
TU126 – What Do We Mean by Modern Attachment? Sue Marriott & Ann Kelley Discuss
Bring attachment science to real-life, the Modern Attachment – Regulation Spectrum (and more) These notes (not the image itself) were updated and added to June 2021. Pausing the riches of the guest interviews, Ann Kelley & Sue Marriott are back to discuss what has changed in the attachment field. They share what makes it modern attachment, anyway, review the science, and discuss their Modern Attachment-Regulation Spectrum (MARS). They also cover best practices for getting through online therapy. Learn more at Therapist Uncensored www.therapistuncensored.com and get full shownotes here. This episode references the Modern Attachment Regulation Spectrum created by Therapist Uncensored. Find out more about that in Episode 31 below. https://therapistuncensored.com/episodes/tu31-attachment-on-a-spectrum-navigating-adult-insecurity-and-security/ Episode 126 Show Notes: Why learn attachment theory? Backed by over 70 years of clinical research in animals and people, founded and organized originally by seminal scholars like John Bowlby, Mary Main, Mary Ainsworth, Pat Crittenden, and a BOATLOAD of other researchers and clinicians working on developing and fine-tuning attachment science. At its core, attachment theory is the study of how the child attaches to the primary caregiver and how those experiences shape the child’s development Often this gets lumped together with a gendered understanding of the world, but it’s a totally gender-neutral science. Anyone can be or become a primary caregiver, even if the primary parent is often referred to as the mother. Also, much of the science surrounds mothers rather than fathers and non-traditional families, culturally-imbued Western notions of parenting, but more on that at another time. What is Modern Attachment? Attachment research started in developmental psychology then expanded into many different complementary fields of research. Basically it went from looking at infants and toddlers, then dyads, then adults, then adult dyads, and now informing adults with multiple partners, groups and communities. Each perspective varies a bit but eventually coalesce to create a coherent and validated picture of the importance of early relationships in our adult relational lives. Briefly, the first phase of attachment science included the probably familiar 3 then the 4 quadrants – preoccupied, dismissing, secure and disorganized/unresolved (the language varies and mean slightly different things per perspective, but let’s just settle on those commonly understood terms). This research began by looking at infants, and then mothers and infants. John Bowlby and his colleague, Mary Ainsworth, are the biggest players here although they were supported by many, we go over this history in much more detail in other episodes on our podcast. The science later incorporated research from adults with retrospective stories about their early life experiences that validated and expanded the theory. Mary Main, Carol George, Patricia Crittendon (we are wildly fortunate that several luminary’s listed below have been expert guests on our show. Crittendon has 2, and 1 devoted to expanding on her work) are leaders in this area, and Alan Sroufe and his team at the University of Minnesota extended and clarified these ideas by following a cohort from infancy through adulthood (our good fortune includes many of those mentioned in these notes – and there are 2 interviews with Sroufe in our podcast catalog). Sroufe’s work validates that early experience sets a developmental trajectory to adulthood, but – fortunately – are changeable. Social scientists expanded the ideas by looking at adult romantic couples. They also confirmed that early attachment patterns are not totally correlated with adult functioning, and exemplify how. See R. Chris Fraley, Hazan and Shaver and many more. Modern attachment science also incorporates the explosion of neuroscience that began to grow in the 1990s. It has always been a biologically informed theory, but with interpersonal neuroscience, we can now literally see inside the developmental process and fine-tune and verify the evolving theory as go. With contributions from the likes of Dan Siegel (2 TU episodes in our catalog), Alan Shore, Bruce Perry (1 episode), Steve Porges (1 episode), Lou Cossolino (2 TU episodes), Ed Tronik, David Elliott (2 TU episodes), Dan Brown (1 in-depth episode), Dan Stern, … and a boatload of clinicians and scientists we bring this theory forward again with confidence of the tenants of the theory. Other huge players in expanding modern attachment from scientists to therapists to a more general population include Stan Tatkin (2 episodes), Bonnie Badenoch (1 episode), Tina Payne-Bryson (2 episodes), Deb Dana (1 episode), Bruce Ecker (1 episode), Kristin Neff (1 episode) Alan Schore first coined the term “Modern Attachment,” and has published and taught extensively on this topic. His focus on the importance of the early right-to-right brain unconscious dance between the primary caregiver and child, affective co-regulation, and the development of the implicit sense of self led the way to integrate burgeoning neuroscience with attachment theory. His work continues and is revered. It is also highly complex, even for seasoned therapists. Your hosts of Therapist Uncensored, Sue Marriott and Ann Kelley amplify the cumulative and highly complex science above and translate it so the life-changing theory and research is available to those who would not otherwise know about it, or what to do with it. We focus specifically on the clinical and real-life application so the theory becomes useful to a wide range of people, in and out of therapy or universities. We developed the Modern Attachment- Spectrum as a model to help convey these ideas. Ann and Sue also specifically move away from a focus on disorder and pathology to a more compassionate, and accurate, focus on adaptation. Symptoms as solutions. They have also added a specific focus on context, including culture, power, race and class perspectives so that the unconscious white Western bias of a theory that is over 70 years old can be recognized. This model will continually update as new perspectives emerge, and they invite reflection on attachment theory from any marginalized group perspective. Click above to join us! More on the evolving understanding of the mind and relationships and modern attachment Importantly, our brains double in size very quickly after birth, and all that growth is constantly shaped and changed by our interactions. Your felt sense of your body learns am I safe, is my environment safe, and is my caregiver safe.When those early experiences with the caregiver go well, you’ll always have a healthy network hardwired into your body. Fortunately, no matter who you are and at any age, your mental models aren’t set in stone – they definitely can change. Deep personal exploration and new safe bottom-up emotional experiences can literally re-wire your brain, change your mind… and