The Path Back to Connection: Healing Attachment Wounds Through the Deep Brain
The Path Back to Connection: Healing Attachment Wounds Through the Deep Brain
Information
Date & Time
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Location
Description
Clinicians recognize that healing attachment wounds is central to trauma treatment, yet many traditional approaches often fall short by emphasizing cognitive and behavioral strategies while overlooking the body's implicit, neurobiological memory of relational trauma. This workshop offers a crucial, integrated perspective, bridging established attachment theory with cutting-edge, neuroscience-informed interventions that target the deep brain—the subcortical engine of safety, regulation, and connection. Join us to move beyond talk therapy and gain an integrated understanding of how deep brain processes influence attachment formation, regulation, and repair. You’ll acquire foundational knowledge and practical tools to address the physiological and emotional dimensions of attachment wounding, helping your clients move toward genuine safety, connection, and integration.
Educational Goal
Learning Objectives
Participants will be able to:
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Examine key principles of attachment theory and Deirdre Fay’s Fundamental Needs framework to gain an understanding of attachment wounding.
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Describe the basic neurobiology of the deep brain, including how subcortical structures contribute to attachment, regulation, and defensive responses.
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Explain how attachment wounding manifests in physiological and emotional symptoms related to disrupted safety and connection.
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Discuss how the Safe and Sound Protocol (SSP) supports nervous system regulation and facilitates deeper relational healing.
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Explain how Deep Brain Reorienting (DBR) addresses implicit, subcortical patterns associated with attachment trauma to promote integration and resolution.
Target Audience
- Addiction Professional
- Counselor
- Marriage & Family Therapist
- Psychologist
- Social Worker
Presenters
Financially Sponsored By
- Sabino Recovery