We asked some of our faculty and practitioners to come up with a
paragraph describing "How AEDP Works." Taken together, these disparate
paragraphs seem to kaleidoscopically have captured the essence of AEDP
better than any elaborate discourse. (However, for those of you
yearning for elaborate discourse, please go to "Articles on AEDP," where you can feast on elaborate discourse, narrative, and then some...). We include them below in no particular order.
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AEDP
works by harnessing and catalyzing a psychobiological state
transformation through activating the extraordinary innate healing
capacities, hard wired in the mind and the body. It is mediated by the
self-righting tendencies and self-integrating abilities of viscerally
felt emotional experience, dyadically regulated, expressed and
coordinated with the engaged presence of a cherishing therapist.
Danny Yeung, Toronto
AEDP
is about working with the heart. Amazing things happen when both
therapist and client tune into their hearts: people feel strengthened,
they discover potentials and capacities for healing, growth and
transformation that they never thought possible.
Diana Wais, London
Eye
contact and moment to moment tracking of emotion and body
sensation activates the attachment system, a system with its origins
based on survival and therefore with the force of considerable
engagement and motivation. AEDP directs that motivation toward
the recognition, elaboration and then, realization of the self at
best. Today's brain research supports the premise of AEDP, that a
positive, responsive, safe relationship produces chemicals and hormones
which enhance the development of higher brain function and the
regulation of emotions and stress. The plasticity of the brain
coupled with the power of a positive relationship are ideas supported
with research that have tremendous implications which AEDP fully
recognizes and applies to not only help but transform lives.
Colette Linnihan, New York City
Corrective Emotional Experience (how's that for less?)
Steve Shapiro, Malverne, Pennsylvania
| In
AEDP reflexive defenses originating deep in the brain of the patient
are brought to conscious awareness. Long-standing blocks and
walls against felt experience soften into states of emotional flow that
lead to relief and heightened clarity and freedom to initiate
corrective action in the lived life of the patient. The AEDP
therapist advocates and encourages the clear formation of the patient’s
corrective impulses, often in the form of imagery of how to apply new
behavior in the patient’s current life or in revisiting past situations
of helpless aloneness, overt trauma or deprivation. |
Like
a volcano whose eruption creates new land in the ocean, the patient’s
unconscious surprises and recognizes itself in AEDP, so the patient’s
agency and inner authority take hold and gain freedom to live in new
and remarkably stable and resilient ways.
David Mars, San Francisco |
AEDP
is a psychotherapeutic approach based on the idea that deep, viscerally
felt affective experiences have the inherent capacity to rapidly and
comprehensively transform people. Facilitated through a relationship
with an actively engaged, emotionally attuned, empathic, affirming
therapist, the patient is guided to process emotions deemed too
overwhelming to face. Experientially processing these previously
avoided emotions activates innate self-righting mechanisms, adaptive
action tendencies and other resources that support psychological
wellbeing and optimal functioning.
Jerry Lamagna, New York City
The
most powerful tenets of AEDP are to establish safety and undo
aloneness. From the first moments together the therapist and
client are developing a relationship from which to explore unresolved
and painful issues from the past and even more importantly to
experience and process how they change and what comes from their new
experiences.
Karen Pando Mars, San Francisco
In
AEDP, we firmly believe that our patients have the potential to make
something constructive and meaningful with their life. For that, we
hold their hands and stand by them as long as they - with our very
active help - keep on working on developing their trust and their
curiosity to look inside their souls and find out what is their deepest
yearning at that particular stage of their lives.
Andrea Junqueira, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
AEDP
works to heal the negative sequelae to attachment trauma and harness
the untapped resources for resilience and growth of our patients
through the explicit and implicit co-creation of a safe and secure
relationship with an attuned, self-actualized, self-reflective
therapist. A process of attunement, spontaneous disruption and
intentional repair informed by specific, experientially driven
intervention strategies, and operating at multiple levels:
moment-to-moment, session to session, and across a whole
treatment process, provides the essential, synergistic framework for
healing and transformation.
Benjamin Lipton, New York City
We
all have strivings toward connection, understanding, growth and
transformation. The more these yearnings are thwarted by
deprivation, misattunement, trauma or loss, the more
profound and painful the longings and needs can become. The AEDP
therapist seeks to awaken and restore these basic human drives through
becoming a safe, nurturing, and responsive “true other.” If a
deep, caring and authentic relationship is the vehicle for
change, then it is feelings and full emotional processing that
fuel the process of transformation, delivering patient and therapist
alike to a place of peace, inner wisdom,
self-actualization, energy, mutual delight and fulfillment.
