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Somatic Experiencing - Have You Tried It?

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Bankhead, if you continue to advertise or promote the site you are upon this website, I will ban you for spam. Once mentioned is ok, twice is getting a bit much, and you have done more than that, which I have removed. Quit it or lose site access. Advertising and promotion of any kind is strictly forbidden.
 
Bankhead, if you continue to advertise or promote the site you are upon this website, I will ban you for spam. Quit it or lose site access.

Anthony - my apologies. I did not realize that posting a website fit the terms "advertise or promote". Thank you for letting me know. I am glad to have found the ptsd forum and do not want to violate the rules.
 
As you can see, I'm a real evangelist for it! Please ask me if you have any questions, or I'd just be happy to hear how you're doing so keep posting. And please be encouraged that my experience of somatic therapy, the felt sense etc is just as Peter Levine describes and is a really wonderful approach to healing trauma.

Hashi

Hashi - I have an appointment on Tuesday. I am excited and looking forward to this work.

Can you tell me a little bit about how the sessions work? What transpires between the therapist and the client? I have no idea about what to expect.
 
Hi bankhead,

I'm so pleased for you that you have an appointment for craniosacral therapy/somatic experiencing. I can certainly tell you my experience of craniosacral therapy, but I think it varies for each individual and it also depends on the therapist's approach. If they also use other techniques (like shiatsu massage, sound therapy, somatic experiencing) that will probably have a big influence on what happens. So I recommend asking your therapist when you meet, about what you can expect. If you have any particular concerns I'd definitely raise them, either beforehand or during the session.

I think things that are common to all sessions are that they will first take your history, ask about medical conditions etc. Then you keep your clothes on, you lie down, and you may be asked if you'd like a blanket over you.

The therapist will touch you lightly. They will often touch/hold your feet to get a bearing on your central nervous system. They will use gentle touch on other parts of your body, including your head and sacrum (lower back, where it meets the pelvis). I'd expect them to encourage you to give feedback throughout about any physical or emotional feelings you're experiencing, and at any point if you feel uncomfortable or concerned you can tell them.so they can change what they're doing They may give you feedback as well, telling you what they can sense and how it's transforming itself during the treatment.

I have to say the touch was sometimes a challenge for me, because I'm female, my CST therapist was male and my traumas have included violence by men. But my therapist was always sensitive and professional. I'd checked his credentials beforehand and my instincts also told me it was OK. It was actually very healing to have a male therapist like this, it reinforced on a deeper level what I knew consciously - that there are many good, caring men out there .

I think it's usual for the therapist to discuss a "safe place" with you beforehand, somewhere you can imagine if you feel any distress and need to ground yourself. The therapist I saw didn't, because he worked in a way that always kept things safe for me. I still visualised things for safety myself, though. I needed to generally, anyway, and it helped me between sessions. A lot could come up for me during the week, as well as the physical cold/shaking, but as long as I was visualising, journalling etc it wasn't overwhelming and I didn't have flashbacks or nightmares.

Something I found strange was how much he could sense and tell me about my history and experiences. I never told him anything other than that I had experienced trauma, but he could obviously sense the nature of the trauma from my body. Our cells really do hold memories and feelings, and it was uncanny how he could read these. He could also sense my present day issues like frustration and low self esteem. Even though he was sensitive and diplomatic I sometimes felt embarrassed, but it always made me feel validated and confident in the therapy and his skill.

I think it can probably vary a lot, so talk to your therapist and see what she does.

Best of luck, and let us know how it goes.

Hashi
 
My T recommended 'Waking the tiger' by Levine to me but I didn't really find myself in there. I guess it's more appropriate for people with mono trauma, and not for those with a complex trauma.

I cant say about somatic experiencing because I haven't had it, but I have experienced multiple traumas and have been diagnosed with complex PTSD. The somatic approach through craniosacral therapy helped me a lot. I never had to focus on any particular aspect, my system just presented whatever needed to be worked on without me consciously thinking of anything.

During the time I was having CST I was working in counselling on a particular event that I had the most memories about. I feel that the CST was addressing all the traumas though. I constantly noticed that the fragments of memory about the other traumas became less charged and less distressing, even though I hadn't been working on healing those. I think the frozen trauma energy I was releasing was not just from the trauma I was consciously concentrating on around that time.
 
I am struggling to recover more memories of childhood abuse so I can understand and process them...

I have disconnected, disturbing images, but nothing that hangs together as a fully recalled incident. I am getting a little desperate after six months of trying and have begun to consider hypnosis, despite the risks.

Sydney, I'm sorry you're struggling to remember and little is coming up for you. I've been there, and I know that frustration.

