Relational Trauma Repair (RTR) takes the guesswork out of incorporating experiential work into programming and practice. The webinars are happening on January 8, 15, and 29, and February 5, 2025, all from 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM CT. A loss of connection with the authentic, feeling self and comfortable connection with others, can be the fallout from trauma. The experiential and embodied processes in Relational Trauma Repair (RTR) activate the social engagement system in service of healing. They give participants practice in tuning in on themselves and connecting in new, more satisfying ways with others.
Sociometrics engage and bond groups, getting participants talking about themselves and to each other in an embodied healing process. Sociometrics are contained, psychoeducational, experiential exercises designed to fit into treatment programs, outpatient programs, and therapy groups. They help to make experiential group therapy focused and contained, revealing both intra-personal and inter-personal dynamics around the issues that adolescents, teens, and young adults face in their recovery.
Recovery 2.0 Membership includes weekly live presentations from leading authors, coaches, therapists, yoga/meditation instructors and nutritionists. We offer premier, direct access to some of the most powerful and uplifting teachers in the world.
The anxious and the avoidant attachment styles often find each other and it can lead to some serious dysfunction. The anxiously attached fears abandonment, the avoidantly attached fears intimacy, and when they come together, their attachment wounds are exposed and activated. In this webinar, we will explore both of these attachment styles and the relationship cycle between them.
The most common form of relational trauma is a consistent disruption in a child’s sense of love and safety in the family system. It is through these disruptions and reinforced through cultural and societal norms, that destructive patterns and self-beliefs are born.
In honor of World Suicide Prevention Day (September 10) and National Suicide Prevention Week (September 6-12), we’re rallying supporters across the country and the globe to amplify a conversation about suicide prevention and take action to reverse the growing rate of suicide. Together we can help people see that there is so much WORTH LIVING FOR.
What is Relational Trauma? What causes it? In this session Heather Monroe, LCSW will go into all the aspects of how Relational Trauma shows up in our lives. Relational trauma typically occurs in childhood and can even be perceived as “normal” behavior. The most common form of relational trauma is a consistent disruption in a child’s sense of love and safety in the family system. It is through these disruptions and reinforced through cultural and societal norms, that destructive patterns and self-beliefs are born. When left unattended, these perceptions give way to depression, anxiety, substance abuse, codependency, attachment disorders, self-harm, eating disorders, personality disorders and so many other mental and physical health issues.