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Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimotor Approach to Psychotherapy | 
enlarge | Authors: Pat Ogden, Kekuni Minton, Claire Pain Publisher: W. W. Norton Category: Book
List Price: $35.00 Buy New: $24.88 You Save: $10.12 (29%)
New (32) Used (8) from $24.88
Avg. Customer Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 11547
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 320 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 5.8 x 1.6
ISBN: 0393704572 Dewey Decimal Number: 616.891 EAN: 9780393704570 ASIN: 0393704572
Publication Date: October 13, 2006 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Promotion: Save $10.00 when you spend $50.00 or more on Qualifying Items offered by Amazon.com. Enter code BMLSAVES at checkout. Terms and Conditions Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description Bridging the gap between cognitive and somatic models.
Psychological trauma profoundly affects the body. Drawing on this insight, Pat Ogden and her co-authors present a body-based approach to the psychological and physiological symptoms of trauma. Backed by research in attachment, dissociation, and neuroscience, this mode of psychotherapy integrates cognitive and somatic interventions to form a practical and effective treatment modality suitable for all clinicians.
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| Customer Reviews:
slow read September 30, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
this book is so full of information but it is not an easy read. It would be helpful to already be familar with Pat Ogden's work because it helps to understand the theories . All that being said, it is breathtaking in its depth and approach to treatment of clients with trauma.
Trauma and the Body October 27, 2007 28 out of 29 found this review helpful
I have worked with people who have experienced trauma particularly childhood abuse and neglect for many years. This is by far the best approach that I have met, and is based on the recent and revolutionary neurobiological reseach that has transformed the understanding of the impact of trauma on the individual. It uses mindfulness as a key part of the therapeutic approach. This book is ground-breaking and to be recommended to all practitioners working in this field, and will also enable survivors of trauma to lead happier and more fruitful lives.
Excellent reference for an important and effective approach to trauma treatment August 15, 2007 76 out of 77 found this review helpful
This book is a comprehensive, well-organized, and practical reference on a somatic (body-based) approach to trauma treatment. It is the best thing on the subject I have on my bookshelf. And since I believe that the resolution of trauma is both safest and most effective when the body is involved, it is therefore the single most useful reference I have on trauma treatment period. The writing is clear, precise, and appealing, and it deals authoritatively with an important emerging area of our field. This book is aimed at professional therapists, but I'm sure that much of it would be interesting and readable for many others.
I've taken Ogden's training in Sensorimotor Psychotherapy for Trauma and found it to be extraordinarily useful, so I'm naturally inclined to be sympathetic to her book. However, I've also had the experience of reading unsatisfying and inadequate expositions of other approaches, and I am glad to say that this is not one of them. One of the great strengths of Ogden's approach, its teachability, shows up here as well.
The first part of the book lays out a theoretical understanding of trauma based on recent scientific research in neurobiology and attachment. It cogently brings together topics including the three levels of information processing in the brain; modulation of physiological and affective arousal in the nervous system; attachment dynamics and neuropsychology; the inbuilt orienting and defensive responses, including fight/flight/freeze, submission, collapse, and dissociation; and relevant findings in affective neuroscience on inbuilt action systems such as nurturance, exploration, and sexuality.
Ogden and her colleagues do not just select a few research results that support a pre-existing point of view, but additionally ask what some substantial bodies of knowledge imply about how we think about trauma and what interventions we can or should make. Neither does the book avoid areas of doubt or debate; instead it provides balanced and clinically informed discussions of topics such as traumatic memory, the type and nature of freeze responses in trauma, or the use of touch interventions in psychotherapeutic practice. Research and theory are well-documented, and the bibliography is very substantial.
The second part of the book lays out principles and clinical skills for treatment based on this theoretical model, and places them within a clearly defined phased treatment approach whose outlines will be familiar and comfortable for many clinicians. The skills include the moment-to-moment sensorimotor, affective, and cognitive interventions used in all phases of treatment, as well as skills, practices, and goals specific to each treatment phase.
Finally, Ogden's approach is deeply humanistic and compassionate. All interventions and practices are grounded in a framework that emphasizes a non-violent, respectful, mindful and integrative approach to the person who has survived a trauma. In the end, I believe, nothing can be more important than this.
If I had one complaint about this book, it would that some of the skill topics are treated too briefly. The information is there, but in certain cases the very concentrated presentation needs considerable unpacking. I suppose this is parallel to the way that many texts might decline to train the reader in basic psychoanalytic or cognitive-behavioural skills, but since somatic intervention skills are less familiar and less well covered in the literature, it would have been nice to have more here. I am also looking forward to a book in which body psychotherapy for developmental issues (character structure) is addressed with equal lucidity and completeness, but that is genuinely another book.
Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimortor Approach to Psychotherapy March 24, 2007 27 out of 44 found this review helpful
This book seems to come closer to understanding the full impact of the mind body connection than most everything I've else I've read in this field. I still see where there's more to be done, but I was please to see this foray into this basic relationship! The mind and body are one, and when we learn to treat the "whole" person, people will finally be able to "be whole" as a person.
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