help build a new, healthy attachment system. Let’s talk about online therapy (ok so we got distracted… sorry 🙂 Online therapy is hard. It’s hard on the therapist just as much as it’s hard on the client. Neither person can feel as deeply the body based reactions that are so key to our non-verbal communication So what can we do about it? And how do we integrate modern attachment theory into an online environment? Try embracing the differences of an online environment instead of trying to ignore them. Experiment with different camera set ups and feedback techniques to really ensure as deep of an interpersonal connection as you can. Pick different words to describe emotions and feelings. Or try making more explicit asks of each other during your session. All in all, be true to yourself and take risks to explore the new online environment, and continue to be patient with yourself and the world around you More content like this on Therapist Uncensored podcast: It’s Not Me It’s My Amygdala – Advanced Course Connecting the Sciences of the Mind to Everyday Relationships FOUR hours of quality content and 3 CE’s available to professionals. Since you are this deep into our shownotes, then you are indeed one of our peeps and thus invited to be part of our clan 🙂 GET 10% off this signature course by using code OURCLAN! – And tons of free episodes: https://therapistuncensored.com/episodes/tu79-attachment-spectrum-and-the-nervous-system-quick-review-with-updates/ https://therapistuncensored.com/episodes/tu79-attachment-spectrum-and-the-nervous-system-quick-review-with-updates/ Neuroscience of Psychotherapy Episode 36, with guest Dr. Lou Cozolino It’s Not Crazy It’s a Solution to an Unsolvable Problem – Disorganized Attachment Episode 61
23 Heinä 202051min

TU125 – Dan Siegel & Tina Payne-Bryson: Parenting Under Stress
Learn the cheat code to parenting in a pandemic with Dr. Dan Siegel and Dr. Tina Payne-Bryson. We’re all struggling with some uncertainty and fear right now, and as a parent it can often be especially hard to know how to raise a child during the rise of Coronavirus. Join co-host Sue Marriott and expert guests Siegel and Payne-Bryson to unpack their new book The Power of Showing Up. In this episode they use interpersonal neurobiology to break down the science of attachment, and share what it means to show up. Applicable not just to those with children but in all relationships, their four legs of promoting secure attachment can change the way we relate to ourselves, and each other, for the better. Learn more about real-life application of IPNB and the relational sciences in general by visiting us at TherapistUncensored.com Shownotes for this episode: Who is Dr. Dan Siegel? The father of Interpersonal Neurobiology (IPNB) !! Yes, for real. Clinical professor of psychiatry at the UCLA School of Medicine and the founding co-director of the Mindful Awareness Research Center at UCLA Prolific author and thought leader Who is Dr. Tina Bryson? Psychotherapist and the Founder/Executive Director of The Center for Connection, a multidisciplinary clinical practice, and of The Play Strong Institute, a center devoted to the study, research, and practice of play therapy through a neurodevelopment lens Author of “Bottom Line for Baby” a comprehensive overview of parenting science New York Times bestselling author, “The Whole-Brain Child” and “No-Drama Discipline” What is showing up? First, showing up is more than just being physically there, it requires you to bring your full awareness to the present. Importantly, it doesn’t mean that you’re perfect, it just means that you’re present. It is the parenting cheat code, bringing a receptive awareness to your children is the most scientifically backed action you can take to help your child grow and develop. Coronavirus and quarantine causing parental freak outs…. Secure attachment is super important during times of stress, anxiety, and uncertainty. Attention is a precious resource, but it isn’t the same as awareness. There are two types of attention that we can have, especially during a global pandemic Focal attention is when we have attention awareness. It is what we know we are focused on, and it requires effort to maintain it. Think of it like a focused concentration Non-focal attention doesn’t involve that awareness. It is what happens when you get that little nagging feeling in the back of your mind The virus draws a lot of non-focal attention, we’re all constantly being distracted by our environment and the fear and anxiety that it generates. Consequently, our focal attention is more easily lost and we can often find ourselves getting overwhelmed and dysregulated So now is a time when we could all use a boost in our secure attachment system, to help stabilize and regulate those experiences. Especially with children, now is a time to be more aware of our presence and where we show up This can be a time for re-defining ourselves, to work form a bottom up perspective at our routines and habits and attention to better fine tune it to form healthier and happier relationships. What we can be doing? Attend to 4 things: Safety As parents, our children need to know us as a source of safety. Sometimes it can be even small things like being unpredictable or upset with customer service. That being said, there is no such thing as perfection. We’re all human and we all make mistakes, the important part is what you do after that. Showing up is all about coming back and repairing any ruptures that were made. As long as that repair is made, and the child learns in their body that the parent can be a stabilizing force, the attachment network can grow Talking about safety in an unsafe time is important as well. It helps cement the idea in the child that my parents keep me safe. But we can do that in a way that doesn’t overwhelm us with fear. We can get our children used to masks with silliness and play, or we can talk about doing XYZ because “it keeps us safer” and not because “it’s dangerous to go outside” Seen To help grow our child’s attachment system, and to help them feel safe, they need to feel understood. Recently parenting has gotten focused on what behavior is the child engaging in, but to show up and be present you need to feel the mind behind the action. It is important to ask, what is my child’s internal experience that is causing this behavior? Turning your attention to the child in this way tells them that when they share their thoughts and feelings with their parents it works well for them. They can feel relaxed and know that their parents really got them. This doesn’t always mean you have to agree with the child or their behavior, but really seeing where it’s coming from helps the child settle into their body and is a great way to co-regulate their experience. Also, don’t forget to make sure that you see yourself. Check in with your own mind and body. Remember that you can’t help others if you don’t know how to help yourself. Excitingly, it’s never too late to learn! Especially now, we can all change and adapt our internal working models