I'm afraid I don't think anyone here can say what's right for you. Personally, I'd be careful about having hypnotherapy to try to access memories. I posted in another thread about trying to "force" memories, so rather than repeat myself here's the link:
[DLMURL]https://www.ptsdforum.org/c/threads/question-about-exposure.22324/#post-310381[/DLMURL]

As I said, though, I can't know what's best for you. Perhaps hypnotherapy or another therapy could you give you insights that would lead you to being in the right place to remember more. Have you tried contacting some different types of potential therapists to get their views and see how what they say makes you feel?

Are you having counselling? Maybe talking things through with a therapist who has a good knowledge of trauma (and is synpathetic to your views) could help you decide an approach.
 
Are you having counselling? Maybe talking things through with a therapist who has a good knowledge of trauma (and is synpathetic to your views) could help you decide an approach.

Hashi, thank you so much for pointing me at this thread. I have been working with a therapist for the past 8 months who is helping me try to deal with the abuse that happened to me at 9 years old. He's also helping me examine and process all the unhealthy feelings and bad actions I have felt and done in the 35 years since.

I have made a lot of progress, and I feel like I am now in a place where I can handle more. However, I hear you about being careful about pushing myself. Recently I have been struggling not to slip back into sexually focused thinking, which are a warning sign for me. My therapist says it is good that I remain aware of these thoughts, but it is an ongoing struggle not to translate the thoughts into actions.
 
Also, at my therapist's recommendation, I am planning on contacting an EMDR expert, rather than trying hypnosis. After a couple sessions, I hope to be able to write some posts about it.
 
Sydney, I'm glad you're seeing a therapist and have support while you explore these options.Good luck with the EMDR.

bankhead - just wanted to wish you luck tomorrow (today? yesterday? I'm hopeless at time differences).
 
I am going tomorrow! Counting the hours.
Saw a doctor today and that was a beginning.
Fingers crossed.
 
Hi Everyone,

I just happened to stumble across this thread. I have been seeing a clinical psychologist who is trained in SE among her other specialties for over a year now. The progress I have made is mind-boggling, especially because the process is extremely gentle. It simply doesn't feel like work, but a creative, fun place to go to, as well as a very supportive environment.

Something that I find amazing about the approach of SE is how different individual therapists use depending on their background training. My therapist described the training process and all the people who take the classes. Each therapist adapts it to fit his/her individual profession and training. I guess that I theoretically had understood that, but as usual I have a disconnect between theory and application. Thank you very much!

My therapist uses it as part of her whole therapeutic approach. She practices CBT, play therapy, sand tray therapy, and the regular long list of current of therapy techniques. About a year and a half ago, I realized that I was ready for another therapy attempt. I had run out of referrals and no idea where to look. I ended up looking online and was intrigued by my therapist being willing to work with people of all ages, including sand play, play therapy, and expressive arts.

As I also have experienced complex trauma and grew up in many different languages, the various traumas as well as treatments have occurred in many different languages. Plus I am Deaf. Therefore I have significant communication difficulties and can't describe things very well. The more stressed I am the more likely I am to forget words to explain my memories to someone. A former therapist was so bothered by the fact that I usually sign even when I am around hearing people that she held down my hands on the chair's armrests until I was done explaining what I was describing. Even with my current therapist, I have times when I struggle to talk. Depending on the day, I will use whatever works (e.g. drawing/painting, playing, the sand, toys, and acting out what happened).

My therapist listens, talks, and gives suggestions (e.g. visual imaging which works beautifully for me). Somewhere during the session (which lasts 90 minutes to incorporate different approaches), my therapist incorporates SE. She asks me what my body feels like. Depending on what my body feels like we focus on the sensation (the felt sense) and its margins. At this point I am slowly learning to stay with the feeling, like waves in the ocean. There's a peak and if I manage to stay with it without dissociating then it comes back down. If I need help with other techniques she will help.

With this approach I have finally acquired an understanding of basic feeling words. Adjectives are the hardest individual types of words to learn in any language because unless you know what the feelings are you can't identify them. With another therapist I made smiley faces that were supposed to show emotions/feelings and words written beneath it. I was trying to wrap my head around the definitions I read in dictionaries, but kept not really having any idea what they meant. With SE with the current therapist she taught me to feel my body and she helped put the words to it later. Previously, I was completely disconnected from my body (a.k.a. dissociated). Different medical professionals (e.g. physical therapists, occupational therapists, doctors) would want me to connect with my body but that kept reactivating the traumas. They wanted me to feel the surfaces of tables and walls to help with balance and actually were able to turn on the sensations with lots of prodding, but they couldn't help with the sensations (e.g. hands around my waist) from the flashbacks. I am still a work in progress, but I have found some hope that there is a chance that I am not as big of a freak as I and other people thought I was.

Something funny that I just learned thanks to all of your postings is that I guess I have had craniosacral therapy, thus a somatic treatment, in the past. I saw a chiropractor for a while who specialized in that. Now it is clicking as to why I was able to benefit from that as well.

Take care!
 
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