion of competing points of view).
Leslie Ellis talks about how working with dreams engages client and therapist in a co-creative process from which much can emerge.
We explore Climate Change from a perspective informed by somatic psychotherapy.
Dr. Gregg Henriques explains the Tree of Knowledge System and describes how it provides a way to think about the universe from an objective scientific view and a personal lifeworld view
Deb Dana talks about using the Polyvagal Theory in clinical practice, and how it helps to creatively involve clients in their healing process.
We talk about putting mindfulness and Buddhism in context — the contexts in which they evolved, and in which they are currently practiced in the Western world.
Trauma often inculcates fears of body awareness and incapacitating shame that complicate the use of somatic approaches
Nancy Eichhorn talks about the magazine she founded 8 years ago, Somatic Psychotherapy Today
Alice Ladas describes a workshop focused on identifying coping strategies in a way that respects people’s humanity instead of pathologizing them.