Sensorimotor Psychotherapy:
One Method for Processing Traumatic
Memory
Pat Ogden, M.A. and Kekuni Minton, PhD.
Hakomi Somatics Institute and Naropa
University
Boulder, Colorado
Abstract
Traditional psychotherapy addresses the cognitive and emotional
elements of trauma, but lacks techniques that work directly with the
physiological elements, despite the fact that trauma profoundly affects the
body and many symptoms of traumatized individuals are somatically based.
Altered relationships among cognitive, emotional, and sensorimotor (body)
levels of information processing are also found to be implicated in trauma
symptoms. Sensorimotor Psychotherapy is a method that integrates
sensorimotor processing with cognitive and emotional processing in the
treatment of trauma. Unassimilated somatic responses evoked in trauma
involving both arousal and defensive responses are shown to contribute to
many PTSD symptoms and to be critical elements in the use of Sensorimotor
Psychotherapy. By using the body (rather than cognition or emotion) as a
primary entry point in processing trauma, Sensorimotor Psychotherapy
directly treats the effects of trauma on the body, which in turn facilitates
emotional and cognitive processing. This method is especially beneficial for
clinicians working with dissociation, emotional reactivity or flat affect,
frozen states or hyperarousal and other PTSD symptoms. In this article, we
discuss Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, emphasizing sensorimotor processing
techniques which can be integrated with traditional approaches that treat
these symptoms. Because the therapist's ability to interactively regulate
clients' dysregulated states and also to cultivate clients' self-awareness
of inner body sensations is crucial to this approach, three sessions are
described illustrating the clinical application of this method.
Sensorimotor Psychotherapy is a method for facilitating the processing of
unassimilated sensorimotor reactions to trauma and for resolving the
destructive effects of these reactions on cognitive and emotional experience.
These sensorimotor reactions consist of sequential physical and sensory
patterns involving autonomic nervous system arousal and orienting/defensive
responses which seek to resolve to a point of rest and satisfaction in the
body. During a traumatic event such a satisfactory resolution of responses
might be accomplished by successfully fighting or fleeing. However, for the
majority of traumatized clients, this does not occur. Traumatized
individuals are plagued by the return of dissociated, incomplete or
ineffective sensorimotor reactions in such forms as intrusive images, sounds,
smells, body sensations, physical pain, constriction, numbing and the
inability to modulate arousal.
These unresolved sensorimotor reactions condition emotional and cognitive
processing, often disrupting the traumatized person's ability to think clearly
or to glean accurate information from emotional states (Van der Kolk, 1996).
Conversely, cognitive beliefs and emotional states condition somatic
processing. For instance, a belief such as "I am helpless" may interrupt
sensorimotor processes of active physical defense; an emotion such as fear may
cause sensorimotor processes such as arousal to escalate. Most
psychotherapeutic approaches favor emotional and cognitive processing over
body processing, and it has been shown that such approaches can greatly
relieve trauma symptoms. However, since somatic symptoms are significant in
traumatization (McFarlane, 1996, p. 172) the efficacy of trauma
treatment may be increased by the addition of interventions that facilitate
sensorimotor processing. We propose that sensorimotor processing interventions
can help regulate and facilitate emotional and cognitive processing, and we
find that confronting somatic issues by directly addressing sensorimotor
processing can be useful in restoring normal healthy functioning for victims
of trauma regardless of the nature of the trauma's origin. However, we also
find that sensorimotor processing alone is insufficient; the integration of
all three levels of processing -- sensorimotor, emotional and cognitive -- is
essential for recovery to occur.
In this article we will discuss Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, a comprehensive
method that utilizes the body as a primary entry point in trauma treatment,
but one which integrates cognitive and emotional processing as well. We will
emphasize sensorimotor processing, which entails mindfully
tracking (following in detail) the sequential physical movements and
sensations associated with unassimilated sensorimotor reactions, such as motor
impulses, muscular tension, trembling and various other micromovements, and
changes in posture, breathing and heart rate. These body sensations are
similar to Gendlin's (1978) "felt sense" in that they are physical feelings,
but while the felt sense includes emotional and cognitive components, the
sensations we refer to are purely physical. Clients are taught to distinguish
between physical sensations and trauma-based emotions through cultivating
awareness of sensations as they fluctuate in texture, quality and intensity
until the sensations themselves have stabilized, and clients are able to
experience these sensations as distinct from emotions.
Sensorimotor processing is similar to Peter Levine's (1997) "Somatic
Experiencing" in the tracking of physical sensation, but it differs in intent.
