CBT for PTSD: Example of how grounding techniques can be used in therapy

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 24 фев 2016
  • Case study example for use in teaching, aiming to demonstrate how grounding techniques might be used in CBT for PTSD disorder. Catherine Corker, qualified CBT practitioner and Clinical Psychologist, demonstrates the grounding techniques. The character of Sarah is played by an actor (Catriona Burke), but the scene is not scripted, and as such it represents a natural therapeutic exchange.
    The video was filmed and produced by Ishan Siddiqui and Christopher Werrett.

Комментарии • 74

  • @johngass4066
    @johngass4066 8 лет назад +48

    Wow! I suffer from early life PTSD and recently received Cognitive Analytic Therapy. Unfortunately, I never felt listened to, much less understood or given any useful support. This video is not only helpful in terms of a new technique I can, and will, try, it also serves as a timely reminder that good therapists and effective treatments are out there somewhere.

    • @JudithJohnsonphd
      @JudithJohnsonphd  8 лет назад +3

      +John Gass Thank you for watching and for this feedback John! I will pass it on to the therapist.

    • @johngass4066
      @johngass4066 7 лет назад +4

      I doubt I'm the right person to give you an authoritative reply but, for what it's worth, here's my take on it.
      I see PTSD as most likely coming from a single, but intensely distressing, event. Some people have been affected by a more complicated cocktail of mutually-reinforcing events and this is classified as Complex PTSD.
      If you think you might fall into the CPTSD group, below is a link to a book that I've found enormously helpful and reassuring - although its impact can be so intense that you might find you can't read beyond the first chapter. However, it resonated with me so strongly that, as much as it overwhelmed me, it validated me. For the first time, it gave me a context for my darkest moments and validated my past and present experiences of the world.
      For anyone who thinks they're suffering from mental ill-health, I strongly recommend you find someone who can support you on your journey; entwined maybe, but certainly not entangled… someone who is there only for you, unselfishly and non-judgementally supporting you on your journey back to a balanced, sustainable life.
      I hope this helps.
      www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00HJBMDXK/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?_encoding=UTF8&btkr=1

    • @jerryparkerIIKAKT
      @jerryparkerIIKAKT 7 лет назад +4

      John Gass early life PTSD also. Good therapists? Somewhere perhaps. I'm not convinced that this therapist and her clients (I'm in the US. We have to pay a medical professions if we so much as sneeze) aren't actors. Gaining so much insight in one session? I don't know. After 21 years of therapy, meds, hospitalization... her clients seem to make more progress in the length of a RUclips video than most do in decades. Also, she doesn't seem to respond to comments all that much... suspicious at best. Even better, I wish you all the best. This is no way to live

    • @thehulk3355
      @thehulk3355 5 лет назад +1

      Hi there you need a therapist who does the havening technique. Look it up on you tube. Don't underestimate its simplicity it does work. Get a therapist to do it with you for best effect.

    • @MrSongwriter2
      @MrSongwriter2 2 года назад

      EMDR worked amazing for me. Turned the flashbacks and hyper awareness and especially invasive images down massively till I could sit without been completely back in the trauma and distress
      For extreme distress whilst in the middle of the flashback you can simple do 5 things you can see, hear/touch in the room

  • @macmerc1556
    @macmerc1556 4 года назад +7

    What an excellent video. Such a lovely girl who has clearly been through a dreadful experience and a very understanding, gentle therapist. I wish her well for the future.

  • @TommyBowerscoasters
    @TommyBowerscoasters 6 лет назад +5

    Actually, grounding and centering saved the day for me on several occasions. Great work!

  • @GlitterEnby
    @GlitterEnby 8 лет назад +16

    Grounding makes so much more sense to me now. Thank you! That was really helpful.

    • @JudithJohnsonphd
      @JudithJohnsonphd  8 лет назад +3

      +Jane May Thank you for watching and for your feedback Jane. I have passed this on to Cat who was delighted to hear you found it helpful.

