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Bearing the unbearable: meditations on being in rhythm

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Many individuals who have suffered persistent, severe childhood abuse have coped with the pain and terror of abuse through a dissociative adaptation. In long-term psychotherapy with these individuals, psychotherapists can experience attunement with multiple self states, often leading to confusion and fatigue. This piece describes journal entries made by the author over several years of working with patients with complex post-traumatic stress disorder. Meditative daily walks at sunrise through a treelined river park served to comfort and balance the stress of this work. These entries describe attunement as an embodied rhythmic encounter that facilitates the management of unbearable pain in a shared healing experience.

Keywords: COMPLEX PTSD; DISSOCIATION; DISSOCIATIVE ATTUNEMENT; EMBODIED MEMORY; TRAUMA

Document Type: Research Article

Publication date: September 1, 2018

More about this publication?
  • Attachment: New Directions in Psychotherapy and Relational Psychoanalysis is a new leading edge journal for clinicians working relationally with their clients; it is a professional journal, featuring cultural articles, politics, reviews and poetry relevant to attachment and relational issues; an inclusive journal welcoming contributions from clinicians of all orientations seeking to make a contribution to attachment approaches to clinical work.

    It includes up to date briefings on latest developments in neuroscience relevant to psychotherapy and counselling and is an international journal with contributions from colleagues from different countries and cultures.

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