For Levine, tracking physical sensation is an end in itself; his approach does
not specifically include therapeutic maps to address cognitive or emotional
processing. Similar to "Somatic Experiencing," Sensorimotor
Psychotherapy encourages sensorimotor processing when necessary to regulate
sensorimotor reactions, often the case in shock and non-relational trauma, but
sensorimotor processing is most often used as a prelude to holistic processing
on all three levels (cognitive, emotional, and sensorimotor). For example, a
traumatized client's affective and cognitive information processing may be
'driven' by an underlying dysregulated arousal, causing emotions to escalate
and thoughts to revolve around and around in cycles. When the client learns to
self-regulate her arousal through sensorimotor processing, she may be able to
more accurately distinguish between cognitive and affective reactions that are
merely symptomatic of such dysregulated arousal and those cognitive-emotional
contents that are genuine issues that need to be worked through. As this
occurs, the approach of Sensorimotor Psychotherapy might shift from
sensorimotor processing alone to include cognitive and emotional processing,
and to address relational and transferential dynamics as well. Sensorimotor
Psychotherapy's use of the therapeutic interaction to work through relational
issues and promote self -regulation can be very effective in the resolution of
relational trauma. Thus, Sensorimotor Psychotherapy lends itself to the
treatment of relational trauma as well as shock and non-relational trauma.
Before discussing Sensorimotor Psychotherapy more fully, we will first
address the question of how experience is processed on cognitive, emotional
and sensorimotor levels, and the effects of unresolved sensorimotor reactions
on all levels of information processing. Ken Wilber's (1996) notion of
hierarchical information processing describes the evolutionary and
functional hierarchy among these three levels of organizing experience --
cognitive, emotional and sensorimotor -- a hierarchy that reflects the
evolutionary development of the human brain.
While functionally the three levels of information processing are mutually
dependent and intertwined (Damasio, 1999; LeDoux, 1996; Schore, 1994),
clinically we find that it is important for the therapist to observe the
client's processing of information on each of these three related but distinct
levels of experience, differentiate which level of processing will most
successfully support integration of traumatic experience in any moment of
therapy, and apply specific techniques that facilitate processing at that
particular level. Such an approach ultimately fosters "holistic" processing
where all three levels will operate synergistically.
The hierarchy of levels of information processing -- sensorimotor,
emotional, and cognitive -- generally correlates with the three levels of
brain architecture described by MacLean (1985): the sensorimotor level of
information processing (including sensation and programmed movement impulses)
is initiated primarily by lower rear portions of the brain, emotional
processing by more intermediate limbic parts of the brain, and cognitive
processing by the frontal cortical upper parts of the brain. These
three levels interact and affect each other simultaneously, functioning as a
cohesive whole, with the degree of integration of each level of processing
affecting the efficacy of other levels, as described by Fisher & Murray
(1991):
The brain functions as an integrated whole, but is comprised of systems
that are hierarchically organized. The "higher level" integrative functions
evolved from and are dependent on the integrity of "lower-level" structures
and on sensorimotor experience. Higher (cortical) centers of the brain are
viewed as those that are responsible for abstraction, perception, reasoning,
language, and learning. Sensory integration, and intersensory association, in
contrast, occur mainly within lower (subcortical) centers. Lower parts of the
brain are conceptualized as developing and maturing before higher-level
structures; development and optimal functioning of higher-level structures are
thought to be dependent, in part, on the development and optimal functioning
of lower-level structures. (p. 16)Sensorimotor processing is in many
ways foundational to the others and includes the features of a simpler, more
primitive form of information processing than do its more evolved
counterparts. With its seat in the lower, older brain structures, sensorimotor
processing relies on a relatively higher number of fixed sequences of steps in
the way it does its work. Some of these fixed sequences are well known, such
as the startle reflex and the fight, flight or freeze response. The
simplest sequences are involuntary reflexes (e.g., the knee jerk reaction)
which are the most rigidly fixed and determined. More complex are the motor
patterns that we learn at young ages, which then become automatic, such as
walking and running. In the more highly evolved emotional and cognitive
realms, we find fewer and fewer fixed sequences of steps in processing, and
more complexity and variability of response. Thus, sensorimotor processing is
more directly associated with overall body processing: the fixed action
patterns seen in active defenses, changes in breathing and muscular tonicity,
autonomic nervous system activation and so forth.
