nicabm – Work with Clients Emotional Triggers

-68%

nicabm – Work with Clients Emotional Triggers

Original price was: $34.00.Current price is: $11.00.

SKU: fe0be336f929 Category:

Salepage link: At HERE. Archive:
n
n

DOWNLOAD INSTANTLYnPLEASE CHECK ALL CONTENTS OF THE COURSE BELOW!

n

n

nicabm - Work with Clients Emotional Triggersnicabm – Work with Clients Emotional Triggers

nn


nnHow to Help Your Client Manage Their Emotional Triggers with Practical Skills They Can Use in Real TimennWhen clients get triggered, it can set off a chain reaction of emotional overwhelm and reactivity.nnSo how do we help clients shift out of this difficult cycle when their nervous system starts to rev up (or shut down)?nnFirst, we have to look at specific ways to keep a triggered emotion from overwhelming the client.nnThen we have to focus on breaking powerful behavior-trigger-reward loops.nnFrom there, we have to undo the hidden traps left behind on their nervous system from trauma and attachment breakdowns.nnMost importantly, we have to help the client carry this work out into the real world so that they become empowered.nnThat’s why we got together with 26 top experts and asked for their best strategies for working with clients’ emotional triggers. For the first time ever, all their expert insights have been gathered in one place . . .nHow to Work with a Client’s Emotional TriggersnThe Neurobiology of an Emotional TriggernRon Siegel, PsyD Dan Siegel, MDnnHow the brain primes us for emotional triggersnTwo ways the brain processes emotion that can fuel emotional sensitivitynThe trigger pipeline that connects unprocessed feelings to impulsivitynnHow to Keep a Triggered Emotion from Overwhelming the ClientnShelly Harrell, PhD Lynn Lyons, LICSWnKelly McGonigal, PhD Joan Borysenko, PhDnRick Hanson, PhDnnThe “Band-Aid” strategy to prevent an emotional wound from getting triggerednThe trigger-resistant mindset that can help clients escape a reactivity cyclenHow to keep the nervous system regulated when an emotional trigger gets trippednnHow to Prevent Vulnerabilities from Turning into Painful TriggersnMichael Yapko, PHD Deany Laliotis, LICSWnJoan Borysenko, PhD Ron Siegel, PsyDnnOne question that can hit the “pause button” on a client’s trigger responsenA simple reframe that can unravel an emotional trigger’s grip on the clientnHow to connect clients with trigger-resistant resources to keep them from being emotionally floodednnGet nicabm – Work with Clients Emotional Triggers downloadnnHow to Break Habit-Trigger-Reward LoopsnDonald Meichenbaum, PhD Kelly McGonigal, PhDnJudson Brewer, MD, PhDnnOne simple strategy that can shift a blamer out of their deeply-ingrained justificationsnHow to help clients reduce the shame they attach to their reactivitynWhy shame can glue clients to their triggersnWhy guilt makes an emotional trigger so much more powerful (and how to undo this)nHow to help clients visualize their trigger sequence to find their pain pointsnnHow to Work with a Highly-Triggered Nervous SystemnStephen Porges, PhD Deb Dana, LCSWnKelly McGonigal, PhDnnHow Polyvagal Theory can spark powerful new interventions for healing triggersnHow a trigger response can block a client’s nervous system from processing safety cuesnHow a triggered physiology can spark a downward spiral of negative experiencennHow to Help Triggered Clients Who Dissociate from Their BodiesnChristine Padesky, PhD Pat Ogden PhDnRick Hanson, PhDnnThe vital first step before working with a dissociated clientnHow to strengthen a client’s emotional tolerance when they dissociatenA simple strategy to neutralize emotional overwhelm and prevent dissociationnnHow To Work with Emotional Triggers Connected to TraumanResmaa Menakem, MSW, LICSW Peter Levine, PhDnKelly McGonigal, PhD Ron Siegel, PsyDnRick Hanson, PhDnnHow traumatic memory can lead to unpredictable triggersnHow to safely foster new sensations in traumatized clients who are shut off from their bodynHow to avoid getting triggered by a client’s high-octane reactivitynnHow to Help Clients Build Powerful Self-Regulation SkillsnRon Siegel, PsyD Terry Real, MSW, LICSWnDavid Wallin, PhD Kelly McGonigal, PhDnRick Hanson, PhDnnOne critical skill that can prevent triggered emotions from escalatingnHow to work with clients who have become attached to their reactive responsenA 3-step approach to help clients take back control from their triggernnHow to Work with Triggers Fueled by Negative AttachmentnRichard Schwartz, PhD Pat Ogden, PhDnRick Hanson, PhDnnWhy it’s crucial to discriminate whether a trigger’s origin is trauma or attachmentnHow to work with the 3 main fears that can undermine the treatment of triggersnnHow to Neutralize a Reactivity PatternnKelly Wilson, PhD Zindel Segal, PhDnnThe first two steps in treating a trigger response that can profoundly affect outcomenHow to help diminish a client’s road rage that’s leaving them tired and angrynHow to expand a client’s capacity to choose a better response to their triggernOne way to help a war veteran shift a core belief that’s fueling their triggernnHow to Help Clients Shift from Reactivity to HealingnBill O’Hanlon, LMFT Kelly McGonigal, PhDnSteven Hayes, PhDnnA strong coping strategy for the unmet needs that drive reactivitynHow to deepen a client’s context sensitivity to increase the space between trigger and reaction

0/5 (0 Reviews)

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.

Enter your keyword