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Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Lynette S. Danylchuk,PhD [email protected] Kevin J. Connors, MS, MFT [email protected] Presented at: Mid-Valley Behavioral Care Network 9 April 2013 Abstract Every clinician has at least one; the difficult, demanding client. This client lives in chaos, complicating treatment with frequent calls, constant crisis, unremitting self-mutilation, and repeated threats of suicide. They come to you labeled problematic, oppositional, manipulative, or worse – Borderline. They present with a history of diagnoses including depression, bi-polar disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, schizoaffective disorder, eating disorders, as well as multiple addictions. With such a complex array of emotional and behavioral difficulties, there are no simple solutions; only a maelstrom of intra-psychic dynamics, overwhelming emotions and distorted beliefs generating internal storms and external anguish. This workshop synthesizes state of the art knowledge about complex post-traumatic stress disorder, attachment theory, and dissociative defenses as well as often overlooked but equally critical issues of power, control and shame. Empathic attunement to this complex interplay empowers therapists to formulate effective and nuanced treatment plans. Client reactions are reframed, shifting from oppositional or manipulative to an appreciation of the nature of their defenses, the history of their abuse and the direction of their healing. This seminar will focus on clinical concerns and conflicts, common in the first two stages of treatment, which derail the therapy process. This is a practical workshop, emphasizing skills, techniques and perspectives that help the therapist connect with the client and help the client move beyond therapeutic impasses and acting out behaviors. The workshop will also address the common reactions of therapists in situations where the client's behavior leaves the therapist feeling lost, frustrated and confused. The practicum will include opportunities for participants to discuss their own clinical cases and apply the ideas of the workshop to them. The therapist is challenged to identify the trauma in a way that advances the therapy by exploring what is being expressed through the therapeutic relationship. The therapist is challenged to be and empathic engaged and sensitive to the dynamics within the client and within the transference. The therapist is challenged to communicate in ways and on levels where language often fails. The therapist is challenged to guide the client through new ways of thinking and perceiving. Objectives Participants will be able to: • Evaluate clients for complex trauma histories and dissociation defenses • Delineate how complex trauma and dissociation complicate treatment and describe appropriate & effective treatment strategies • Describe treatment interventions to increase client safety and stability Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Pg. 3 INTRODUCTION Overview Co-Morbidity of Complex Trauma & Dissociation Impact of Complex Trauma & Dissociation On Client’s Lives In Clinical Practice Take Home Message: By having an expanded and comprehensive understanding of trauma based disorders and dissociative defenses more clients will get better treatment. Definitions Complex Trauma PTSD Relational Trauma Developmental Trauma Dissociation Dissociation is little understood, and Dissociative Identity Disorder is mistakenly considered rare. Clients with complex relational trauma exacerbated by dissociative defenses remain stuck in inappropriate treatment paradigms. They are labeled as difficult, oppositional and manipulative. Uninformed clinicians treat symptoms of depression or anxiety without addressing critical underlying issues. Therapists may never even ask about the person’s history, treating the symptoms as if they arose out of nothing. THEORTICAL FRAME Phenomenological Presentation – What does it look like? PTSD Symptoms – Siegel’s Window of Tolerance Hyper-arousal Hypo-arousal Intrusive Flashbacks Dissociative Symptoms Conceptualizations of dissociation Disruption of self-awareness Disruption of relatedness Dissociative symptomology Dissociative amnesia Depersonalization & Derealization Somatoform dissociation Dissociative Identity Disorder Relational Symptoms Borderline features Paranoid features Narcissistic features Asocial features Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Pg. 4 Diagnosis – How do we find out if someone is dissociative? Dissociation Screening Devices DES Dissociative Experience Scale Formal Diagnostic Tests MID 6.0 Multidimensional Inventory of Dissociation Clinical Interviews SCID-D PTSD Los Angeles Symptom Checklist (Foy) PTSD Check List (VA) Trauma Symptom Checklist- 40 (Elliot & Briere) Differential Diagnosis Considerations Schizophrenia