to be more flexible and self-reflective. Soothed When the child can have an interactive experience of being both safe, and seen, then they can begin to be soothed. Together with the child, we can build the circuitry in our own brains to help regulate states of dysregulation, to move back towards harmony within your body. In this way, we can grow our window of tolerance to ensure that as we experience fear, anxiety, loneliness, etc. we can still stay integrated, grounded and connected. It is important to practice this with our children, as our ability to do that inner regulation comes from those safe experiences of interactive regulation. We don’t even need to fix every problem or do anything dramatic. As a parent just showing up in that moment and connecting with them, sitting in the discomfort with them, helps us both grow our window of tolerance and return our bodies back to a safe and integrated space. Secure Ultimately, all of these practices come together to help our children feel secure. The brain knows that if they have a need someone will show up for them. This helps them grow up to have healthier and more secure relationships with significant others, their peers, and their own children later in life. References “The Power of Showing Up: How Parental Presence Shapes Who Our Kids Become and How Their Brains Get Wired” by Dr. Dan Siegel and Dr. Tina Bryson “The Yes Brain” by Dr. Dan Siegel and Dr. Tina Bryson “The Power of Discord: Why the Ups and Downs of Relationships Are the Secret to Building Intimacy, Resilience, and Trust” by Dr. Claudia Gold and Dr. Ed Tronick “The Bottom Line for Baby: From Sleep Training to Screens, Thumb Sucking to Tummy Time–What the Science Says” by Dr. Tina Bryson Websites: www.drdansiegel.com www.tinabrson.com www.mindsightinstitute.com www.thecenterforconnection.org More content like this on Therapist Uncensored podcast: Neuroscience of Psychotherapy Episode 36 https://therapistuncensored.com/episodes/tu36-the-neuroscience-of-psychotherapy-an-interview-with-louis-cozolino/ It’s Not Crazy It’s a Solution to an Unsolvable Problem – Disorganized Attachment Episode 61 It’s Not Me It’s My Amygdala – Advanced Course Connecting the Sciences of the Mind to Everyday Relationships FOUR hours of quality content and 3 CE’s available to professionals. Since you are this deep into our shownotes, then you are indeed one of our peeps and thus invited to be part of our clan 🙂 GET 10% off this signature course by using code OURCLAN! – Don’t want the beast of the course but want a bit more of this mojo? Find us on FB or better yet, join our private online Neuronerd community to gain more access, get course discounts and support this valuable educational podcast freely be distributed to the world! Most importantly – share the hope and science of secure relating with somebody else so we can keep it going.
10 Heinä 20201h 24min

TU124 – Hip Hop as Therapy: Beat Making, Lyrics & Community Empowerment
Hip hop heals Our guests Dr. Eliot Gann and Dr. Raphael Travis shed light on how hip hop can help resolve the deep need for self-expression and trauma processing, especially in black and brown communities. Music-makers in hip hop culture are some of the greatest writers of our generation. These lyricsts use in depth metaphor, satire, and word play to express widely shared feelings. This process literally gives a voice to experiences that are otherwise unexplainable. Hip hop, rap and R&B are more than just music for the club. Connecting through music creation can be used to bridge disempowered groups. Our guests bring to light the importance of learning about and respecting this genre. It can engage people of culture (POC) to heal trauma, empower self-expression, and grow communities. In this second half of our interview, co-host Ann Kelley dives into the healing power of hip hop with Dr. Elliot Gannhael and Dr. Raphael Travis. We explore what makes hip hop unique, how it can be used in schools, detention centers and clinical work, as well as how we can each grow through hip hop culture. If you missed it – here is the first half of the conversation, Episode 123 The Healing Power of Fear, Protest, George Floyd and Community Empowerment with Dr. Raphael Travis. However don’t worry, this episode stands on it’s own and it is OK to just start here, you won’t be lost. Dr. Elliot Gann – Therapeutic Beat Making Executive Director at Today’s Future Sound (TFS) Creator of the Therapeutic Beat Making (TBM) model for healing and development D. of Clinical Psychology from the Wright Institute, specializing in Children and Adolescents Who is our expert guest, Dr. Raphael Travis? lyrics hip hop and rap Associate Professor and BSW Program Director at Texas State University’s School of Social Work Specializes in youth empowerment and community development through creative arts, specifically Hip-Hop culture Author of “The Healing Power of Hip Hop” Leads the Collaborative Research for Education, Art, and Therapeutic Engagement (CREATE) Lab which works with educators and artists to understand the therapeutic and educational benefits of music Show Notes for this Episode: Five Dimensions of Empowerment Hip Hop culture serves to foster five major dimensions of empowerment Esteem – it is a safe place to build ones confidence and experience, people can leave with an actualizable accomplishment that is fully their own. It helps develop a strong sense of agency in their own creation Resilience – it gives people an outlet to express trauma or struggle. It helps put words to the experiences they’ve had and is a constructive coping mechanism Growth – it requires an introspective atmosphere. Unpacking what the lyrics and beat mean to you opens up new possibilities within the body Community – it is a co-regulating process. Groups can come together to either create or celebrate hip hop, and through the collective experience of the beat there is a bond built. Change – it builds on lived experiences, and asks us to all better ourselves and the community around us through a collective growth and development What can hip hop and music therapy do? Hip hop can be used as a powerful therapeutic tool. It’s a relational, fun, and joyful way of letting your guard down. It is also an expressive, cathartic release. In addition, it also is a self-actualizing experience, the body gets to create something unique and special all on their own. Lyrics for self expression Hip hop serves as a vehicle to resolve the deep need for self-expression and trauma in black and brown communities. Lyricists and writers in hip hop culture are some of the greatest writers of our generation, they can use in depth metaphor, satire, and word play to express widely shared feelings. This process literally gives a voice to experiences that are otherwise unexplainable. Beats for self expression and regulation Often students and patients struggle to engage with insight-oriented work at the start. Beat making can help warm up the body, and lower the body’s defenses. Through beat making, the body relaxes and enters more readily