Moving fear into USEFUL anxiety. PACER 12 August 2017 Anne R. Gearity, PhD

Similar documents
Does anxiety cause some difficulty for a young person you know well? What challenges does this cause for the young person in the family or school?

Effects of Traumatic Experiences

The following is a brief summary of the main points of the book.

The Wellbeing Course. Resource: Mental Skills. The Wellbeing Course was written by Professor Nick Titov and Dr Blake Dear

Mindfulness at HFCS Information in this presentation was adapted from Dr. Bobbi Bennet & Jennifer Cohen Harper

TeensHealth.org A safe, private place to get doctor-approved information on health, emotions, and life. Anxiety Disorders. What Is Anxiety?

Motivational Interviewing

Depression: what you should know

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Psychology UNIT 1: PSYCHOLOGY AS A SCIENCE. Core

Talking to Teens About Anxiety. A Supplement to the 2018 Children s Mental Health Report

Anxiety and problem solving

CBT and Anxiety. Marjorie Rabiau, Ph.D. Pearl Lebovitch Clinical Day November 18, 2014

Anger and Chronic Pain

Developing Resilience. Hugh Russell.

The difference between normal worry and an anxiety disorder is severity. Although feeling anxious is a natural reaction to a stressful or dangerous

Module 2 Mentalizing

Overcoming Subconscious Resistances

TWO WAYS OF THINKING ABOUT A RELATIONSHIP ISSUE

Helping Your Asperger s Adult-Child to Eliminate Thinking Errors

Appendix C Discussion Questions for Student Debriefing: Module 3

Michael Stone Week Four, Finding Stability in Times of Turbulence November 21, 2016 Healing from Trauma

Handout on Expectations, Transitions and Overcoming Imposter Syndrome

Panic. Information booklet. RDaSH leading the way with care

handouts for women 1. Self-test for depression symptoms in pregnancy and postpartum Edinburgh postnatal depression scale (epds) 2

A Guide to Understanding Self-Injury

HANDOUTS FOR MODULE 7: TRAUMA TREATMENT. HANDOUT 55: COMMON REACTIONS CHECKLIST FOR KIDS (under 10 years)

do? Childhood Anxiety Caitlin Tur pyn,

Simple Pure Whole TM Wellness

Suicide: Starting the Conversation. Jennifer Savner Levinson Bonnie Swade SASS MO-KAN Suicide Awareness Survivors Support

Michael Norman International &

2/9/2016. Anxiety. Early Intervention for childhood Mental Health issues. ANXIETY DISORDERS in Children and Adolescents.

Effective Responding Exercise. Learning to recognize the different types of Communication Responses

CREATING A MORE VALIDATING FAMILY ENVIRONMENT

LOCUS OF CONTROL AND REACTION TO ILLNESS: A STUDY OF PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC RENAL FAILURE

University Staff Counselling Service

How to Reduce Test Anxiety

Test Anxiety. New Perspective Counseling Services Dr. Elyse Deleski, LMFT

DEPRESSION. Teenage. Parent s Guide to

Anxiety. Everybody and normal reaction the organism to. you. from. your major muscle groups. escape. the dog. of both of these. Now. head.

Embodiment, Shame & Play

Mindfulness, Self-Compassion, and Resilience by Linda Graham, LMFT

THE LIVING STRESS FREE STRESS MODEL

What You Need to Know. Self-Regulation: 5 Domains of Self-Reg

Enhancing Support for Special Populations through Understanding Neurodiversity

Retreat Lecture 2014 Yearly Meeting Gathering, Bath, 5 August Jane Muers

Intergenerational Trauma and Intergenerational Healing. 1 Presented through the Centre for Excellence in Indigenous Health With Dea Parsanishi

2/8/ List three homework assignments to give anxious families. 2. Describe three ways that families strengthen anxious patterns.

3/9/2017. A module within the 8 hour Responding to Crisis Course. Our purpose

Helping Your Children Learn to Handle Their Own Anxiety Winter 2015

Targeting Emotion Dysregulation in the Treatment of Self-injury: An Acceptancebased Emotion Regulation Group Therapy

Typical or Troubled? Teen Mental Health

POsitive mental health for young people. What you need to know about Children and Adolescent s Mental Health Services (CAMHS) in Buckinghamshire

5 Quick Tips for Improving Your Emotional Intelligence. and Increasing Your Success in All Areas of Your Life

Look to see if they can focus on compassionate attention, compassionate thinking and compassionate behaviour. This is how the person brings their

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)

Fear of illness returning

OVERCOMING YOUR CHILD S FEARS AND WORRIES GUIDANCE FOR PARENTS

Flashpoint: Recognizing and Preventing Workplace Violence Shots Fired: When Lightning Strikes - Active Shooter Training From the Center for Personal

