Sebern Fisher
Sebern Fisher is a psychodynamic psychotherapist with a primary interest in the importance of secure attachment throughout the life span. She incorporated neurofeedback into her clinical practice in 1997. The effects of brain training that she has both experienced and witnessed have had significant impact on the way she now conceptualizes personality, self, psychopathology and even free will. |
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Plenary #293): Affect Regulation, State Dependence and the Limits of Self Training
Affect dictates our state. When states are rehearsed they become traits. States create self justifying narratives and we believe them. Worse yet, we actually think we are our traits. When neurofeedback addresses affect appropriately, it eases the grip of state. But neurofeedback also has the power to disregulate and promote negative states. This creates a hazard in training oneself. Given that states produce self-justifying narratives, how do we assess what we are doing? It is the conclusion of this presentation that any shift in state toward reactivity be considered compelling information that our training must change.
Workshop #290): Trauma and Recovery: The Integration of Neurofeedback and Psychotherapy
Post-traumatic stress disorder is, at its foundation, a disorder of the brain, particularly of the brain's ability to regulate fear. The brain oscillates between high sympathetic arousal as manifest in nightmares and startle responses and parasympathic under arousal, manifest at its worst in dissociation. PTSD is a brain in the grip of fear. The regulation of fear is the single most important contribution neurofeedback makes in the remediation of PTSD.
This workshop will focus on the integration of neurofeedback and psychotherapy in the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder, both acute and chronic.
Plenary #272): Trauma and Recovery:The Integration of Neurofeedback and Psychotherapy
Post-traumatic stress disorder is, at its foundation, a disorder of the brain, particularly of the brain's ability to regulate fear. The brain oscillates between high sympathetic arousal as manifest in nightmares and startle responses and parasympathic under arousal, manifest, at its worst, in dissociation. PTSD is a brain in the grip of fear. The regulation of fear is the single most important contribution neurofeedback makes in the remediation of PTSD.
This workshop will focus on the integration of neurofeedback and psychotherapy in the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder, both acute and chronic.
Details:
Plenary #293): Affect Regulation, State Dependence and the Limits of Self Training
Affect Regulation, State Dependence and the Limits of Self Training
Psychotherapists and psychotherapy theorists from all schools of thought are coming to the consensus that affect regulation is the key to successful treatment outcome, and perhaps also, to successful living. Affect dictates our state and when states are rehearsed often enough they become reified as traits or aspects of personality. States create self justifying narratives which lead us to believe them. What’s worse is that we actually think we are our traits. Not only do we believe that this is how we are, but we believe that this is who we are. When I hear a neurofeedback practitioner say “That is just the way I am”, I can feel protest arising. If they believe that, I think to myself, then they don’t yet understand the instrument in their hands or its potential. Neurofeedback challenges state by changing the frequency based arousal mechanisms that under gird it. If you successfully change the state often enough, you can change the trait that these states gave rise to in the first place. To borrow from the Buddhists, we are never who we are, and to borrow from a friend, “As long as we have a personality, we have a personality disorder.” People change when their affect and their states and their traits change. They change fundamentally.
They don’t, however, always change for the better. The same principles apply. Neurofeedback when it is done poorly promotes negative states and these states too drive compelling self-justifying narratives. As practitioners, we are, hopefully, watching for this in our patients to see what adjustments in protocol or approach we may need to make. How do we watch for it in ourselves? This problem with state presents a very real hazard in training oneself. We can not, clearly, be relied upon to be the sole or even the main source of feedback on our own states. In the worst possible scenario we can train ourselves into states of fear, anger and distrust. Given that states produce self-justifying narratives, we could end up in a situation in which we trust only our own affectively driven, state dependent, and faulty self perceptions.
Self training is an ethical imperative in our work. We must be training our brains to truly understand the mechanisms at play and the profound promise of neurofeedback. But we have this tricky confound, the confound of state, to deal with. I am proposing two simple protective strategies to escape the confound. We need to be engaged in this process with at least one trusted other, the more the better here, and privilege their feedback to us over our own and secondly, we must decide, a priori, that any shift toward reactivity, fear, anger, distrust, or failure of empathy is sufficient and compelling information that we must change the training. Effective neurofeedback training leads toward attachment, trust, openness and love. This is true not only for our patients. It is most importantly true for ourselves.
Workshop #290): Trauma and Recovery: The Integration of Neurofeedback and Psychotherapy
Trauma and Recovery: The Integration of Neurofeedback and Psychotherapy
Post-traumatic stress disorder is, at its foundation, a disorder of the
brain, particularly of the brain's ability to regulate fear. The brain
oscillates between high sympathetic arousal as manifest in nightmares,
startle responses and aggression and parasympathic under arousal, manifest, at its worst, in dissociation. PTSD is a brain in the grip of fear. Neurofeedback can be used to regulate the fear circuitries in the brain. Regulation of fear may, in fact, be the single most important contribution that neurofeedback makes to the treatment of severe conditions such as PTSD, attachment disorder and personality disorders.
This workshop will focus on the integration of neurofeedback and
psychotherapy in the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder, both acute and chronic.
Among the topics we will discuss will be:
Once neurofeedback is introduced, what is the role of the therapist?
What role does neurofeedback play when integrated into psychotherapeutic treatments?
Affect regulation as the corner stone of effective psychotherapy
The role of neurofeedback in the regulation of affect
Fear as the central affect of concern
The circuitry of fear: an overview of the limbic brain and the "greater amygdaloid region"
Recent findings of the effects of trauma on the brain- overview of Schore, Siegel, Perry and others
State dependence and neurofeedback
Repressed memory and neurofeedback training
The discovery and use of FPO2: frequency and time considerations
We will also discuss the pragmatics of the integration of neurofeedback and psychotherapy. Among the issues we will discuss will be:
When and how to introduce neurofeedback
When to talk and when to train
Touch
The presence of the therapist
The length of sessions
How to set up your system to enhance relational aspects of this endeavor
When to introduce alpha/theta training
We will discuss, as well, the need for self training and its inherent limits.
Case studies will be used throughout
Plenary #272): Trauma and Recovery:The Integration of Neurofeedback and Psychotherapy
Contact Info:
Sebern Fisher
34 Elizabeth Street
Northampton, Massachusetts 01060
phone: 413-586-4230
fax: 413-584-5794
sebern.fisher@verizon.net