Kari Gleiser, Hanover, New Hampshire
AEDP
works through safety and caring. The AEDP therapist creates safety
through a warm and emotionally engaged relationship where the patient
is valued and respected. Because the patient feels safe and cared for,
his defenses against feelings aren't needed as much as in other areas
of his life, so the defenses "melt" away with the therapist's help. As
the defenses dissolve, the therapist helps the patient to manage the
deep feelings that are then free to emerge. These feelings are ones
that have almost always been too difficult, frightening, or painful for
the patient to experience alone, so feeling them in the company of a
caring other is new and freeing. Though painful, being met in the
feelings is healing. When the full wave of emotion flows through, the
patient feels lighter, grateful, transformed, changed for the better.
The therapist then encourages the patient to reflect on the healing and
transformational feelings, and this reflection generates deeper and
deeper levels of healing and growth.
Candyce Ossefort-Russell, Austin, Texas
Most
simply put, AEDP works through meeting and safely gratifying the
patient’s deep longing to seen, heard and understood by the therapist
and perhaps more importantly by him or herself. By the patient
following emotions through to their completion, a deep sense of what is
real and true directs the work during sessions. In an evolving
dialectic process, the therapist and the patient jointly steer the
vehicle of each session in a rising and deepening spiral of unfolding
emotional awareness and integrity of speech. When the patient’s
reality is held in such empathic and resonant attunement by the
therapist, healing and forward momentum in treatment transcends
ordinary expectations of what psychotherapy can be and do.
David Mars, San Francisco
Both
psychotherapy and integrative framework, AEDP seeks to theoretically
elucidate and clinically harness healing transformational processes. A
whole brain therapy, through its attachment-based stance, AEDP entrains
right-brain-mediated affective experiences; works with subcortically
generated primary emotions; and recruits left brain organization for
the articulation of emotional experience. Then, alternating waves
of experience and reflection give rise to the best the prefrontal
cortex (especially the right pre-frontal cortex where emotionally
meaningful autobiographical narratives are mediated) has to offer:
integrative states of flow, clarity, ease, wisdom, compassion,
curiosity, generosity, creativity, and calm, where the sense of the
truth promotes deep acceptance and self-acceptance.
Diana Fosha, New York City
Ode To AEDP
- The AEDP therapist has faith in the humanity in relationship and offers safety and security unsparingly.
- The AEDP therapist participates actively to help a client face the distress that has initiated their healing journey.
- The
AEDP therapist sees psychotherapy as a tremendous opportunity for
growth and transformation and holds this perspective throughout the
course of treatment.
- The
AEDP therapist practices the art of guidance, recognizing when and how
to assist the client be with their emotional life, and then, when to
step out of the way and be present to witness the natural phenomena of
cascading emotions and experiences.
- The
AEDP therapist trusts the process and recognizes that helping clients
face and move through painful experiences can bring them to new places
that have the uncanny aspect of feeling true and more deeply real than
anything previously imagined.
- The
AEDP therapist revels in witnessing clients come to experience
themselves freshly with calm knowing and recognition that this is the
self they have always been.
- The
AEDP therapist celebrates the mystery of human experience and the
wonder of the transformational journey. This lives in their being
and is part of the interpersonal matrix between client and therapist
that supports and fosters healing and discovery.
Karen Pando-Mars, San Francisco
AEDP
takes seriously and literally the plasticity and fluidity of the
mind. Moment to moment the AEDP therapist notices, tracks and
seizes upon areas of health and hope in the patient and sets about
capitalizing upon them. This focus on the adaptive wired-in already
present vitality of the patient leads to an organic resourcing of our
patients from the very beginning of treatment. From infant-mother
research, AEDP takes the stance of a real, relating, caring other. A
real person who responds authentically and honestly is inherently a
secure base. From this place the AEDP therapist is always working with
a dual attention: the relationship and the emotional experience of
patient and therapist. This dual focus accelerates change.
The AEDP therapist has a protocol to follow and a phenomenology to
anchor the work: the theoretical flowchart of AEDP tracks the patient
from (i) anxiety and defense, to (ii) core affect, and then (iii) core
state. As an emotion-based therapy the focus is always on helping the
patient feel, and have the experience of feeling. Finally,
metaprocessing teaches patients that there is value in talking about
experience, that everything can be talked about, and that talking
cements experience.
