Red Lights for Body Workers
Recognizing the Signs of Unresolved
Trauma in the Physiology
Some bodyworkers may be
able to tell, when they touch the
tissue, whether there is trauma there or not. For others, that ability
may come with time and experience. But few bodyworkers (unless they
have had formal training in some type of trauma resolution modality)
are aware of the visual signs that may signal that their client is
suffering from unresolved trauma in the physiology.
When working with a client, this
unresolved trauma may be activated by
the treatment being provided. Any methods/treatments which focus on
release alone could be problematic for a client who has been
traumatized. In fact, energetic release alone can, in some cases, lead
to re-traumatization because the physiology is not, at the present
time, able to contain the amount of energy that is released.
Supplying bodyworkers with a "bulleted
list" in terms of what to look
for in order to determine if their client may be suffering from
unresolved trauma in the physiology is a difficult, if not impossible,
task. There are several reasons for this.
- Healing in general and healing trauma in particular, is not a linear process. It is simply not as "black and white" as a bulleted list implies.
- Detecting whether you are working with a client who has unresolved traumatic imprints, has to do with a series of signs that can be picked up while "tracking" the client. "Tracking" is the active, receptive capacity of the therapist to notice and follow the client's inner and outer experiential process, and organize this information conceptually and intuitively. If you are not trained in a trauma resolution modality such as Somatic Experiencing, you may not have the tracking skills required.
- As is always the case, the therapist has his or her own subjective experience. What he or she may be perceiving may not be reflective of the reality of the client.
Nonetheless, my first-hand
experience -- as a client -- before I became
a therapist and before I had any Somatic Experiencing training -
compels me to at least attempt to give bodyworkers some possible
"warning signals." My first-hand experience, as a client, compels me to
help educate, at least to some small extent, those bodyworkers who have
not, to date, received any formal training in recognizing the signs of
unresolved traumatic imprints. ¨
Even one of these signals might indicate
that your client could benefit
from methods, such as Somatic Experiencing which are specifically
designed to resolve traumatic imprints. But generally, one might want
to look for more than one indicator before carefully suggesting a
trauma resolution modality.
One might also want to consider the
degree of repetitiveness in the
client's response. A client may for example, have an extreme emotional
reaction when working a particular area of the body. Or a client may
tremor for a few moments after working a particular area of the body.
But doing so consistently, time after time, with seemingly no
resolution, might be a signal that there is an unresolved traumatic
imprint.
In the end, every case will be slightly
different and your response to
your observations will ultimately depend on your relationship with that
particular client.
INDICATORS OF TRAUMA LOCKED IN THE PHYSIOLOGY
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For a more detailed discussion
of trauma, see Dr. Peter
Levine's book
Waking The Tiger
(readily available in bookstores).
For more information on Somatic Experiencing (including articles
written by Dr. Peter Levine as well as information about the training),
click on
http://www.traumahealing.com.
This document was a collaborative effort
on the part of Lael Katharine
Keen (Certified Advanced Rolfer, SE Practitioner and SE Faculty
Member), Bob Alonzi (Certified Advanced Rolfer and SE Practitioner),
and myself, Lori A. Parker Ph.D. (Feldenkrais Practitioner and Somatic
Experiencing Practitioner).