Anxiety and Depression. What you want to know Leah Hibbeln-Colburn, CMHC Valley Behavioral Health

Ingredients of Difficult Conversations

The eight steps to resilience at work

Anxiety: Cure For Anxiety, Fear, Panic & Techniques For Stress By Zac Dixon READ ONLINE

Emotional Intelligence and NLP for better project people Lysa

Problem Situation Form for Parents

OVERVIEW ANXIETY AND ANGER IN ADULTS AUTISM AND MENTAL HEALTH COMORBIDITIES WHAT YOU SEE AND WHAT THEY FEEL WHAT YOU SEE AND WHAT THEY FEEL 26/09/2015

How to Help Your Patients Overcome Anxiety with Mindfulness

Exposure Therapy. in Low Intensity CBT. Marie Chellingsworth, Dr Paul Farrand & Gemma Wilson. Marie Chellingsworth, Dr Paul Farrand & Gemma Wilson

Taking Charge of My Mental/Emotional Health. 8th grade

anxiety. Strategies for helping children to understand and manage their Maria Ivanka Milić

Interpersonal Biofeedback Training with Couples


Resilience: After a Hurricane

SEARCH AND RESCUE Supporting a colleague with a mental health problem

A-Z of Mental Health Problems

The Brave Child How to Help Your Child Adapt, Move Forward, and Thrive (Even When They Are Scared)

Understanding and Building Emotional Resilience

July 2018 Coping with anxiety

Name Block Quiz Date 1B Taking Charge of My Mental/Emotional Health

AN INFORMATION BOOKLET FOR YOUNG PEOPLE WHO SELF HARM & THOSE WHO CARE FOR THEM

Neurobiology of Sexual Assault Trauma: Supportive Conversations with Victims

threats, losses, or injustices and the associated feelings of anxiety, depression, or anger.

Meta Skills: MEDDSS/MEDS Effectively Wise Mind IPE DEAR MAN GIVE FAST Nonjudgmental Radical Acceptance. MEDDSS / MEDS Mastery Exercise Diet

Achievement: Approach versus Avoidance Motivation

Stress Prevention in 6 Steps S T E P 3 A P P R A I S E : C O G N I T I V E R E S T R U C T U R I N G

Caring for Children Who Have Experienced Trauma

What is anxiety? What does it look like? Why is my child anxious? What can I do to help my child?

If you would like to find out more about this service:

Coach on Call. Please give me a call if you have more questions about this or other topics.

Exposures, Flooding, & Desensitization. Anxiety Disorders. History 12/2/2009

Understanding Your Coding Feedback

Psychological preparation for natural disasters

Tier 3 Specialist Weight Management Service. Helen Moffat, Fiona Campbell Mary McCallum

OVERCOMING YOUR CHILD S FEARS AND WORRIES GUIDANCE FOR PARENTS

Improve Your... Mental Training - SELF TALK

A FRAMEWORK FOR EMPOWERMENT

Your Safety System - a User s Guide.

Feeling nervous? Class Objectives: 9/3/2008. Chapter 4-Anxiety Disorders. Discuss the paper guidelines

S o u t h e r n. 2-4 Tea Gardens Avenue Kirrawee NSW 2232 Ph: Fx: Deliberate Self Injury Information

SESSION TOOLS LEARNING COPING SKILLS

Transcription:

Moving fear into USEFUL anxiety PACER 12 August 2017 Anne R. Gearity, PhD

Today Examine the connection between fear debilitating anxiety and anxiety that can be useful. Examine ways to restore useful anxiety by focusing on mastery. Provide guidance about how we can best support children and adolescents who struggle to manage and learn.

Subjective feelings of fear = state of mind occurring when the source of harm, What is fear? Le Doux and Pine 2016 the threat, is either immediate or imminent. Brain defensive circuit cause defensive behaviors. Resulting changes in physiology = defensive physiological adjustments.

And Anxiety = feelings that occur when source of harm is uncertain or is distal in space and time. Le Doux and Pine 2016

Anxiety activates stress Stress is not the enemy/ everyday anxieties. Tolerable (useful) stress and anxiety = enough to engage brain functions/ with enough resources/ and adequate adult

Toxic stress Toxic stress and toxic anxiety is endangering: too much for too long with too little help. Why help? Remember defensive behaviors and defensive physiological adjustments? These solutions take over without active adult mediation. Toxic stress often defeats learning and mastery.

Anxiety is different from worry: Worrying permits Anxiety can become habitual and chronic. specific focus, problem solving and even distraction (I'll think about that later). Anxiety tends to be more diffuse, preoccupying and hard to Often people describe being both anxious and depressed: lack of effectiveness can easily lead to depression. escape because it is more in my body than just my thoughts.

