Content OutlineFeeling, Healing, and Touch | 1 Hour | Feelings and the Mind/Body Interface | 1.5 Hours | Pain, Regression, Tension, and Healing | 1.5 Hours | The Inner Dimension of Bodywork | 1 Hour | Case Studies Suggested Reading: Book Reviews | 0.5 Hour | | Open-book Test and Course Evaluation | 0.5 Hour |
[Enroll Now] Learning Objectives- Identify the three levels of the human brain and how they each contribute to “body memory.”
- Distinguish between psychological, physiological and structural tension in yourself and your clients.
- Identify the elements of fragmented feelings in your own and your client’s experience.
- Achieve at least 70% correct on the open-book test.
[Enroll Now] Sample text"The human body structurally demonstrates the fundamental and natural necessity for boundary-setting as a means of sustaining health, especially in two locales: the skin and the immune system. The skin is both our outermost organ and the site of physical contact with the world, marks where the self ends and the "outer" world beings. Also known as the "integument," it functions as the built-in delineator of our separateness and our integrity as individuals. When someone touches us lovingly and appropriately, we feel soothed, stimulated, "in touch", and connected. Gentle touch not only elicits a cascade of mood altering endorphins and the relaxation response ot make us feel good, it also triggers the skin to release thymopoeitan, a hormone which bolsters our immune competence by stimulating maturing immune cells. When someone touches us without our permission we feel "invaded" and "violated," and our fight-or-flight response kicks in, along with a gush of stress hormones, aborted digestion, elevated blood pressure, and increase muscle tension. Negative contact with the world is an emergency." (Deep Feeling, Deep Healing by Andy Bernay-Roman LMHC, NCC, MS, RN, LMT, 2009, p. 69) [Enroll Now] Sample test questionThe necessity for intact boundaries, as vital to the integrity of the entire organism, is best reflected in which two parts of the human anatomy? - cell wall and mucous membranes
- hair follicles and fingernails
- the skin and the immune system
- the blood and lymph
[Enroll Now] |