Listen "Neuroscience of Trauma, Part 1"
Episode Synopsis
Introducing our capstone episode of the season, and arguably one of the most important topics we've discussed to date.
As it turns out, trauma is proven to play a much more direct role in our lives than we may have realized (as you'll hear around the 22-minute mark).
In this episode, as Laine walks us through some of the science most noted from neuroscientist Bruce Perry, we discover just how impactful trauma -- both "capital T" and "little T" -- can be.
In my experience while recording this episode, it took almost the entire hour+ to grasp the difference between these two traumas, and that shockingly enough, it's not the event that causes trauma.
There's a lot to cover on this topic, and to do it justice, we've decided to break it up into two episodes. You'll receive one more episode + a bonus meditation in November!
REFERENCES
What Happened To You Bruce Perry and Oprah Windfrey
Trauma-Informed Care in Behavioral Health Services. Rockville (MD)
PTSD History and Overview Matthew J. Friedman, MD, PhD
Traumatic Stress Center of Wales
How does your body remember trauma? Dr. Matthew Boland and Hilary L. Lebow
Response Variation following Trauma: A Translational Neuroscience Approach to Understanding PTSD Rachel Yehuda, * and Joseph LeDoux
Thirty-Year Study Links Neuroscience, Specific Trauma, PTSD, Image Conversion, and Language Translation Dee Spring PhD, ATR-BC, MFT
Relational Trauma and the Developing Right Brain An Interface of Psychoanalytic Self Psychology and Neuroscience Allan N. Schore
As it turns out, trauma is proven to play a much more direct role in our lives than we may have realized (as you'll hear around the 22-minute mark).
In this episode, as Laine walks us through some of the science most noted from neuroscientist Bruce Perry, we discover just how impactful trauma -- both "capital T" and "little T" -- can be.
In my experience while recording this episode, it took almost the entire hour+ to grasp the difference between these two traumas, and that shockingly enough, it's not the event that causes trauma.
There's a lot to cover on this topic, and to do it justice, we've decided to break it up into two episodes. You'll receive one more episode + a bonus meditation in November!
REFERENCES
What Happened To You Bruce Perry and Oprah Windfrey
Trauma-Informed Care in Behavioral Health Services. Rockville (MD)
PTSD History and Overview Matthew J. Friedman, MD, PhD
Traumatic Stress Center of Wales
How does your body remember trauma? Dr. Matthew Boland and Hilary L. Lebow
Response Variation following Trauma: A Translational Neuroscience Approach to Understanding PTSD Rachel Yehuda, * and Joseph LeDoux
Thirty-Year Study Links Neuroscience, Specific Trauma, PTSD, Image Conversion, and Language Translation Dee Spring PhD, ATR-BC, MFT
Relational Trauma and the Developing Right Brain An Interface of Psychoanalytic Self Psychology and Neuroscience Allan N. Schore
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