Autism & Trauma - Robert Cox

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  • Опубликовано: 7 июн 2024
  • The latest research on autism and the brain is indicating that it affects the brain in much the same way as complex trauma. What does this mean for the delivery of behavioral and social services? If the brain is affected in the same ways as trauma what does this mean for educational, vocational, and developmental goals in the individual's life? How do we progress with treatment based on the research of the last six years?
    In this session, Robert will introduce the latest research, outline how the brain reacts to both trauma and autism in the same way, and what this means in the real world for treatment services. Using case examples and his own observation, Robert will lay out a method and direction for treatment that is making a profound difference in the lives of the individuals he supports every day. From families to schools to employment and individual struggles, you’ll discover the methods that can bring lasting change to lives, and often reduce or remove the necessity for expensive behavioral services.
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    This session was recorded as part of the A Day on Neurodiversity on August 2022. To access the full conference package, as well as supporting materials, quizzes, and certification, please visit: theweekenduniversity.com/lect...
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    Robert Cox is a Licensed Professional Counselor and a Nationally Certified Counselor. He has been providing services for individuals on the autism spectrum for more than 20 years. He is the creator of the nonprofit The Tristn Jevon Center for Recovery a trauma treatment center in Richmond, Missouri specializing in the treatment of trauma, addictions, and autism. He trains and uses mindfulness practice in the control of anxiety and mental health issues resulting from trauma in his practice and produces the podcast “Mindful Recovery” to bring these topics to all podcast listeners.
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    Timestamps:
    00:00 - Intro
    00:11 - Autism and Brain Development
    08:10 - Understanding Sensory Reactivity
    15:30 - The Body-Mind Connection in Autism
    23:40 - Sensory Diets and Mindful Living
    39:01 - Q&A on Trauma and Autism Recovery
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    Links:
    - Get our latest psychology lectures emailed to your inbox: bit.ly/new-talks5
    - Check out our next event: theweekenduniversity.com/events
    - Robert Cox’s profile: liferecoveryconsulting.org/st...
    - Robert Cox’s book: amzn.to/3Bp5KN8

Комментарии • 11

  • @buddhahead27
    @buddhahead27 4 месяца назад

    I was really grateful at 45 minutes in when I could finally see the speaker's face and his body language and so forth... Excellent presentation

  • @MovementMagic
    @MovementMagic 6 месяцев назад +2

    Fascinating. Thank you for sharing this

  • @brianthebizarre11
    @brianthebizarre11 6 месяцев назад

    He definitely got results, I'll give him that. Story of John with the stimming ball is neat. Is it sustainable? A person with autism may find precarious momentum in life if the tools for forward movement ever lead them into disaster. You have to have an organic solution, conditioning and perseverance doesn't cure this. There are still issues with attachment and personal notions of higher power and attunement, yet if you play whack a mole with these facets of living in search of better functioning you're still not curing the autism as a whole.

  • @Heru_Iluvatar
    @Heru_Iluvatar 6 месяцев назад +4

    Imo autism is a symptom, not an identity.

    • @MagnumInnominandum
      @MagnumInnominandum 6 месяцев назад

      A symptom of what?

    • @Heru_Iluvatar
      @Heru_Iluvatar 6 месяцев назад

      @@MagnumInnominandum (Complex) Trauma

    • @JelMain
      @JelMain 6 месяцев назад

      T@@Heru_Iluvatar Wrong - from the horse's mouth. Almost all the Neurodiverse have been traumatised by your ignorance, in the psychiatric profession. The reason is because you talk at us from a basis of almost total ignorance - the interviewer can't even get Temple Gradin's name right, and she walked away 20 years ago.
      There's several hundred million of us out there, and we're fed up with being talked at and not listened to. After Simon Baron-Cohen's shameful attempt to treat us as untermensch, proposing a eugenic Final Solution, we've walked.
      Firstly, reverse DSM-5. I cannot simultaneously be disordered with an intellectual challenge and gifted, with a decent share of the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize, driven by a mind now on the decline from the definition of a top IQ. I'll spare you the details, to save time. The very basis of diagnosis is narcissistic child-abuse, based in Dabrowsky's study of the gifted, over-extended into a very different culture from Polish Communism in the 1960s.
      Next, dump your symptomatics. We're not afraid because we have nothing more to lose, you've stolen our humanity and reduced us to behaviours. Start listening to us.

  • @R50_J0
    @R50_J0 Месяц назад

    “kiddo”? Stop it.