Hi Pixel,
I listened to the podcasts last night (and a couple of others from the same site as well, they're good). I'm guessing that what Levine is explaining in the bit that you quoted is how he came to the idea of somatic experiencing.
He does take a tendency to healing as almost being axiomatic, he gives examples from nature.
He had been observing wild animals, and noted that beasties like wild rabbits and small birds, have their lives threatened daily by predators, and he noted that he never seemed to see them suffer from PTSD. But, put the same sort of animals into captivity, and it was very easy to induce characteristics of trauma disorders in them.
He was observing that in the wild, the critters were able to complete an escape, and he guessed that the problem seemed to arise when the response wasn't allowed to run its full course, but got frustrated.
He gave the example that clarified that idea for him, of a woman who had very bad symptoms, having a panic attack in his office, she couldn't breathe and thought that she was going to die
He was trying to think what to do and said to her "there's a tiger chasing you, run!"
Her legs moved as though running. That worked as a sort of cathartic cure, her agroraphobia etc went away.
He'd then experimented through the 1970s with titrating the somatic stuff down to more manageable levels, rather than the cathartic and potentially re traumatizing "there's a tiger, run!" and he seems to have good success.
After listening to the podcast, I think that it's one of those areas where we know something works, but perhaps the explanation for why it does, may not be the best. And even if it is right, perhaps it isn't being explained in the best way.
That's not uncommon in other areas. There are plenty of areas where practical things have been achieved for thousands of years, but where theory has still not caught up, and decisions made on the basis of that theory may actually be harmful.
Imo, The podcasts are definitely worth listening to.
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@Leighlee87 I understand that the current DSM V does at last show catatonia as something that can be experienced in PTSD. Previously it only listed it with schizophrenia. The assumption was therefore made that if someone was experiencing catatonia, then they NECESSARILY had to have schizophrenia. Having a wrongful diagnosis of schizophrenia on your medical records could do a lot of harm, in employment, in background checks, a person's credibility in a court etc.
Talk about the landscape being made to conform to a really crappy map, the sort that says "here be monsters"
You'll find more about what you're experiencing in the paper linked here
Dissociation 6f's (drop Attacks/catatonia)