  • @ASMinor
    @ASMinor 5 лет назад +2

    I am an avid #MentalHealthAwareness advocate and performer, and I love this so much. I travel the country trying to bring that awareness on stages, in classrooms, hospitals, and on my RUclips channel, so I get excited when I see other advocates. 💙❤

  • @cindymartin-campbell8840
    @cindymartin-campbell8840 6 лет назад +24

    After experiencing childhood trauma and a more recent major TBI, techniques like this have been very helpful. The more I was willing to trust my therapist and physician the effectiveness jumped significantly. I’m naturally suspicious and yet when I was desperate enough from ptsd I finally surrendered to creating trust. EMDR has been profoundly helpful as well. After being completely disabled by physical and mental trauma I started investigating scientific modalities around neuroplasicity. I want anyone who is willing to listen to know that I have been a pretty stubborn student and I lost everything I owned including relationships over the years due to it, I have lived in an academic background and so for a non believer like me to have remarkable results, I want to give you hope: Your brain and spirit can absolutely heal. You are mailable no matter the trauma or your age.

    • @FeelingShred
      @FeelingShred 6 лет назад +4

      The problem is that most "therapists" don't know jack shit about trauma because they didn't experience it themselves, so it's really hard to overcome the lack of trust

    • @philiphammar
      @philiphammar 4 года назад +2

      thank you for writing this, really needed to hear it.

    • @RockDove5212
      @RockDove5212 Год назад +1

      @@FeelingShred that's it exactly! You've just helped me understand why I don't trust therapists and feel it's such a fake interaction. I feel like they haven't a clue .

    • @FeelingShred
      @FeelingShred Год назад

      last december was when it "clicked" for me and I IMMEDIATELY noticed difference... I can now focus on tasks at hand again, I don't crumble at the slightest sign of opposition, I can engage in confrontation, I play with people's minds (it's so fun but also so dangerously addictive, use it in small doses, motherfuckers love to be humiliated, people are so weird, they test you all the time) And another thing I noticed: once "depression" was out of the picture my brain entered this interesting "Mockery" state, I mock everything and everyone now, it seems like Mockery and Humor is the Natural state of mind for humans... I need to research more on this, using myself as bait of course

  • @authenticlivinghypnotherap6121
    @authenticlivinghypnotherap6121 4 года назад +1

    wonderful real life example and great tool for anyone to take home and use and "fill in the gaps" for their own circumstances

  • @robertas100
    @robertas100 7 лет назад +14

    Grounding definitely. During trauma or chronic stress the nervous system (primarily important) is shocked, the person is shaken to the core, "losing ground", somehow uneasy as if not quite "there", not quite him/herself (as body/entity), as if almost died, really. It is some all-over physiological tentativeness/malfunctioning, extending to psychological-neurological... Somehow one must be re-established and re-stabilized fully in the body physical, the nervous system be fortified and the whole biochemistry restored to order. "Proper" food, exercising, supplements, outdooring, beneficial socializing (supporters), restoring believing in and will to living. One session does not do, this is committed and dedicated "work" and self-work, to regain a positive mind/psyche.

  • @MrJohnnynapalm7
    @MrJohnnynapalm7 7 лет назад +3

    A very useful insight which helped deepen my understanding on this important topic.

  • @LukeWeb1992
    @LukeWeb1992 2 года назад +2

    I was attacked 10 years ago and left with a life long injury. I was diagnosed with depression... at the time I was having nightmares, I have never felt good since. I'm struggling to do my job, feel like my brain is shutting down from bad memories. not getting the help I need. As a young male its hard to ask for help. Then when you do get the courage to ask for help I am not taken seriously.

  • @elliotsimpson-rooke917
    @elliotsimpson-rooke917 3 года назад +15

    The majority of people who speak about PTSD professionally have no personal experience of PTSD itself outside their relationship with the people they treat within their profession. Every time I try and seek peace through one of these videos I feel frustrated, misunderstood and patronised, though I realise this is no fault of the speaker - they have never had to endure this pain, confusion, paranoia and the stress it puts on their relationships with the people around them. I feel as though I should write about PTSD first hand so that sufferers alike can communicate with those from their own pain-felt community

    • @therabbithat
      @therabbithat 2 года назад +1

      I am sorry for what you went through and I like your idea of writing about your experience to support other survivors.
      I have met dozens of psychotherapists in my training and all of them had suffered horrific traumas in their lives, although PTSD is one expression of trauma and not all of them had that specific expression, but some did. A common response to trauma is to start comparing your suffering to that of others, this separates you from others and makes it harder to get support

    • @RockDove5212
      @RockDove5212 Год назад

      Absolutely agree, I feel anger and mistrust towards therapists like this. Something cold and patronising, and ridiculously insulting, " suck a sweet."

