Course Description
John M. Gottman & Julie Schwartz Gottman – The Siegel-Gottman Summit – Neuroscience Meets Family Science – Daniel J. Siegel
John M. Gottman & Julie Schwartz Gottman – The Siegel-Gottman Summit – Neuroscience Meets Family Science – Daniel J. Siegel
Don’t miss this exciting opportunity to immerse yourself in a conversation of mindfulness and couples therapy. This groundbreaking training offers you the chance of a lifetime to watch three of the greatest thinkers in their fields as they weave together independent approaches that will empower and transform your work with individuals and couples. Ā Learn how to move couples from rigid and chaotic states to a state of empathy, compassion, and flexibility through mindfulness.
Dr. Dan Siegel has made one of the most exciting scientific discoveries of the last twenty years: how we focus our attention shapes the structure of our brain. Ā He will masterfully provide an entertaining and clear framework for understanding the human mind and its connection to relationships.
In response, the Gottmans will skillfully demonstrate-through live video taped sessions with couples, clinical vignettes, and experiential audience participation-how to interweave mindfulness into your couples work using evidenced-based interventions from Gottman Method Couples Therapy.
This workshop provides a synthesis of Interpersonal Neurobiology woven together with key Gottman Method Interventions. Ā You will learn how to identify chaotic and rigid states of mind and help move individuals and couples toward states of flexibility, compassion, openness, empathy and attunement. Ā As a result, they will experience deeper connection, renewed intimacy, greater self-compassion, and healing from relationship wounds.
- Summarize the three domains of the Gottman Method Sound Relationship House.
- Apply principles of Interpersonal Neurobiology to clinical assessment.
- Describe several ways in which the Gottman Method can be integrated with principles of Interpersonal Neurobiology.
- Define the self-organizing aspect of the mind and mental health.
- Identify several Gottman Method interventions that promote self-integration.
- List at least seven aspects of integrative prefrontal functions.
- Discuss the ways in which attachment patterns and couple relationship dynamics intersect.
- Identify the overlap between the social and regulatory circuits of the brain.
- Discuss the four ways in which experience alters the function and structure of the brain.
- Define integration and its functional outcomes.
- Describe how attachment categories may be altered by psychotherapy.
- Identify how Gottman method may induce neuroplastic changes in the brain.
DAY ONE
Self-Awareness and Self-Soothing
- Integration of consciousness
- Increasing self-awareness and self-compassion
- Emotional regulation
- The science of Diffuse Physiological Arousal
- The clinical treatment of -ĀFlooding’
Gottman Intervention: Self Soothing
Connecting Your Brain’s Hemispheres and Connecting with Your Partner
- Integrating the verbal/logical left side and the nonverbal/sensual right side of the brain
- Enabling the individual to translate sensations into words
- Developing sensitivity to meta-emotional mismatches within a couple
- Intimate connection in all six emotional command systems
- Receptivity to the partner’s unique perspective
Gottman Intervention: Meta-Emotion Mismatch: Untruth vs. truth sensory experience
Moving Past Trauma to Receptivity
- Understanding vertical integration: Gut, heart, lungs and brain
- Increasing awareness with our bodies
- Increasing emotional receptivity and attunement to others by listening to the body
- Implications for working with trauma in couples
- Strengthening the couple relationship by surfacing past trauma
Case example: Sexual abuse
Contextualizing Negativity in a Deeper Story
- Memory integration
- Moving traumatic memories into a greater state of consciousness
- Constructing autobiographical memories
- Identifying a partner’s Internal Working Model
- Increasing the sensitivity of both partners to negative, reactive responses
Gottman Intervention: Internal Working Model
DAY TWO
Building Attachment, Understanding and Compassion
- State integration: intrastate, interstate and interpersonal states
- Build self-esteem by exploring insecure attachments
- Explore the individual deep seeded dreams that lead to gridlocked conflict in a couple
- Uncovering those dreams builds understanding between partners
Gottman Intervention: Stress reducing conversation
Creating a Partnership within Yourself and With Your Partner
- Interpersonal integration: honoring and supporting differences in each other
- Shame and self-loathing act to split a person into multiple selves
- Helping clients establish an integrated self through self-acceptance and compassion
- Deepening fondness and admiration between partners
- Creating a unified partnership with mutual respect
Gottman Intervention: Fondness and admiration
Building Connections for a Lifetime
- Temporal integration: making maps of time
- Finite role of time in shaping the human life
- Seeking certainty, but change is the only constant
- Building rituals of connection for creating a meaningful life together
Gottman Intervention: Building rituals of connection
Increased Attunement and Implications for Working with Affairs
- Mindsight and freedom
- Being receptive and open with others encourages neuroplasticity and increases attuned communications
- Clinical applications of openness to healing from an affair
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.