Understanding Psychological Wounds Through the Lens of Neurophysiology
Trauma becomes embedded in the brain, mind, and body. It directs our behavior, shapes our social habits, and profoundly informs the ways we navigate the world. An inner injury, trauma imprints itself into our neurobiology, leaving a footprint in the nervous system. Rather than an event, trauma is what happens inside of us – it is a fracturing of the self that manifests in the form of disintegrated neural patterning. Lack of self-regulatory capacity lies at the heart of this disintegration, which shows up as chaos and/or rigidity in our relational and neural functioning. During a traumatic stress response, the brain and other nervous systems mobilize neurophysiological processes to cope with the stressor. Specific regions of the brain are activated along with changes in hormones and neurotransmitters. Prolonged activation of brain regions involved in the stress response and an ongoing release of neurochemicals associated with trauma reorganize the brain-mind-body system, resulting in a compromised ability to prepare for and adapt in the face of stress, adversity, and daily challenges.
This science-back workshop provides a definition of trauma from an Integrative NeuroSomatic® perspective, which emphasizes the nature of trauma as being an internal wound that impacts multiple biological systems involved in human development. Findings from an array of scientific fields, including contemporary neuroscience, mind-body research, traumatology, polyvagal theory, and epigenetics will be shared. Tools for helping people who have histories of developmental and complex trauma use safety and neuroplasticity to rewire their nervous systems, upgrade internal models, and enhance neural integration for higher levels of self-regulation will be explored.
Learning Objectives
- Define trauma from a neurophysiological perspective
- Describe the role of the central nervous system, autonomic nervous system, and the HPA axis in the formation and navigation of trauma narratives
- Examine integrative approaches for helping people being the process of healing inner wounds
- Apply a neuroscience-informed tool for working people who have suffered trauma