  • @Yasminedavisben
    @Yasminedavisben 7 лет назад +3

    hi ! Thank you for this amazing video ! Gratitude !
    Namaste

  • @nasirmehood3110
    @nasirmehood3110 Год назад +1

    You have made it very easy in terms of applying this grounded technique to such kinds of traumatic experiences. It's quite useful

  • @Slarti
    @Slarti 7 лет назад +5

    This is very helpful.
    One question, because it's the way I learn and remember things - I take it this is connected with mindfulness and being present in the moment, so by cultivating more of a habit of coming back to the present we experience less dissociation?

  • @ivispark3780
    @ivispark3780 4 года назад

    I really love this technique!

  • @SelfLoveCeo
    @SelfLoveCeo 4 года назад +1

    Very helpful, thank you

  • @palmina77italiana
    @palmina77italiana 2 года назад +5

    Please keep studying this topic and spreading awareness. CPTSD is complex and there is not much help for this

  • @savvy3869
    @savvy3869 3 года назад +1

    CMHC Grad Student: Initially I felt as though the counselor was doing a bit much of the "standing and writing" approach which may make a client feel like they are in a classroom with a teacher and could make them feel incongruence/inequality in the session as far as the roles go; however, I feel as though this was a great representation of the "Sharing Information with Clients" counseling technique in order to put things into perspective. I also think that maybe if she had given the client a pen and paper to write the graph out and think of the representations for the senses (that they went over), she would have used the "Directive" counseling technique and that would've put the session even more into the clients hands rather than the counselor being the focal point during this part of the session. Overall, this video helped though so thank you!

  • @sophiel1708
    @sophiel1708 3 года назад +3

    EMDR is really good for PTSD. I’ve tried it :)

  • @Kev80ification
    @Kev80ification 3 года назад

    Good job!

  • @gotama570
    @gotama570 2 года назад

    Thats good,its working

  • @nolagatto2136
    @nolagatto2136 7 лет назад +7

    I'm so dissociated. I hate it. I wish this kind of thing would work

    • @danieseifert
      @danieseifert 5 лет назад +6

      Hey, I see you! I feel this. I have dissociative ptsd/cptsd from multiple childhood rape and seriously I do not control what my thoughts say to me or how I react to most things now. I have been known to black out into a totally different type of person and get vicious/suicidal/violently ready to fight my way out of anything that is setting me into that state of fear/hate/rage/pain, fuck any type of defensive stance someone else makes me take can sent me into a straight up psychosomatic seizure. So my body literally looks and feels like it's having a seizure but it's not something that is a true ekg, or eeg I can't remember the name of the brain waves test they did on me to prove I have this psychosomatic seizures to sexual assault and domestic abuse. It's very odd, so telling me to look at the room I've grown up in after waking up from rape is like asking me to go list five things I can look at to distract myself from rape when I was raped next door to my house at ten. How am I supposed to think my way out of that?! Bullshit. There's probably another twin I ate in the womb or something that lives in my pineal gland.... but good luck. CBT annoys the shit out of me already. I'm doing it to try to learn to calm down but I feel like I'm arguing with an my ultra mind handler who just wants me to behave and stop wanting to chew my rapists into dog food.

  • @jaywhite5142
    @jaywhite5142 4 года назад +1

    Handy if Sarah doesn't sleep with a dentist then (the sugar in mints); very arguable how PTSD does/nt interfere with day to day life at 'higher' end of the dissociation scale

  • @XOXO-mb2vh
    @XOXO-mb2vh 4 года назад +1

    The nightmares are the worst because im in it. There's a whole world going on outside of wakefulness for me. I hate it cause it's not real and it persist my whole life.Im just at its will. I have to ground by taking a shower and 'resetting'. Water really seems to help me. I keep it to myself because it sounds like a nothing burger to anyone not experiencing it. So I just try not to sleep.