The nature of this hierarchy is such that the higher levels of processing
often influence and direct the lower levels. We can decide (cognitive
function) to ignore the sensation of hunger and not act on it, even while the
physiological processes associated with hunger, such as the secretion of
saliva and contraction of stomach muscles, continue. In cognitive theory, this
is called "top-down processing" (LeDoux, 1996, p. 272), indicating that the
upper level of processing (cognitive) can and often does override, steer or
interrupt the lower levels, elaborating upon or interfering with emotional and
sensorimotor processing.
Adult activity is often based upon top-down processing. Schore (1994) notes
that, in adults, "higher cortical areas" act as a "control center," and that
the orbital cortex hierarchically dominates subcortical limbic activity (p.
139). A person might think about what to accomplish for the day,
outline plans, and then structure time to meet particular goals. While
carrying these plans through, one may override feelings of fatigue, hunger, or
physical discomfort. It's as though we hover just above our somatic and
sensory experience, knowing it's there, but not allowing it to be the primary
determinant of our actions.
In contrast, the activities of very young children are often dominated by
sensorimotor (Piaget, 1952) and emotional systems (Schore, 1994), in other
words by bottom-up processes. Tactile and kinesthetic sensations guide early
attachment behavior as well as help regulate the infant's behavior and
physiology (Schore, in press-a). Infants and very small children explore the
world through these systems, building the neural networks that are the
foundation for later cognitive development (Piaget, 1952; Hannaford, 1995).
Hard-wired to be governed by somatic and emotional states, infants respond
automatically to sensorimotor and affective cues and are unregulated by
cognition or cortical control (Schore, 1994). The infant is a
"subcortical creature…[who] lacks the means for modulation of behavior which
is made possible by the development of cortical control" (Diamond, Balvin and
Diamond, 1963, p. 305). Similarly, traumatized people frequently experience
themselves as being at the mercy of their sensations, physical reactions and
emotions, having lost the capacity to regulate these functions.
In summary, bottom-up and top-down processing represent two general
directions of information processing. Top-down processing is initiated by the
cortex, and often involves cognition. This higher level observes, monitors,
regulates, and often directs the lower levels; at the same time, the effective
functioning of the higher level is partly dependent on the effective
functioning of the lower levels. Bottom-up processing, on the other hand, is
initiated at the sensorimotor and emotional realms. These lower levels of
processing are more fundamental, in terms of evolution, development and
function: these capacities are found in earlier species and are already intact
within earlier stages of human life. They precede thought and form a
foundation for the higher modes of processing.
The interplay between top-down and bottom-up processing holds significant
implications for the occurrence and treatment of trauma. Psychotherapy has
traditionally harnessed top-down techniques to manage disruptive bottom-up
processes, through the voluntary and conscious sublimation of sensorimotor and
emotional processing. This is achieved through activity, behavioral discharge,
cognitive override or distraction. When sensorimotor experience is disturbing
or overwhelming, conscious top-down regulation can allow a person to pace
herself, modulating the degree of arousal or disorganization in the system, as
evidenced by the following example:
Harriet.... had a problem and had found a way to begin to control it.
When a hallucination began, she would try to picture her library at home. She
would look at the imaginary shelves and start to count the books, focusing on
each one as best she could as she counted. Soon, her hallucination would
stop…she was imposing top-down control, which quashed the bottom-up
hallucination signal. She was purposefully lighting up her cortex so that it
drowned out her lower brain, snapping her out of her episode just as cognition
wakes us up out of a dream. (Hobson, 1994, p. 174)While the above
technique is an effective way to manage hallucinations and provide significant
relief, and thus can be an important first step in therapy, it may not address
the entire problem. It engages cognition, but ignores sensorimotor processes.
Such top-down processing alone may manage sensorimotor reactions, but may not
effectuate their full assimilation. For instance, a client may learn to
mitigate arousal by convincing herself that the world is now safe, but the
underlying tendency for arousal to escalate to overwhelming degrees may not
have been fully resolved. The traumatic experience and arousal from the
sensorimotor and emotional levels may be redirected through top-down
management, but the processing, digestion and assimilation of sensorimotor
reactions to the trauma may not have occurred.
In much the same way that a client who comes to therapy with unresolved
grief must identify and experience the grief (emotional processing), a client
who exhibits unresolved sensorimotor reactions must identify and experience
these reactions physically (sensorimotor processing). Additionally, the
client's awareness and processing of sensorimotor reactions on the
sensorimotor level will exert a positive influence on emotional and cognitive
processing, since, as we have seen, optimal functioning of the higher levels
is somewhat dependent upon the adequate functioning of the lower
levels. Sensorimotor processing is often a precursor to holistic processing --
the synergistic functioning of cognitive, emotional and sensorimotor levels of
processing.
In Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, top-down direction is harnessed to support rather than manage sensorimotor processing. The client
is asked to mindfully track (a top-down, cognitive process) the sequence of
physical sensations and impulses (sensorimotor process) as they progress through the body, and to temporarily disregard emotions and thoughts that
arise, until the bodily sensations and impulses resolve to a point of rest and
stabilization in the body. The client learns to observe and follow the
unassimilated sensorimotor reactions (primarily, arousal and defensive
reactions) that were activated at the time of the trauma. Bottom-up processing
left on its own does not resolve trauma, but if the client is directed to
employ the cognitive function of tracking and articulating sensorimotor
experience while voluntarily inhibiting awareness of emotions, content, and
interpretive thinking, sensorimotor experience can be assimilated.
Furthermore, it is crucial that the cognitive direction is engaged to help
clients learn self-regulation.
To harness such top-down cognitive direction, a specific kind of
therapeutic relationship is imperative. Similar to a mother's interaction with
her infant, the therapist must serve as an "auxiliary cortex" (Diamond et al.,
1963), for clients through observing and articulating their sensorimotor
experience until they are able to notice, describe and track these experiences
themselves. Such relational communication is a process of "interactive
psychobiological regulation," which resembles a mother's attunement to and
interaction with her infant's physiological and emotional states (Schore,
1994). Schore writes that the therapist must act as an "affect regulator of
the patient's dysregulated states to provide a growth-facilitating environment
for the patient's immature affect regulating structures" (Schore, in press-b,
p. 17).
In defining self-regulation, Schore (in press-b) differentiates between
interactive and non-interactive forms, describing self-regulation as both
"interactive regulation in interconnected contexts via a two-person
psychology," and "autoregulation in autonomous contexts via a one-person
psychology"( p. 13-14). When self-regulation is fully developed, clients can
observe, articulate, and eventually integrate sensorimotor reactions on their
own as well as utilize relationships to self-regulate. Without what Schore
calls the "adaptive capacity to shift between these dual regulatory modes" (p.
14), the sensorimotor reactions of arousal and defensive responses are subject
to becoming either hyperactive or hypoactive, as we shall see in the following
section, leaving traumatized persons at the mercy of their bodies.
Physical Defensive Responses
Threat calls forth both
psychological and physical defenses, the objectives of which are to evaluate
and reduce stress and maximize the chances for survival (Nijenhuis & Van
der Hart, 1999). For the purpose of this article, we will focus on physical
defenses, rather than psychological defenses (such as projection, reaction
formation, displacement, rationalization or minimization), acknowledging that both types may be responses to traumatic situations.
Physical defenses are examples of the relatively fixed action patterns
mentioned in the previous section, the effective functioning of which upper
levels of processing depend upon for their efficacy.
Physical defenses may precede cognitive and emotional reactions in acute
traumatic situations. Hobson writes:
Bottom-up processing takes precedence in times of emergency, when it is
advantageous to short-circuit the cortex and activate a motor-pattern
generated directly from the brain stem. If we suddenly see a car careening
toward us, we instantly turn our car away; we react automatically, and only
later (even if it is only a split second later) do we realize there is danger
and feel afraid. (1994, p. 139)However, during a more prolonged
trauma, voluntary physical defensive impulses that are mediated through the
cognitive level -- such as thoughts of striking out or reaching for the phone
-- might also come into play.
Physical defenses may be active or passive (Levine, 1997; Nijenhuis and Van
der Hart, 1999). Active defenses manifest through a wide variety of physical
impulses and movements depending on the nature of the threat, and vary in
intensity of activity. They include fight/flight and a multitude of other
possible reactions such as engaging the righting reflexes to regain balance,
turning away from a falling branch, lifting an arm to avoid a blow, slamming
on the brakes to prevent an accident, twisting out of the grip of an
assailant, and so on. Additionally, the orienting response (scanning and
adjusting to the environment) is heightened and all of the organism's
attention is focused on the threat. The senses become hypersensitive to better
smell, hear, see and taste the danger (Levine, 1997; Van Olst, 1972) in
preparation for further assessment and response (Hobson, 1994).
In the animal kingdom, active defensive responses turn to passive freezing
when active responses are likely to threaten survival (Nijenhuis and Van der
Hart, 1999). For humans as well, when active defenses are impossible or ill
advised, they may be replaced by passive defenses such as submission,
automatic obedience, and freezing (Nijenhuis & Van der Hart, 1999).