Fear brain/ learning brain

Sources of fear and anxiety Outside: events or experiences that are or perceived to be endangering. Between: children seek proximity (attachment) to manage fear. When important relationships are threatened or loss is possible, fear dominates. Inside: memories, perceptions, physical distress, dysregulation can cause a child to experience fear from within.

Sources of fear and anxiety outside danger inside distress between: threat if real or potential loss panic: I can't

I can t do it Childhood is dominated by experiences of I can do it. Connection and exploration lead to mastery. When managing seems too hard, or beyond possible, children and teens often panic, and react with cascading anxiety.

Working with anxiety

Working with anxiety

When mastery cannot be reached

How can we support mastery?

1. R E C O G N I Z E D I F F E R E N T W A Y S OF E X P R E S S I N G D I S T R E S S

Behavior has purpose Behavior has purpose and communicative intent. Behavior serves to protect myself and signal to others. Because of fear circuit and defensive behavior, children need adults to be interested, to help make sense of what is perceived as dangerous, and reduce behavioral activation that doesn't work. Joining: replace why you do that? with why did he do that??????

Even when behavior seems planned or is about something kids know not to do ask what does he/ she need to learn, and how can I help that learning? Remaining interested in children's learning protects against useless blaming and retaliation.

2. A C T I V E L Y C O N S T R U C T E M O T I O N A L S T O R I E S Emotions are not just static or hard-wired entities but alive and continually constructed phenomena that allow us to build a sense of our lives-- and our worlds. We construct meaning that confirm our feelings, and feel to confirm our meanings. Meaning making is a critical component of emotional life.

A faulty story Very challenged children perceive punishment as both rejection and retaliation. So they "fight back". They are judged to be wild and made responsible for others feeling constructs.

3. Build their disability story When children and teens are struggling at school, they need more than explanations: they need constructed narratives that include why learning is hard/ how their feelings and perceptions make sense/ and what they can do to feel better about themselves. Resilience is about moving forward in the face of adversity, and having a organizing story helps.

4. Advice to parents Scaffolding is different from suffocating: remember mastery. Children and teens must get to competence. Be sure to diversify what competence means, and respect your child s strengths. Pride can be a good quality: I'm so proud for you.

Development happens in time

Regulating support Try, try, try (motivation and desire) Accept that this might be hard (integration) Don't get too upset (distress tolerance) Then you can do it(guiding). Start with we can do this Sroufe, 1996 together (scaffolding).

Anxiety tricks you into staying scared/ tricks back Anxiety comes on fast but it is really hard to get it to go away. sensations, and conscious feeling states/ words to describe. Talk to your body reconciles Benefit of exposure (extinction): these seemingly contradictory forces. dosing/small steps/ small victories. Reinforcements that keep child active and

5. Advice to teachers At school anxiety becomes a learning disability: fear brain. Kindness, patience and informed teaching strategies promote mastery. It's important: convey conviction: this student can learn. Counter fear and loathing.

Keep moving students forward Scaffolding * NEW LEARNING What children already know and can use for more learning. Zone of proximal development, Vygotsky *

Give up shame Shaming never helps students who are struggling to learn not even the ones who appear to not care. Remember: fear circuits promote defensive behaviors. Students are protecting themselves from their own shame and misery. They need relief from shame, and direction to how to learn. What if student won't try? Reframe this: how can I find ways to repair motivation so this student will want to learn something useful?

Understanding where you are going, and why, is critical to ensuring that all feet are marching in the right direction. Northwest Area Foundation report, 2011 Disorganized, dysregulated students need predictable, reliable expectations. This is especially crucial for students who fear school, and feel anxious about being there. Educators must shift from this is how I do it but this works for this child. Individual educational plans are as good as educators willingness to focus on mastery and obstacles that block mastery of academics, but also of fear.

6. Advice to mental health providers (including anyone who supports wellbeing) Mental health massages minds and brains. Fear is massaged by confidence of safety; anxiety is massaged by perspective: make sure to keep danger testing with reality opportunities. Medications an provide some relief to fear and anxiety but only if learning keeps going. (LeDoux and Pine, 2016, Amer J Psychiatry)

Importance of executive functions Brain organizes from bottom up. Executive functions represent planful capacities and are often deficient when learning is hard. This adds to fear and anxiety. Executive function work must include attention to self functions too/ to building a robust and realistic sense of self/ I did it! Self deficits can cause two extreme reactions: dissociation/ checking out on self; and grandiosity/ exaggeration of self.

7. Advice to anxious students Remember, learning is at the center. Want to learn something. Hire adults to help: this is what kids do. Take charge. Be brave enough to say this is how I learn best. That is very different from avoiding or feeling trapped Tolerate disappointment and recognize that anger is one of the defensive behaviors that protect you and then doesn't.

Pete the cat manages