Bi-Polar Disorder Paranoid Disorder Major Depression Borderline Personality Disorder Prevalence – How many people have it? General Population Waller & Ross suggest 3% of the general population has pathological dissociation Substance Abuse Data: Authors Population N Tests Results Benishek & Wichowki Tamar-Gurol, Sar, Karadag, Evren & Karagoz Substance Abusers 51 DES 25 % > 15 Substance Abusers 104 DES, DDIS & SCID-D 46% > 30 Historical antecedents Alcohol or substance abuse in families increases likelihood of interpersonal violence, including, intimate partner violence, children exposed to physical or emotional abuse, neglect and other forms of childhood maltreatment. Intimate Partner Violence Data: Authors Population N Tests Results Connors, Kemper, Hamel & Ensign Intimate Partner Violence – Victims 95 DES, CTS, CAT Trauma History 31.6 % > 20 18.9% > Taxon Score of .55 Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Pg. 5 Intimate Partner Violence Historical Antecedents: IPV is itself a form of relational trauma and involves aspects of betrayal trauma similar to what many child abuse victims experience. Clients who dissociate may have deontic reasoning deficits and be at greater risk of re-victimization. (DePrince) Female victims of child sexual abuse are more likely to experience abuse at younger ages, and to be abused by family members, than are male victims of child sexual abuse. Connors etal (2008) found that participants that reported pathological levels of dissociation reported that they use isolation & jealously and general control in their relationships and engaged in higher levels of physical conflict with their battering partners. Simonetti, Scott and Murphy (2000) suggested that dissociative coping mechanisms among batterers play a role in severe intimate partner violence. Mantakos (2008) in attempting to develop the Dissociative Partners Violence Scale sought to establish a correlation between the DPVS and pathological dissociation. She found a significant correlation between the 9 items of the DVPS and the DES-T. Eating Disorders Data: Authors Beato, Cano,& Belmonte Population Studied Eating Disorders N 118 Tests DES, Rosenberg Self-esteem Scale, Body Shape Questionaire, Eating Attiudes Test-40 Results 30.5 % > 25 Dalle 22.6% had severe Grave,Tosico, Eating 106 DIS-Q dissociative Bartocci Disorders symptoms, Vanderlinden, 12% pathological Van der Hart, Eating 98 DIS-Q dissociative Varga Disorders experiences Historical Antecedents: Reports of sexual abuse are similar to those in general psychiatric disorders, and may be a factor in the development of eating disordered behaviors. Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Pg. 6 However, traumatic experiences appear to be more prevalent among clients diagnosed with bulimia and clients with anorexia nervosa/binge eating-purging subtype. Etiology – What causes it? Response to Physical/ Sexual Trauma Response to Relational Trauma Response to Dysfunctional Family Dynamics Conceptual Models – How do we think about it? Ego State Model (Watkins) Component Model BASK (Braun) Sequential Model Structural Model (Van der Hart, et al) Self as Process ANP EP TREATMENT – DID/DDNOS confirmed – Now What? ISSTD Treatment Guidelines available at: www.ISST-D.org Complicating Factors – Heads up – the person you will be treating comes with: Impact of Abuse on Attachment and Relationships Disorganized attachment leads to multiple models of attachment Attachment and avoidance become enmeshed Inability to transcend “Good Parent/Bad Parent” paradigm Disconnection from normal relationships Stockholm Syndrome (Graham & Rawlings, 91) Victim feels threatened and fearful for survival Victim feels isolated Victim fells dependent upon perpetrator for safety Perpetrator shows limited kindness Victim bonds to perpetrator Victim adopts beliefs/rhetoric & perceptions of perpetrator Externalized Locus of Control – ‘Just tell me what to do…’ Client Symptomology Lack internal control Attempt to control others Assume responsibility for others Alternately seeks and rejects external control Perpetrator dynamics (Sgroi, 82 Mey, 82 ) Dysfunctional boundaries Displacement of responsibility Isolation Discounted/distorted feelings Non-validation of reality Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Shame – ‘I’m a worthless piece of shit who’s not worthy of the air I breathe.’ Conceptualizations of shame Inherent sense of flawed self Shame is about the self; guilt is about an act (Lewis, 71) Shame as a significant basis for defense mechanisms (Wurmser, 81) Shame as an attenuator of affect (Nathanson, 92) Denial of abuse maintains shame Perpetrator denial Familial /societal denial Self-denial Therapist denial (C. Dalenberg, 2000) Fears of counter transference Fears of legal liability Fear of the overwhelming pain Silence and the failure of language Shame and powerlessness E. Erickson: Autonomy vs. Shame If not able to make change then no autonomy (powerless) If powerless to make changes (lacking autonomy), then shame filled Nathanson: Shame vs. Pride Shame inhibits experiencing the positive affects Purposeful goal directed, intentional behavior Success leads to affect: enjoyment-joy Competence & pleasure antidotes to shame Paradoxical relationship between shame and powerlessness Powerlessness leads to shame Shame is held to avoid powerlessness Accepting powerlessness to relieve shame Addiction to Chaos (van der Kolk, 87) Examples of chaos Eating disorders Chemical dependency Self-injurious behavior Dysfunctional relationships Identification with aggressor - Addiction to anger Alexithymia Difficulty identifying feelings Difficulty expressing feelings Affect storm Connection to somatoform dissociation (Clayton , 04) Pg. 7 Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation General Treatment Considerations Three Stage Trauma Model 1. Safety & Stabilization 2. Remembrance & Mourning 3. Reconnection Trauma Treatment Triggers Trauma Treatment frame should be safe but not too safe There will be complications Therapists will step in it Rupture repair process is rich and necessary Underlying Themes/Guiding Lights Transference and Countertransference Non-linear Nature of Trauma Therapy Replication of Dysfunctional Trauma Dynamics Addictive Patterns of Arousal Power, Powerlessness, Choices and Shame Shift from Ordeal to Recovery Therapeutic Relationship Secure Attachment Consistent Caring Presence Sustained Connection Boundaries Predictable Not too rigid, not too loose Negotiable Create safe environment within which to meet Stage One: Safety and Stabilization Intrusive Flashbacks Container Imagery Divide & Put Away (Controlled Dissociation) Manipulating Memories Lack of Internal Cooperation Honor the Resistance/Honor the Fear Seeing the Whole Person as Conflicted Alexithymia- ‘I don’t know what to say’ Development of affective language Modulating an titrating affective experiences Use of journaling and art exercises Development of somatic awareness Distinguish between hyper & hypo arousal Attention to somatic state changes Grounding: (See list at end) Pg. 8 Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Stage 2: Remembrance & Mourning General Considerations They were traumatized, they are not the trauma They are not the problem Integration not Exorcism Growing awareness that what feels bad or scary may be necessary and helpful Self as Process Remembrance Sometimes the Bad Guys are the Best The Navy Seals of the system, The parts that took the worst abuse & showed up for the most difficult experiences, They saved the innocence and protected the rest Value the need to identify with the perpetrator Not Changing History Dealing with what was, and grieving what was not. Connecting with the past yields two important fields of information: What was learned and What was missing What was learned may (or may not) be useful in different ways in the present. What was missed needs to be learned – earned attachment, relational skills, Healthy habits – self-care, food, employment, finances, and self-expression. Do Not Need All the Memories Pivotal points that are paradigmatic memories that speaks for all Using present to tap into what’s relevant from past Identify the repetitive patterns of behavior and attendant emotional responses Highlight how the person learned to adapt Demonstrates what life in the “warzone” was like. Critical mass – Consciousness raising Shift the psyche from inside to outside the trauma vortex. The need to do every bit of memory work is based on fears Of not getting it right, Of the beliefs based about trauma, Of avoiding making a mistake and being punished Need to Understand the Meaning of the Trauma Event Unbridled expression of emotion (without attached meaning) is unhealthy and re-traumatizing Recounting without affect remains disconnected & dissociated Assembling all the components of the trauma includes the meaning assigned at the time of the trauma. (Think BASK) Pacing Resist the urge to turn therapy into another ordeal The slower you go, the faster you get there Trauma is not a paced experience Trauma is subjectively felt as if there is no beginning, middle, and end Learning to pace one’s self heals of the effects of trauma Pg. 9 Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Pg. 10 Trauma Treatment Triggers Trauma Stage II work elicits Stage I issues Intense affect inhibits cognitive functioning Decreasing dissociative defenses increases PTSD symptomology Safety Finding other ways to deal with overwhelming emotions Grounding exercises, The power of relationship Learning about the body and mind How to calm the self, Become more present Affect regulation Name the fear/affect Identify where in your body you are experiencing the fear/affect, Identify where in your body you are NOT