into a flow state, an open and relaxed place, from which a deeper connection and growth can occur. Our Biases For people unfamiliar with hip hop and rap, or truthfully for white people in general, there is often an aversion to the genre. It can be experienced as violent, misogynistic, and overly sexualized. You aren’t wrong for hearing some of those themes in hip hop and rap, but there are a couple of things to keep in mind We’re only seeing a very small sample. Hip hop has a decades old history, and there are millions of songs in thousands of different sub-genera’s, not all hip hop has the same elements or themes Our experiences listening to each song are subjective. Each person filters each song through their own lived experiences and biases Specifically, white people’s bodies are primed from a young age by our society to hear energetic black voices, especially black male voices, as violent or scary. Also, we’re programmed to hear specific narratives of aggression or misogyny and to react negatively to sounds of black empowerment Hip hop arises out of struggle and is a way to voice trauma, or an outlet to express healing from that inter-generational experience. On some level it has to address graphic material The most violent or explicit songs get pushed in the national market. Studio executives, who are primarily white, have a financial incentive to sell and promote the most sensationalized and explicit songs because the listeners experiences catharsis while they consume those fantasies and desires Resources “Using Therapeutic Beat Making and lyrics for empowerment” by Dr. Raphael Travis and Dr. Elliot Gann Breaking Down The Therapeutic Beat Making Model with Dr. Elliot Gann aka Phillipdrummond “The Healing Power of Hip Hop (Intersection of Race, Ethnicity, and Culture)” by Dr. Raphael Travis “Hip Hop, empowerment, and therapeutic beat-making: Potential solutions for summer learning loss, depression, and anxiety in youth” by Dr. Raphael Travis “Rap Music and Empowerment of Today’s Youth: Evidence in Everyday Music Listening, Music Therapy, and Commercial Rap Music” by Dr. Raphael Travis “Strategies and mechanisms in musical affect self-regulation: A new model” by Margarida Baltazar, and Suvi Saarikallio “White Fragility” by Dr. Robin Diangelo Black Trans Advocacy Coalition Contact Information – Elliot Gann E-mail: egann@todaysfuturesound.org Website: https://todaysfuturesound.org/about/ or at youtube.com/todaysfuturesound Twitter: @TFS_beats Music Mixes: https://audiomack.com/artist/dj-hoodwin TRIO Conference Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iL1_OpyIa-Q&feature=youtu.be Contact Information & Resources – Dr. Raphael Travis E-mail: rtravis@txstate.edu or raptjr@gmail.com ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Raphael_Travis Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FlowstoryATX/ IG/Twitter: @raptjr @FlowStoryATX Music Mixes: https://audiomack.com/artist/dj-hoodwin TRIO Conference Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iL1_OpyIa-Q&feature=youtu.be #HealingPowerofHipHop #MUZUZE #EMPYD #CREATELABTXST _____________ BOOK WE ARE LOVING RIGHT NOW – get it on audible for free right here. “My Grandmother’s Hands: Racialized Trauma and the Pathway to Mending Our Hearts and Bodies” by Resmaa Menakem _____________ Our course on Attachment and Neuroscience – It’s Not Me It’s My Amygdala, is now available! Four (!) hours of curated content on modern attachment and healing. It is designed for anyone wanting to deepen security in themselves or those close to you (CE’s available for clinicians). You’ve been interested enough to listen and dig into the shownotes, so you are our people and we are yours. Get 10% of the course with code: OURCLAN. CLICK HERE TO CHECK OUT THE COURSE Join like-minded peers promoting the relational sciences as a Patreon Neuronerd supporter of the show.
30 Kesä 20201h 8min

TU123 – Narratives of Fear: George Floyd, Protest, and Community Empowerment with Dr. Raphael Travis
George Floyd. Breonna Taylor. Tony McDade. Sandra Bland. Rayshard Brooks. Tamir Rice. Emmett Till… and so on. The violence enacted by the criminal justice system isn’t new, so what makes this moment feel so different? Dr. Raphael Travis and Dr. Elliott Gann join co-host Ann Kelley to break down the now global protests against the murder of George Floyd. Together they explore the role of youth empowerment, coronavirus, and narrative storytelling in helping fuel the biggest social movement in decades. This episode focuses on Dr. Travis’ experience, the second episode (see link below) dives into Dr. Elliott Gann’s innovate and cutting edge work as well. This is a 2-part conversation on community empowerment and using hip hop – beat making and lyrics – as a therapeutic goal. Find episode TU24 Beat-Making, Lyrics and Community Empowerment with Dr. Elliot Gann and Dr. Raphael Travis with right here Who is Dr. Raphael Travis? Associate Professor and MSW Program Director at Texas State University’s School of Social Work Founder and Executive Director of Flow Story, PLLC Specializes in youth empowerment and community development through creative arts, specifically Hip-Hop culture Author of “The Healing Power of Hip Hop” Leads the Collaborative Research for Education, Art, and Therapeutic Engagement (CREATE) Lab which works with educators and artists to understand the therapeutic and educational benefits of music Show Notes for this Episode…. Why now? The energy of the youth Like most social movements throughout history, this one is largely being led by youth Police brutality and white supremacy systemically cut off healthy development of communities by taking mothers and fathers How can anyone feel safe or like they belong if they know they are always at risk of that disruption Expansion of hyper-surveillance results in the buildup of the stress response in the body Youthful energy to take that inter-generational trauma and say “we’re not putting up with this anymore” Even though this is led by youth, these experiences of violence is nothing new, the story is the same but the particulars are different Narrative development Social media and the expansion of counter-narratives allows for a proliferation of alternative visions of the world Those serve to counter the mainstream stereotypes and understandings to force people to view events in a different light Expansion of SEL (Social and Emotional Learning) within schools and society develops greater empathy and capacity for self-reflection Forcing white people to step out of their comfort zone, a shift in our own internal narrative, a greater opening up of communal recognition Coronavirus Living in a state of constant fear and anxiety about going out in public is a new feeling for white people, the pandemic as an unseen threat that could take you at any time Experiencing just a fraction of the fear people of color experience helps make people more receptive towards shifting their own internal narrative It generated an expanded understanding of communal responsibility, a narrative shift away