Format: Audio MP3 file download
Presenter: Maggie Phillips, PhD
Relational Safety as the Treatment for Trauma and Pain: Polyvagal Contributions to the Countertransference Trance
The concept of safety is an important requirement for our early capacity to bond with significant
others, and a sense of safety within our intimate relationships throughout life is central to
our ability to trust. Dr. Stephen Porges, creator and researcher of the Polyvagal Theory, made the
discovery that ?the detection of features of safety actively changed the autonomic state and fostered health,
growth, and restoration as well as providing opportunities to connect and co-regulate.? Porges concluded
that there are three branches of the ANS rather than two, which respond constantly to relational conditions
mediated by safety and threat. Ventral vagal, social engagement, and co-regulation are in the lead, with the
sympathetic adrenal (fight-flight) and dorsal vagus (freeze) coming online when there is significant threat. The
polyvagal model suggests how we can become safe and healing havens for each other if we cultivate our own
ventral capacities. This presentation focuses on how relational safety is the treatment for trauma and pain, and
explores polyvagal contributions to the essential development of a positive countertransference trance (from
the hypnotic perspective) for the therapist (Phillips & Frederick, 1995).
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