experiencing the fear/affect, Shift your focus between the two Differentiating past from present Critical Therapeutic Issues You’re supposed to be able to get over it yourself We all need each other far more than we are willing to admit. What was it like to be you, disconnected from the rest of human kind? What does it means to be a person and live in the human condition? Role of Therapist and Therapeutic Alliance Cannot be the blank screen Healing can only occur within the context of a healthy relationship Therapists Will Make Mistakes Be mindful of when & how Be able to say, “I’m sorry.” Repair of therapeutic ruptures is as important as any other piece of good therapy A golden opportunity to strengthen the therapeutic alliance Methods Assembling Dissociative Components Non-leading Questions If you weren’t there, you don’t know. Dealing with the client’s need to be believed Believing their experience while not getting stuck in validating what you have no way of validating Not getting caught up in who, what, where, and when Those basics become a way to avoid loss, abandonment, betrayal When to talk about ‘why’ The question may be a distraction, moving from emotional to intellectual It can be a different question, helping to understand others and themselves Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Pg. 11 Exploring the recalled event Empowering the person to work with the beliefs about self, others and the world Recognizing and responding to the traumatized body & mind Enumerating and acknowledging the missed chances and lost opportunities Developing the client’s ability to question and to view experiences and events from alternate perspectives None of these core issues require absolute knowledge of exactly what happened. Moving Forward & Backward to Complete Beginning, Middle & End Allowing non-linear processing Develop a coherent narrative Trauma memories tend to be a repeating loop of a portion of the event Identify the context and finding the frame of reference Asking either: What happened next? or What happened before that? All along the way, existential issues arise and need to be dealt with Accept the vulnerability of being human We need each other in order to survive Independence is an illusion We do have the ability to be separate, independent, but not disconnected from others. We are interdependent, and that makes us all vulnerable to each other. Stage II will often activate Stage I needs Practice re-stabilization Sharing Across Alter Personalities Metaphors for helping Taking spoonfuls of pain, Letting feeling be carried out by the breath, Joining hands, Giving wisdom, knowledge to others in the system, Pushing strength into the part that needs it. When appropriate, ask for spiritual help in the form accessible to the client, which may mean they create something for themselves that you would never have thought of. Metaphors to create a sense of oneness out of many and value all within Team, Village, Orchestra, Tribe Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Pg. 12 Specialized Techniques Caveat: Tools, not panaceas, use with wisdom and caution. Many new specialized techniques can work well with severely traumatized people, but they must be used with the awareness and cooperation of the client’s system. Severely traumatized people are avoiding their pain, etc. for a good reason. The desire to be fixed, quickly, without pain can cause therapists and clients to use a technique too much or too soon. Hypnosis Extremely useful, Hypnosis with DID clients is often not the usual preparation, induction, etc. DID people are already in trance, Help guide their process in healthy directions EMDR Can be very useful in specific applications Be very well trained and careful with DID people Level 3 training is recommended for anyone with a dissociative client Somatic Therapies Very useful Very powerful Be careful - Do you want to activate or calm? Prolonged Exposure Least useful, Can be re-traumatizing, The client may suppress more, looking better while feeling worse Mourning Grief The intensity of grief Affect comes in waves Look for relief between the waves Assurance that the grieving will not go on forever Learn to accept support and give it to self Self-soothing Holding and comforting that should have happened can happen in visualization with the voice and presence of the therapist to guide it Key questions What did you want? What was done to you? What didn’t you get because of that? Therapist’s ability to stay present Determines how far the client can go Clients are highly attuned to the reactions and responses of the therapist Will stop themselves rather than push the therapist too far Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Pg. 15 Why Me? Perpetrators and Narcissism No I and Thou Other as prop or audience Karpman’s Triangle: Roles in a subculture Therapeutic Exercise Have client identify roles in