  • @dinaazzam3646
    @dinaazzam3646 4 года назад +3

    I cant find one single paper about using grounding as a cbt technique. Is grounding really a CBT technique per se?

    • @lauraolivas2682
      @lauraolivas2682 3 года назад

      I was wondering the same thing... I am doing a paper on CBT and anxiety

    • @ewinedm9250
      @ewinedm9250 3 года назад +1

      No - you use a grounding skill and then follow it up with a specific technique like CPT or PET. The final step is to implement the skills into their life.

  • @lamexanna7345
    @lamexanna7345 Год назад

    so asmr

  • @abdurahman224
    @abdurahman224 4 года назад

    Complicated,,,!

  • @heu-uaigimata164
    @heu-uaigimata164 5 лет назад

    Can you help me too please ... i have PTSD for long time until now ... pleaseee... pleaseee... pleaseee

  • @conleycd
    @conleycd 4 года назад +1

    I think it would just be better to treat the trauma with CPT or PE rather than doing all this work on the consequence of the trauma.

  • @DarayaVahu
    @DarayaVahu 5 лет назад +9

    The therapist looks a bit like Avril Lavigne, right?

  • @kathymyers7279
    @kathymyers7279 4 года назад +1

    I think it’s great that some can go through things like this and find a therapist, GO to them for treatment and then pay for it. Most of us just get on with it because we have bills to pay. Jerez talk about pampered. Thanks for the generosity of deciding to put this on utube, I recognize that. God bless you. How about car crashes, miscarriage, toxic mold poisoning, adultery, addiction and rejection? Looking forward to further videos. I hope this poor child survives her horrific trauma. Glad she made it and if she gets through this she’ll have some tools for her hangnail or a bad dream.

  • @vadimtroshkin6323
    @vadimtroshkin6323 5 лет назад

    cannot take it anymore

    • @misha5570
      @misha5570 4 года назад

      Please hang in there i know how unbareable it can be

  • @thehulk3355
    @thehulk3355 5 лет назад +5

    The reason that CBT does not work for PTSD is because PTSD is a physical brain injury. The havening technique and BWRT Brain working recursive therapy will work to remove PTSD and complex trauma. I recommend a therapist that practices one of these therapies. Good luck.

    • @Mark_1974
      @Mark_1974 4 года назад

      The hulk care to explain your comment, any evidence to support your claim ? If PTSD is a physical brain injury then surely no talking therapy will help.

    • @Mark_1974
      @Mark_1974 4 года назад +2

      rabbitwho I fully agree, TF CBT is effective which is why I was wondering why the Hulk was so sure it does not work.

    • @conleycd
      @conleycd 4 года назад +1

      Except that CBT both CPT and PE for PTSD is highly effective and fast. When you post garbage like this you cause people to lose hope - so don't do it.

  • @unitedservice2033
    @unitedservice2033 6 лет назад +1

    a lot of talk but she never says this worked for her, is she just reading this from a book because I do not hear her saying she uses these techniques to help herself. 51 years of dealing with severe multiple PTSD events with multiple TBI's. this was a useless technique for me.

  • @HayatFaqeer
    @HayatFaqeer 2 года назад

    There are many jobs we can do. Tour guide, translating books about CBT from other languages and hide the book. I am intrigued by Britain education system which does not advise to communities because of white racism. Will britain ever appoint black British in parliament.

  • @krool1648
    @krool1648 7 лет назад +14

    Therapist in this video is hot.

    • @XRXONE
      @XRXONE 6 лет назад

      Kelley Two Feathers agree mate

    • @vadimtroshkin6323
      @vadimtroshkin6323 5 лет назад +2

      she is as hot as my old shoe

    • @asmeraertra2628
      @asmeraertra2628 5 лет назад

      How do you mean

    • @ky024
      @ky024 4 года назад

      stone man what the hell?