Natasha Prenn, New York City
A
patient arrives for her appointment, angst-ridden, full of despair and
diffuse pain. She is ashamed and feels weak for not being able to
pick herself up by the bootstraps and cope. The AEDP therapist
invites fuller disclosure of her feelings, emphasizing her perseverance
and courage for sharing them. The patient looks up surprised, a
new light in her eyes, as she holds the gaze of her therapist, drinking
in permission, understanding, new self-perception. Then, as the
therapist gently leads the dyad deeper into the pool of pain and
grief and aloneness inside, always maintaining a shared,
tolerable edge to the emotional experience, the patient sobs
deeply. In the wake of this wave of emotion, they explore the
patient’s sense of relief, self-compassion, lightness, gratitude.
She leaves feeling transformed, freer, cared for and full of hope.
Kari Gleiser, Hanover, New Hampshire
AEDP
works through creating a container of emotional and psychic safety that
invites and even provokes a deep experience of being connected to ones
self and the self of another. The therapist in the practice of
AEDP engages an authenticity and vividness of self-expression that
invokes a field of safety and interest, which in turn invites and
ushers in experiences of heightened emotional presence within the
patient. The patient’s deepened emotional experience and
expression, then brings in turn, a heightened permeability and
awareness within the therapist. What had been held off in the
distance within the patient becomes vitally experience-near in each
evolving moment to both the therapist and the patient.
David Mars, San Francisco
AEDP
(i) rests on a deep faith in clients' innate capacities, hard-wired and
always recoverable, to self-right and heal into their authentic True
Self; (iii) privileges the power of new experiences of being seen and
understood to heal the deepest injuries and create a new platform for
exploration and change; (iv) lasers through defenses to the deepest
levels of wounding where healing can be most catalytic to further
change; (iv) evokes new trust in the power of experiencing any
and every emotion, no matter how frightening, sharing,
reflecting, processing, with a safe other to full and sweet
self-acceptance and love.
Linda Graham, San Francisco
AEDP
changes how our brains work. It is widely known that we all
develop coping strategies and patterns from our early life experiences
and relationships. Currently, the research in neuroscience shows
how these patterns and reactions are wired in our brains and nervous
systems. AEDP helps clients forge a safe and secure relationship
with a therapist to strengthen and build their capacity to face the
distress that has driven them to seek therapy. By learning new
ways to process old feelings and emotions, AEDP literally changes
neural pathways in the brain. This enables clients to process incoming
information differently. What previously may have triggered a defensive
reaction, can be recognized for what it is and thus responded to
directly after AEDP. When change is experienced so viscerally,
clients truly come to new places of self understanding, acceptance, and
confidence from which they can engage more fully with life.
Karen Pando-Mars, San Francisco
| Rooted
in attachment theory, the AEDP therapist acts, rapidly as the secure
base for the client so that he/she could work through overwhelming
experiences. No longer alone, the client's intense emotional
experiences, be they painful or joyful, previously defensively excluded
in the absence of optimal care giving, can now be processed in the
here-and-now towards a corrective emotional experience. Informed by
mother-infant developmentalist studies, the secure base is effectively
established through the AEDP therapist’s moment-to-moment tracking of
dyadic affective attunement, disruption and repair. |
| The
AEDP therapist further aims to mine the transformative power and
adaptive action tendencies inherently embedded in undefended human
emotions unleashed in the holding environment of deeply engaged
relatedness. Affective neuroscience demonstrates the centrality of the
right cerebral hemisphere in emotional processing. |
| Dyadic
affect regulation through psychobiological state attunement has been
shown to be mediated through right brain to right brain communication
between dyadic partners. Right brain language codes use gaze, play, vocal tones and rhythms, touch, visual imagery, and somatosensory experience;
right brain mediated processing of emotion and attachment occurs
through this somatic, non-verbal lexicon. And this somatic lexicon is
what the AEDP therapist seeks to engage in the therapeutic interaction.
Insights in quantum transformations describe the phenomenon of sudden
and discontinuous change which the AEDP therapist aims to facilitate in
the patient, thereby accelerating the therapeutic process. |
Such
dramatic phenomena are accomplished through catalyzing a
psycho-neurobiological state transformation with the visceral affective
experience, expression, coordination and communication in the emotional
engaged presence of a empathically attuned AEDP therapist.
Danny Yeung, Toronto |
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