family, How they may have shifted between family members, Look at own internal system to see how it had to adapt to those roles, Explore how internal system reflects those roles to deal with family To escape the Triangle and allow for growth and freedom Mindfulness, Curiosity, The ability to observe self and other What Does It All Mean? Normalize the reactions and learned behaviors. Those worked for that original situation Now the person needs to learn new things. Developmental process happening within therapy Who am I? Letting go of the false self/selves Allow the authentic self to emerge. Explore key therapeutic questions About Self, About Others About Relationships About Life Finding Strength Buried treasure: Finding the self amidst the ruins Identifying the strengths derived from survival Keen observational skills Adaptability Compassion Wisdom An increasing ability to see the truth of the world and remain in it Control Locus of Control Issues Attachment to Perpetrator – often a necessary survival tactic Stockholm Syndrome – seeing how best to connect with perpetrator to live Control paradigm in dysfunctional families Explore what can and can’t be controlled Shifting shame to another areas of life give the illusion of control Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Pg. 14 Shame Perpetrators displace blame & shame Shame as inhibitor: stifles joy, happiness, any kind of vulnerability. Nathanson’s shame diagram – act out, act in, blame others, blame self. Keeps the trauma stuck. Shame avoids Powerlessness Holding onto shame is an attempt to avoid the feeling of being out of control and powerless. Ironically, facing shame pulls the person out of the abyss of powerlessness Therapist needs to be able to sit with the shame Explore culpability – where responsibility truly resides Explore reality of choices Stage 3: Integration – Not the end of therapy, but the stage that most resembles therapy with non-dissociative people. Loneliness, mourning the loss of ‘others’ inside. ‘who am I?’ questions, learning to relate as a whole person, from the inside out, finding meaning and purpose, working on relationships. CONCLUDING REMARKS The Impact of Chronic Interpersonal Trauma Strips the ability to be in community No attachment = No connection In the natural world, this would mean certain death To the trauma survivor this is felt as complete annihilation People exclude others who are seen as excluded in order to avoid the reality of our own personal human needs and frailties. Abandonment, Shame, and Powerlessness are the key elements Abandonment: Not wanted, not included Shame: Not worthy Powerlessness: Not able to build a bridge back Therapy Builds the Bridge - The Therapeutic Alliance Creates Community Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Pg. 15 Bibliography Ainsworth, M.D.S., Blehar, M., Water, E., & Wall, S. (1978) Patterns of attachment. Hillsdale, NJ, Erlbaum Atkinson, L., Zucker, K. J. (1997). Attachment and Psychopathology. New York: Guilford Press. Boon, S., Steele, K., Van der Hart, O. (2011). Coping with trauma-related dissociation. New York: W. W. Norton & Co. Braun, B.G. (1988). The BASK (Behavior, Affect, Sensation, Knowledge) Model of Dissociation. Dissociation, 1 (1), 4-23. Briere, J., Scott, C. (2006). Principles of trauma therapy: a guide to symptoms, evaluation, and treatment. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications. Bromberg, P. M. (2001). Standing in the spaces: essays on clinical process trauma and dissociation. New York: Routledge. About being mindfully present in the midst of therapy sessions. Appropriate self-revelation. Brownmiller, S. (1975). Against Our Will: Men, Women, and Rape. Burdick, D. (2001) The Neurobiology of Fear: Emotional Memory and PTSD. Campbell, J. (1986). “Nursing Assessment for Risk of Homicide with Battered Women.” Advances in Nursing Science, 8 (4) Cardena, E., Lynn, S., Krippner, S. (2000). Varieties of anomalous experience: examining the scientific evidence. Wash. D.C.: APA. Chefetz, R. (2006). Psychiatric clinics of North America: dissociative disorders: an expanding window into the psychobiology of the mind. Philadelphia: Saunders. Chu, J. A. (2011). Rebuilding shattered lives: treating complex PTSD and dissociative disorders. New York: Wiley. Clayton, K (2004) The interrelatedness of disconnection; The relationship between dissociative tendencies and alexithymia, Journal of Trauma and Dissociation 5 (1) 77 - 101 Cohen, N.J. & Eichenbaum, H. (1993) Memory, Amnesia, and the Hippocampal System, Boston, Mass M.I.T. Cole, N. (1994). The traumatized mind: The impact of traumatic thinking on treatment. Plenary Presentation: 7th Western Clinical Conference on Multiple Personality & Dissociation Cook, P. (1997). Abused Men: The Hidden Side of Domestic Violence. Courtois, C., Ford, J. (2009). Treating complex traumatic stress disorders: an evidence-based guide. New York: Guilford Press. Cozolino, L. (2010). The neuroscience of psychotherapy: healing the social brain. New York: Norton. Very readable, up to date synthesis of neurobiology and therapy. The vignettes illustrate major points in a very human and touching way. Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Pg. 16 Daitch, C. (2007). Affect regulation toolbox: practical and effective hypnotic interventions for the over-reactive client. New York: W.W. Horton. D.C.: APA. The most useful and readable book on the countertransferential experience of the therapists who work with clients suffering from severe trauma. Dalenberg writes with wisdom and warmth. All trauma therapists should read this book for their own well-being and for the benefit of anyone they counsel. Damasio, A. (1999). The feeling of what happens: body and emotion in the making of consciousness. San Diego: Harcourt, Inc. Dell, P.F., O’Neil, J.A. (2009). Dissociation and the dissociative disorders: DSV-V and beyond. New York: Routledge. The big one – the latest thinking by experts in all areas of the field. De Waal, F. (2009). The age of empathy: nature’s lessons for a kinder society. New York: Harmony Books. Diagnostic and Statistical Manuel of Mental Disorders – 4th Ed. Washington D.C. American Psychiatric Press Edelman, G. and Tononi, G. (2000). A Universe of Consciousness. Elkind, S. N. (1992). Resolving impasses in therapeutic relationships. New York: Guilford. Erikson, E. H. (1950) Childhood and Society Norton Erikson, E.H. (1968) Identity: Youth and crisis Norton Foa, E., Keane, T. M., Friedman, M. J., Cohen, J. A. (2009). Effective treatments for PTSD: practice guidelines from the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies. New York: Guilford. Fonagy, P. (2001). Attachment Theory and Psychoanalysis. Freeland, J. (1996) Neuropsychology of Memory and Implications in Trauma. Presentation: Claremont Study Group of the International Society for the Study of Dissociation Freyd, J., Klest, B., & Allard, C., (2005) Betrayal trauma: Relationship to physical health, psychological distress and a written disclosure interview. Journal of Trauma and Dissociation 6 (3) 83 - 104 Germer, C. K., Siegel, R. D., Fulton, P. R. (2005). Mindfulness and psychotherapy. New York: Guilford. Gold, S. N. (2000). Not trauma alone: therapy for child abuse survivors in family and social context. New York: Routledge. Gottman, J. (1999). The Marriage Clinic. Graham-Kevan, N. & Archer J. (2002). “Does Controlling Behavior Predict Physical Aggression and Violence to Partners?” Unpublished manuscript. Gutheil, T. G., Brodsky, A. (2008). Preventing boundary violations in clinical practice. New York: Guilford. Haddock, D. (2001). The dissociative identity disorder sourcebook. New York:McGraw Hill. Helpful for clients and their families. Hammond, C. (1990). Handbook of hypnotic suggestioins and metaphors. New York: Norton. Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Pg. 17 Herman, J. (1997). Trauma and recovery: the aftermath of violence – from domestic abuse to political terror. New York: Basic Books. A classic – a great book to start with, and one that won’t fully be appreciated until re-read years later. Howell, E. F. (2005). The dissociative mind. Hillsdale: Analytic Press. Johnson, S. M. (2002). Emotionally focused couple therapy with trauma survivors: strengthening attachment bonds. New York: Guilford. Kasian, M. & Painter, S. (1992). “Frequency and Severity of Psychological Abuse in a Dating Population.” Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 7 (3) Kluft, Richard P., MD. (2013). Shelter from the Storm: Processing the Traumatic Memories of DID/DDNOS Patients with The Fractionated Abreaction Technique (A Vademecum for the Treatment of DID/DDNOS) (Volume 1) . CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. Koonin, M., et al. (2003). Treatment of Women Arrested for Domestic Violence: Women Ending Abusive/Violent Episodes Respectfully Lanius, R. A., Vermetten, E., Pain, C. (2010). The impact of early life trauma on health and disease: the hidden epidemic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. LaViolette, A. and Barnett, O. (2000). It Could Happen to Anyone. Levine, P.A. (2010). In an unspoken voice: how the body releases trauma and restores goodness. Berkeley: North Atlantic Books. Liotti, G. (1992) Disorganized/disoriented attachment in the etiology of the dissociative disorders. Dissociation, 5 (4), 196-204 Main, M., & Soloman, J. (1990). Procedures for identifying infants as disorganized/disoriented during the Ainsworth Strange Situation. In M.T. Greenberg. D. Cicchetti & E.M. Cummings (Eds.), Attachment in the preschool years Chicago: University of Chicago Press Marcus, G. (2004). The Birth of the Mind. Mandler, J. M., (2004). The foundations of mind: origins of conceptual thought. Oxford: Oxford Press. Miller, L. (1998). Shocks to the system: psychotherapy of traumatic disability syndromes. New York: Norton. Nijenhuis, E.R.S. (1999). Somatoform dissociation: phenomena, measurement, and theoretical issues. Netherlands: Van Gorcum. Ogden, P. & Minton K. (2000) Sensorimotor psychotherapy: One method for processing traumatic memory. Traumatolgy 6(3) O’Hanlon, B., Bertolino, B. (1998). Even from a broken web: brief, respectful solution-oriented therapy for sexual abuse and trauma. New York: John Wiley & Sons. O’Hanlon, W. H., Martin, M. (1992). Solution-oriented hypnosis: an Ericksonian approach. New York: Norton. Panksepp, J. (1998). Affective neuroscience: the foundations of human and animal emotions. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Pearson, P. (1997), When She Was Bad: Women and the Myth of Innocence. Pence, E. & Paymer, M. (1993), Education Groups for Men Who Batter Phillips, M., Frederick, C. (1995). Healing the divided self: clinical and Ericksonian hypnotherapy for post-traumatic and dissociative conditions. New York: Norton. Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Pg. 18 Pliszka, S. R. ((2003). Neuroscience for the mental health clinician. New York: Guilford. Rhoades, G.F., Sar, V. (2006). Trauma and dissociation in a cross-cultural perspective: not just a North American phenomena. New York: Hawthorne Maltreatment & Trauma Press. Rothschild, B. (2000). The body remembers: the psychophysiology of trauma and trauma treatment. New York: Norton. One of the first somatic books. Rothschild., B. (2010). 8 keys to safe trauma recovery: take-charge strategies to empower your healing. New York: Norton. Good for clients. Rosen, S. (1982). My voice will go with you: the teaching tales of Milton H. Erickson. New York: Norton. Rosenbloom, D., Williams, M. B., Watkins, B. E. (1999). Life after trauma: a workbook for healing. New York: Guilford. Schiele, D. (1992). “The Neuropsychobiology of Addiction, Trauma, and Dissociation”. Schiraldi, G. R., (2000). The post-traumatic stress sourcebook: a guide to healing, recovery and growth. Los Angeles: Lowell House. Schore A. (1994) Affect regulation and the origin of the self: The neurobiology of emotional development. Hillsdale, NJ Erlbaum Schore, A. N. (2003). Affect dysregulation and disorders of the self. New York: Norton. Schupp, L. (2006). Assessing and Treating Trauma and PTSD. Shapiro, R. (2010). The trauma treatment handbook: protocols across the spectrum. New York: Norton. Siegel, D. J. (1999). The developing mind: how relationships and the brain interact to shape who we are. New York: Guilford. Siegel, D. J. (2010). Mindsight: the new science of personal transformation. New York: Bantam. Solomon, M. F., Siegel, D. J. (2003). Healing trauma: attachment, mind, body, and brain. New York: Norton. Stamm, B. H. (1995). Secondary traumatic stress: self-care issues for clinicians, researchers, & educators. Maryland: Sidran. Stein, P. and Kendall, J. (2004). Psychological Trauma and the Developing Brain. Tedeschi, R. G., Park, C. L., Calhoun, L. G. (1998). Posttraumatic growth: positive changes in the aftermath of crisis. New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Assoc. Terr, L. (1990). Too Scared to Cry. Tracy, J. L., Robins, R. W., Tangney, J. P. (2007). The self-conscious emotions: theory and research. New York: Guilford. Connors & Danylchuk Understanding and Working with Complex Trauma and Dissociation Van der Hart, O., Nijenhuis, E., Steele, K. (2006). The haunted self: structural dissociation and the treatment of chronic traumatization . New York: W. W. Norton & Company. This book has very helpful tables in the midst of the writing, with do’s and don’ts that help therapists set the therapy frame and guide the client through the process. van der Hart, O., Steele, K., Boon, S., Brown, P., (1993) The Treatment of Traumatic Memories: Synthesis, Realization, and Integration. Dissociation, 6, (2/3), 162-180 van der Kolk, B. (1987) Psychological trauma Washington D.C. American Psychiatric Press van der Kolk, et. al. (1997). Psychobiology of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. Walker, L. ((1979). The Battered Woman. Wallin, D. J. (2007). Attachment in psychotherapy. New York: Guilford. Wieland, S., (2010). Dissociation in traumatized children and adolescents: theory and clinical interventions. New York: Routledge. Brand new – great for working with children and adolescents, which means it would be helpful for dissociative clients who have those parts active in present time. Ziegler, D. (2002). Traumatic Experience and the Brain. Internet Links: http://www.isst-d.org/ http://www.isst-d.org/training/Training-index.htm http://www.trauma-pages.com/ http://www.sidran.org/ http://www.istss.org/Home.htm http://www.isst-d.org/jtd/GUIDELINES_REVISED2011.pdf https://www.cmellc.com/landing/pdf/A10001101.pdf http://www.firstpersonplural.org.uk/dvd Pg. 19