from an individual self-focused approached to risk towards a great communal goal What has been surprising? Dr. Travis was hopeful and surprised by the amount of diversity within this movement. The increased messaging that silence is complicity helps force people into that un-comfort zone which allows them to question their own fears, assumptions, and narratives. It gives people who feel like they otherwise couldn’t have engaged permission to now. Where do we go from here? We still need consistent pressure and energy. However, we’ve seen promising changes at the level of policy and at the level of the body. First, policy reforms have happened, and will continue to happen, and we should continue to push for them with our presence and our voice. Also, societal reforms are also happening at the level of each individual body. Indeed, there is a narrative shift within each us as we move to be more open to connection, empathy, and understanding. We all need to continue to pay attention, listen, and grow together as a community as this develops. Resources “The Healing Power of Hip Hop (Intersection of Race, Ethnicity, and Culture)” by Dr. Raphael Travis “Using Therapeutic Beat Making and Lyrics for Empowerment” by Dr. Raphael Travis and Dr. Elliot Gann Breaking Down The Therapeutic Beat Making Model with Dr. Elliot Gann aka Phillipdrummon “Say Their Names” by Kadir Nelson “White Fragility – Why It’s So Hard for White People to Talk about Racism” by Dr. Robin Diangelo Black Trans Advocacy Coalition “Race After Technology: Abolitionist Tools for the New Jim Code” by Ruha Benjamin “White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack” by Peggy Mcintosh “White Awake: An Honest Look at What it Means to be White” by Daniel Hill Contact Information & Resources: Find Dr. Travis here – E-mail: rtravis@txstate.edu or raptjr@gmail.com ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Raphael_Travis Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FlowstoryATX/ IG/Twitter: @raptjr @FlowStoryATX Music Mixes: https://audiomack.com/artist/dj-hoodwin TRIO Conference Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iL1_OpyIa-Q&feature=youtu.be #HealingPowerofHipHop #MUZUZE #EMPYD #CREATELABTXST Find Dr. Gann here – egann@todaysfuturesound.org Website: https://todaysfuturesound.org/about/ or at youtube.com/todaysfuturesound Twitter: @TFS_beats Music Mixes: https://audiomack.com/artist/dj-hoodwin TRIO Conference Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iL1_OpyIa-Q&feature=youtu.be _____________ BOOK WE ARE LOVING RIGHT NOW – get it on audible for free right here. “My Grandmother’s Hands: Racialized Trauma and the Pathway to Mending Our Hearts and Bodies” by Resmaa Menakem _____________ Other Episodes You May Enjoy – TU120: Finding Security During Coronavirus Isolation with Dr. David Elliott TU118: Mental Health Support During this Damn Coronavirus Pandemic _____________ Our course on Attachment and Neuroscience – It’s Not Me It’s My Amygdala, is now available to everyone! Four (!) hours of curated content on modern attachment and healing. It is designed for anyone wanting to deepen security in themselves or those close to you (CE’s available for clinicians). You’ve been interested enough to listen and dig into the shownotes, so you are are people and we are yours. Get 10% of the course with code: OURCLAN. CLICK HERE TO CHECK OUT THE COURSE Join like-minded peers promoting the relational sciences as a Patreon Neuronerd supporter of the show.
22 Kesä 202051min

TU122: Loving & Living with Adult Attention Deficit Disorder (or ADHD) with Ari Tuckman
When we think of ADHD, we often imagine a restless & fidgety child who loses focus rather than the grown up parent or partner these kids eventually become. It is a legit neurological condition – yet adults with ADHD or ADD often believe that they are forgetful, lazy, selfish & disorganized. Unfortunately sometimes so do their partners. This episode will help you appreciate your unique gifts, or value your distractible partner. “ADHD doesn’t create new problems, it just exacerbates the universal ones.” Co-host Ann Kelley speaks with Ari Tuckman, psychologist, certified sex therapist who specializing in ADHD within relationships, and he sheds light on how ADHD can impact our relationships, from conflict to sex, and outlines ways to improve both. In relationships, couples often fall into imbalance, over-functioning and under-functioning. You recognize it – the one who manages order and responsibilities (aka “control freak”) and the other looking for spontaneity and fun (aka “irresponsible one”). Who is Ari Tuckman? Ari Tuckman, PsyD, CST is a psychologist and certified sex therapist in private practice specializing in diagnosing and treating children, teens, and adults with ADHD, as well as couples and sex therapy. He has appeared on CNN, National Public Radio, and XM Radio and been quoted in The New York Times, USA Today, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, USnews.com, The Daily Mail (UK), and many other media outlets. See his full bio below. Understanding Adult ADHD – today’s episode Ari advocates for ADHD awareness so adults and therapists can actively recognize it in others because it does not just affect children. These children grow up and continue to have ADHD make up about 4% of the general population, that is 1 in 25. Effects of non-diagnosed ADHD can be painful and complex: common effects include anxiety, depression, bipolar, marital discord, and substance abuse issues. If you don’t look for symptoms of ADHD, you may not find it, and that is painful and problematic for everyone involved. What can we see in our office, partners, and ourselves to know if we have ADHD? Not everyone with attentional issues has the classic symptoms of being hyperactive. It shows up in adults as inattentive symptoms like time management, disorganization, forgetfulness, procrastination, and misplacing things. That is why in adults what you actually see in Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD). When someone in your immediate family has it, there’s a 25% chance that you might have it too. People who have distractibility will see the symptoms show up in many stages of their life – childhood, college, as a young adult. The symptoms can show up in their job, or at home. Untreated or unrecognized attention issues affects school performance, career attainment, lifelong learnings, car accidents, relationship satisfaction – it’s always there and impacts your life interactions. When it goes undiagnosed it can drastically influence your self-esteem – but when diagnosed you can have a better understanding of your behavior. Medication can work very well, risk/side effects are very low, not addictive if used appropriately, and can reduce substance abuse problems when addressed first. Why give a stimulate to someone that would seemingly be “hyperactive?” The medications act as “brake fluid” so those affected are able to “hit the brakes” more easily before acting. When adults take ADHD medication, it gives them the