- The evolution of the autonomic nervous system
- How trauma shapes ways the body responds
- Three organizing principles of Polyvagal Theory:
- Neuroception: Detection without perception
- Hierarchy: 3 predictable pathways of response
- Coregulation: The biological imperative
Neuroception and the Shaping of Autonomic Pathways
- How the internal surveillance system works
- Identifying cues of safety and danger
- Connecting to our innate automatic wisdom
- Understanding patterns of protection and connection
- Moving from neuroception to awareness
- Using the Safety/Danger Equation to resource patterns of
Navigate the Autonomic Hierarchy
- Exploring three autonomic circuits
- Sympathetic mobilization
- Ventral vagal connection
- Dorsal vagal collapse
- How trauma shapes biology
- Moving between states
- Introduction to autonomic mapping
- Creating skill with the Notice and Name practice
The Social Engagement System
- The five elements of the Social Engagement System
- What happens when parts of the system are unavailable?
- Using the Social Engagement System to regulate states
- How to "exercise" the Social Engagement system
- Seeing patterns over time
- Use micro-moments to resource change
- Explore the blended states of play and stillness
- Create autonomic anchors
- Using continuums to track changes within a state
Meeting the Biological Need for Connection
- Creating safety in co-regulation
- Ways to use your autonomic state as a co-regulating resource
- Noticing moments of misattunement and making a repair
Shaping the Autonomic Nervous System Toward Safety
- Identify portals of intervention
- Using breath as a regulator
- Resourcing new patterns through movement
- Exploring the autonomic response to touch
- Using autonomic imagery
- Exploring the stretch to stress continuum
- Building safety with breath, movement, and imagery
- Writing new autonomic stories
Incorporating Polyvagal Theory in Clinical Practice
- Getting comfortable teaching Polyvagal Theory to clients
- Tracking the flow of a Polyvagal-guided clinical session
- Polyvagal-guided assessment and treatment planning
- Polyvagal Theory and Phase I trauma treatment
Responsibilities of a Polyvagal-Guided Therapist
- The guiding questions
- Ethical considerations
- Research limitations and potential risk
Objectives
- Determine the principles of Polyvagal Theory and how to communicate them in client friendly language.
- Distinguish three circuits of the autonomic nervous system for use in client psychoeducation.
- Analyze how the autonomic nervous system operates as an internal surveillance system and its impact on clients’ habitual responses to trauma.
- Determine how to help clients engage the regulating capacities of the autonomic nervous system that create an environment of safety.
- Determine how tfeso exercise the Social Engagement System to assist clients in becoming more adept in skills of co-regulation and creating reciprocal relationships.
- Assess for patterns in clients’ autonomic states to better inform treatment planning.
- Support the trauma-informed therapist’s role as co-regulator and its impact on clinical outcomes.
- Distinguish portals of intervention in the autonomic nervous system to more effectively establish safety and treat trauma.
- Employ the right degree of neural challenge and exercises to employ with clients to help shape the autonomic nervous system toward safety and connection.
- Evaluate how to work with the cycle or reciprocity-rupture-repair in helping clients achieve the biological need for connection.
- Design a Polyvagal-guided clinical practice based on appropriate assessment and treatment planning.
- Categorize ethical issues, research limitations, and potential risks to be considered by a Polyvagal-guided therapist.