ability to limit or be aware of thoughts that deter them from the task at hand. Without the medication, the thought of the task at hand can develop into many thoughts leading to being distracted, possibly forgetting, and then punishing themselves for forgetting. Ultimately, this leads to negative thoughts, anxiety, or those close to them believing the task is being neglected. The person with more focus can become bothered by this repeated behavior and the partner with ADHD will either become down and depressed and/or angry and reactive when they feel targeted by the non-ADHD partner. Generally, both will happen. One can become angry and reactive when receiving negative feedback and down and depressed when feeling they can’t do anything right. People with ADHD are capable of being very focused during specific moments, like when receiving negative feedback, but then they are held to that standard at all times. Spouses begin to become angry because they witness the ADHD person focus on some things and not on others. They can get triggered and feel neglected. A neurological syndrome It doesn’t create new problems, it just exacerbates the universal ones. The common solution to the problem between a partner with ADHD and the non-ADHD person: the person undiagnosed just needs to step up! This is not sustainable or realistic, it’s like asking a depressed person to cheer up! The less obvious solution: The non-ADHD partner also needs to learn to step back, accept uncertainty, learn to manage their own anxiety, and choose their battles. Both partners can negotiate and express expectations but have understanding and compassion. Ann and Ari provide examples of issues that can arise between a couple of a non-ADHD and a person with ADHD and how they can work as a team to resolve it. Ari speaks about his book, ADHD After Dark and about the relationship between ADHD and sexual relationships based on his survey of over 4,000 individuals and 72 questions. _____ RESOURCES: Additional resources for this episode: Ari Tuckman’s Website http://adultadhdbook.com/ Ari Tuckman’s Website https://tuckmanpsych.com/ Ari Tuckman’s Book: More Attention, Less Deficit: Success Strategies for Adults with ADHD Ari Tuckman’s Book: ADHD After Dark: Better Sex Life, Better Relationship CHADD.org – leading nonprofit organization serving people affected by ADHD. These and other resources have been collected for you on our Resources page! ___ Ari Tuckman’s Bio: Ari Tuckman, PsyD, CST is a psychologist, Certified Sex Therapist, and ADHD expert in private practice in West Chester, PA. His fourth book (ADHD After Dark: Better Sex Life, Better Relationship) helps couples improve their sexual and relationship satisfaction. He has done more than 400 presentations and interviews across America and in nine countries. You can find information about his books, upcoming presentations, and recordings of past presentations at adultADHDbook.com._ Our course on Attachment and Neuroscience – It’s Not Me It’s My Amygdala, is now available to everyone! Four (!) hours of curated content on modern attachment and healing. It is designed for anyone wanting to deepen security in themselves or those close to you (CE’s available for clinicians). You’ve been interested enough to listen and dig into the shownotes, so you are are people and we are yours. Get 10% of the course with code: OURCLAN. 🙂 CLICK HERE TO CHECK OUT THE COURSE ______ Want to join our community? We are on Patreon! You can become a Neuronerd supporter and help the show continue to grow! Join our exclusive community of Therapist Uncensored Neuronerds for as little as $5 a month (or become a Co-executive Producer for $25/month)! Increase your access, join a kick-ass like-minded community, get discounts on our courses and get exclusive content. Help us create a ripple of security by supporting us in freely sharing the science of relationships around the globe! NEURONERDS UNITE! Click here to sign up.
19 Touko 202058min

TU121: Redefining the Purpose of Relationships During Quarantine with Stan Tatkin
With the tsunami of unclear and contradictory yet potentially life-threatening information coming at us right now in quaratine – it’s no wonder there is so much conflict within groups that are/were quarantining together. Reasonable people can interpret the suggestions very differently, in this episode we go into how to navigate how to manage right now. Why Stan Tatkin? Stan Tatkin was one of as the first guests on the Therapist Uncensored Podcast and is so awesome, we are bringing him back for a second interview. (Listen to the first episode here.)He is one of the best translators of the science to application in the real world, so we really want to connect our audience with him. He’s has a wealth of resources for ya! See full bio below. Bringing security to your partnerships during COVID-19 – today’s episode During this Coronavirus pandemic, the existential threat is more apparent and strain within a couple starts to become more apparent. Partners are faced with understanding the goals of their relationship and whether or not they are moving in the right direction. Reasons to be together beyond loving each other and having children together. Many have been faced with breakups, running away, move in, or getting married during this existential time. Having an understanding that there is always an existential threat every day but we are being faced with it more closely during this time. Automation – getting off auto-pilot. Before and during the pandemic our partnered relationships have been on auto-pilot where “you know your partner,” react out of memory/trauma, or take your relationship for granted. PACT – Psychobiological Approach to Couples Therapy Homosapiens by nature are aggressive, war-like, comparing, and opportunistic and are being flighty because of the pandemic. How do pair-bound all of the time and not when things are going wrong/when we need more safety? By nature, we are pack animals and are built to be interdependent and have a shared purpose with a partner. (Ex: survive and thrive) With your partner, create an agreement, a culture, and a shared vision and purpose for being together. Love is not enough Emotions can fluctuate. A state of purpose and a goal is what can remain consistent in a partnership. Insecure model – “It’s my way or the highway,” where the individual is “pro-self” not “pro-relationship.” With attachment, we take the injustices and take them to our future relationships. Every couple has a duty to design their own ethos and culture, to layout ground rules of “what we do and don’t do.” Examples: “We protect each other. Our relationship always comes first. We support each other to perform well but not at the cost of the relationship. We are always working towards bringing peace and harmony to the relationship.” Partners who do not agree on core values and will continue to disassociate. Mature long-running relationships that will last a lifetime where partners vow to operate from principles of fairness, justice, sensitivity, cooperation, creating win-win outcomes where they move together towards the same goal. Be collaborative about an issue or creating a new goal together to be on the same page on thoughts and feelings. Sue and Stan provide conversation examples of how that can be accomplished. Commitment (the C-word) Committing to making the partnership as successful as possible. People who are threatened will create threats. Single security about understanding what each individual feels, self-correct and approach from a friendly way to resolve the conflict. Only one needs to remember to self-correct to move towards resolution and the other will follow. Co-regulation – having each partner be active towards regulating each other to shift towards taking care of each other. Pay to play In adulthood, there is conditional love, which makes us more accountable for each other. The couple and the principles are the guiding light on where to go. During this pandemic time, is a good time to think about your life purpose with your primary partner and your loved ones. Knowing that our time is limited and being present with your loved ones. Guiding principles of secure functioning to thinking about your life meaning and purpose to overcome these threats. _____ RESOURCES: Additional resources for this episode: PACT Institute – Psychobiological Approach to Couple Therapy (Offers global therapist training programs and couple retreats) We Do: Saying Yes to a Relationship of Depth, True Connection, and Enduring Love by Stan Tatkin Your Brain on Love: The Neurobiology of Healthy Relationships by Stan Tatkin Stan Tatkin’s Ted Talk: Relationships Are Hard, But Why? Stan Tatkin’s Instagram Facebook Twitter These and other resources have been collected for you on our Resources page! ___ Stan Tatkin’s Bio: Clinician, author, PACT developer, and co-founder of the PACT Institute, Dr. Stan Tatkin teaches at UCLA, maintains a private practice in Southern California, and leads PACT programs in the US and internationally. He is the author Wired for Dating, Wired for Love, Your Brain on Love, and co-author of Love and War in Intimate Relationships. Dr. Stan Tatkin is on the board of directors of Lifespan Learning Institute and serves as an advisory board member of Relationships First, a nonprofit organization founded by Harville Hendrix and Helen LaKelly Hunt. __ Our course on Attachment and Neuroscience – It’s Not Me It’s My Amygdala, is now available to everyone! Four (!) hours of curated content on modern attachment and healing. It is designed for anyone wanting to deepen security in themselves or those close to you (CE’s available for clinicians). You’ve been interested enough to listen and dig into the shownotes, so you are are people and we are yours. Get 10% of the course with code: OURCLAN. 🙂 CLICK HERE TO CHECK OUT THE COURSE ______ Therapist Uncensored is on Patreon! Gain greater access and support this cool content getting out to the world You can become a Neuronerd supporter and help the show continue to grow! Join our exclusive community of Therapist Uncensored Neuronerds for as little as $5 a month (or become a Co-executive Producer for $25/month)! Increase your access, join a kick-ass like-minded community, get discounts on our courses and get exclusive content. Help us create a ripple of security by supporting us in freely sharing the science of relationships around the globe! NEURONERDS UNITE! Click here to sign up. BOOK of the MONTH – get it on audible for free right here. Maybe You Should Talk to Someone by Lori Gottlieb (interview with her coming soon…)
8 Touko 202053min

TU120: Finding Security and Healing Attachment with Dr. David Elliott
Use a proven mindfulness-based technique of imagery to cope with quarantine and promote healing. Is this pandemic making your nervous system crunchy? Let’s work on some healing techniques in the mean time. Find out how to use one of the Elliott and Brown’s 3 pillars of healing attachment to cope during this society-wide emotional hotbox. Using the first pillar of the three pillars of healing attachment, using the imaginings of your mind to leverage security, David explains how this practice can be beneficial during a time where we’re looking for connection to regulate and heal. Why Dr. David Elliott We are pleased to bring Dr. Elliott back for a second interview. We were so enamored with his co-authored book Attachment Disturbances in Adults: Treatment for Comprehensive Repair, that we stayed connected and are now working together on an exciting new project to bring this empirically-validated work with trauma to more of you. His full bio is below. Using imagery to help find security and attachment healing during COVID 19 – today’s episode Our attachment system is designed to seek proximity especially during threat, danger, and distress. So in this time of needed distance from one another our nervous system is being especially challenged. For some of us, sheltering in place with others allows us to turn to one another for emotional and physical comfort. However there are millions of people across the globe who are sheltering in isolation or in unsafe or unsupportive environments. They are missing another persons comforting support and touch. David speaks personally from this experience because he is currently sheltering in place alone – that is, away from his family – so his advice is coming from a place of knowing. The Three Pillars of Healing Attachment Elliott and his colleagues have developed a model for the treatment of early attachment and healing called the 3 pillars model discussed in detail in episode 34. In today’s episode we discuss the tenets of the first pillar – the power of the mind to imagine – the essential elements of connection and security needed for coping during this COVID quarantine crisis. Mindfulness and guided imagination literally helps to promote neurological growth. Ann and David provide examples of ways athletes and musicians use imagery to improve their performance. David then leads us through a mindful exercise based on the tenets of the first pillar. Through a guided exercise, he helps us create and be with an imagined “safe other” which provides our minds with the sense of social and emotional connection. Our bodies often can not distinguish between the real and imagined and our social-engagement system can respond with the soothing and healing connections that our bodies need during stress. CLICK HERE to access the audio of this mindfulness demonstration. _____ RESOURCES: Additional resources for this episode: Stand-alone mindfulness exercise download here Contact Dr. Elliott directly at http://www.davidelliottphd.com Please refer to our previous episode with Dr. David Elliott for even more resources in the audio and show notes. – TU34: Treating Attachment Difficulties with Dr. David Elliott Attachment Disturbances in Adults Treatment for Comprehensive Repair (2016) Daniel Brown and David Elliott These and other resources have been collected for you on our Resources page! ___ Dr David Elliott’s Bio: Dr. Elliott comes from an academic career in psychology from Harvard University. He gained experience at the Tufts University Counseling Center, the Outpatient Psychiatry Clinic of St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center in Brighton, Massachusetts, and McLean Hospital, the psychiatric teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. Recognizing from an early age that there are many dimensions to human experience, any and all of which can contribute to well-being or to difficulty, Dr. Elliott has maintained a commitment to learning and understanding the whole range of human possibility — from the deepest confusions and struggles of psychosis, to the patterns of personality that create personal and relational conflicts, to the development of the self in ways that promote both independence and intimacy, and to higher levels of growth that allow for flourishing and even a recognition of oneself as beyond the limits of the personal self. __ Our course on Attachment and Neuroscience – It’s Not Me It’s My Amygdala, is now available to everyone! Four (!) hours of curated content on modern attachment and healing. It is designed for anyone wanting to deepen security in themselves or those close to you (CE’s available for clinicians). You’ve been interested enough to listen and dig into the shownotes, so you are are people and we are yours. Get 10% of the course with code: OURCLAN. 🙂 CLICK HERE TO CHECK OUT THE COURSE ______ Want to join our private community? Therapist Uncensored is now on Patreon! You can become a Neuronerd supporter and help the show continue to grow! Join our exclusive community of Therapist Uncensored Neuronerds for as little as $5 a month (or become a Co-executive Producer for $25/month)! Increase your access, join a kick-ass like-minded community, get discounts on our courses and get exclusive content. Help us create a ripple of security by supporting us in freely sharing the science of relationships around the globe! NEURONERDS UNITE! Click here to sign up. BOOK of the MONTH – get it on audible for free right here. For the Love of Men A New Vision for Mindful Masculinity by Liz Plank While our book of the month is Liz Plank’s (Episode TU119) book on mindful masculinity, we want to highly recommend Attachment Disturbances in Adults Treatment for Comprehensive Repair (2016) Daniel Brown and David Elliott It literally should be in every therapist’s library, it’s that comprehensive.
27 Huhti 202048min

TU119: For the Love of Men, Rethinking Masculinity with Liz Plank
It isn’t a war between the genders, it’s a war between those interested in freedom of individual expression and equality, and those wedded to and defending the patriarchal script. “I measure activism based on impact… .” – Liz Plank In this episode, co-host Sue Marriott speaks with Liz Plank, one of the worlds most powerful and influential voices for gender and policy. Who is Liz Plank? Liz Plank is an award-winning journalist and senior producer at Vox Media. Her TedxTalk, How to Be a Man: A Woman’s Guide inspired her first book, For the Love of Men: A New Vision for Mindful Masculinity, where she “offers a smart, insightful, and deeply-researched guide for what we’re all going to do about toxic masculinity. For both women looking to guide the men in their lives and men who want to do better and just don’t know how.” Mediaite’s Most Influential in New Media 50 Most Influential Women by Marie Claire Forbes’ 30 Under 30 in Media Episode 119 Show Notes: Why do we need more storytelling around men? More progress regarding issues around domestic & sexual violence if men were more involved in the conversation. Human rights are not a finite resource and when there is more equality, the better it is for everyone. Open the conversation for men to talk about masculinity and what it means to be a man because they do not feel safe doing so. Having an empathic conversation about feminism that includes all genders, a movement that benefits the whole society. Rewriting Gender Roles The lack of conversations regarding masculinity between men. Following gender roles based on societal pressures and family development. Exploring historical and cultural examples of how gender roles change and vary to give men permission to explore their identity. A shift in the younger generation being accepting of gender fluidity. What It Means To Be A Man Identifying as a provider when many jobs traditionally done by men are disappearing or moving overseas. Starting to have the opportunity to have an identity outside of their career. Have both genders shoulder the emotional burden and do the work to heal. Narcissism & Toxic Masculinity There is a higher percentage of narcissism in men. Have more female leadership represented in entertainment & media to provide an understanding of female complexity. Education Encouraging curriculum that teaches anti-violence, anti-sexual assault, verbal consent, emotional intelligence, and interpersonal relationships. A universal understanding that we all experience similar emotions and social anxiety so we can all advocate for each other. Liz’s Influence: Wanting to measure her activism based on impact. Wanting everyone to feel welcome to this conversation on masculinity and help men go through their emotional labor. Continue to open the conversation for men of influence to discuss masculinity openly. Masculinity Influence: Brad Pitt speaking openly about masculinity to give others permission to do the same. Tim Ferriss expressing that external performance is not where “success” is and inner work is the harder challenge but more important. Liz’s Recommendations: The Will to Change: Men, Masculinity, and Love by Bell Hooks Thomas Page McBee Wade Davis Learn about and connect with Liz: For the Love of Men: A New Vision for Mindful Masculinity TED Talk How to Be a Man, A Woman’s Guide Twitter Instagram Web Series _____ Our course on Attachment and Neuroscience – It’s Not Me It’s My Amygdala, is now available to everyone! Four (!) hours of curated content on modern attachment and healing. It is designed for anyone wanting to deepen security in themselves or those close to you (CE’s available for clinicians). You’ve been interested enough to listen and dig into the shownotes, so you are are people and we are yours. Get 10% of the course with code: OURCLAN. 🙂 CLICK HERE TO CHECK OUT THE COURSE ______ Want to help Therapist Uncensored keep going? We are on Patreon! You can become a Neuronerd supporter and help the show continue to grow! Join our exclusive community of Therapist Uncensored Neuronerds for as little as $5 a month (or become a Co-executive Producer for $25/month)! Increase your access, join a kick-ass like-minded community, get discounts on our courses and get exclusive content. Help us create a ripple of security by supporting us in freely sharing the science of relationships around the globe! NEURONERDS UNITE! Click here to sign up. BOOK of the MONTH – get it on audible for free right here For the Love of Men A New Vision for Mindful Masculinity by Liz Plank
8 Huhti 202050min






