Nijenhuis and Van der Hart (1999) write:
…. applying problem-solving coping (attempted flight, fight or
assertiveness) would be inevitably frustrating and nonproductive for a child
being physically or sexually abused or witnessing violence. In some
situations, active motor defense may actually increase danger and therefore be
less adaptive than passive, mental ways of coping…(p.
50)Furthermore, passive defenses may be the best option when
active ones are ineffective, as when a victim is unable to outrun an
assailant.
While Levine (1997) claims that hyperarousal and active defenses precede
passive defense and immobility, both Nijenhuis (e.g., Nijenhuis, Vanderlinden
& Spinhoven, 1998) and Porges (1995, 1997) note that frozen states are not
always preceded by active defenses or arousal. In some cases, such as those
mentioned above, an individual might automatically engage passive defenses
without first attempting active defense. Also, passive defenses alone are
employed in infancy, long before capabilities for fight/flight.
In passive defense, the ordinarily active orienting response, which
includes effective use of the senses, scanning mechanisms and evaluation
capacities, may become dull and ineffective. The cognitive function of
problem-solving may become severely diminished and confused, which may lead to
a general dulling of cognition or "psychic numbing" (Solomon, Laror, and
McFarlane, 1996, p. 106), a numbing of sensation, and the slowing of
muscular/skeletal responses (Levine, 1997). Muscles may be extremely tense but
immobilized, or flaccid. Clients may report that in this state, they find
moving difficult, and they may even feel paralyzed.
Frequently, the complete execution of effective physical defensive
movements do not take place during the trauma itself. As we have seen, a
victim may instantaneously freeze rather than act, a driver may not have time
to execute the impulse to turn the car to avoid impact, or a person may be
overpowered when attempting to fight off an assailant. Over time, such
interrupted or ineffective physical defensive movement sequences contribute to
trauma symptoms. Herman (1992) observes:
When neither resistance nor escape is possible, the human system of
self-defense becomes overwhelmed and disorganized. Each component of the
ordinary response to danger, having lost its utility, tends to persist in an
altered and exaggerated state long after the actual danger is over. (p.
34)Traumatized people may exhibit a propensity for either
hyperactive or passive defense or an alternation between the two. When
defenses become hyperactive, they manifest as habitual defensiveness,
aggression against self or others, hyper-alertness, hyper-vigilance, excessive
motoric activity and uncontrollable bouts of rage, and so on. Habitual passive
defenses may manifest as chronic patterns of submission, helplessness,
inability to set boundaries, feelings of inadequacy, automatic obedience, and
repetition of the victim role. The person may appear lifeless and
non-expressive, and may fail to defend against or orient toward danger, or
even attempt to get help.
Interrupted or ineffective physical defensive movements can disrupt the
overall capacity for sensorimotor processing, similar to the way a repeated
suppression of a particular emotion disrupts the overall capacity for
emotional processing. Unsuccessful patterns of sensorimotor responses may
become habitual, negatively affecting the normal and healthy interplay between
top-down and bottom-up processing, and thus contribute to trauma symptoms.
The Modulation Model
Figure 1 Modulation Model: Optimum Arousal Zone
Poor tolerance for arousal is characteristic of traumatized individuals
(Van der Kolk, 1987). The top and bottom lines of the above diagram depict the
limits of a person's optimum degree of arousal, which Wilbarger and Wilbarger
(1997) call the "optimal arousal zone." When arousal remains within this zone,
a person can contain and experience (not dissociate from) the affects,
sensations, sense perceptions and thoughts that occur within this zone, and
can process information effectively. In this zone, modulation can occur
spontaneously and naturally. This optimum zone is similar to Siegel's "window
of tolerance," within which "various intensities of emotional arousal can be
processed without disrupting the functioning of the system" (1999, p. 253).
During trauma, arousal initially tends to rise beyond the upper limits of
the optimal zone, which alerts the person to possible threat (Van der Kolk,
Van der Hart, and Marmar, 1996). In successful and vigorous fight or flight,
this hyperarousal is utilized through physical activity (Levine, 1997) in
serving the purpose of defending and restoring balance to the organism. In the
ideal resolution of the arousal, the level returns to the parameters of the
optimum zone. However, this return to baseline does not always occur, which
contributes significantly to the problems with hyperarousal that are
characteristic of the traumatized person.
In relation to energy dissipation following hyperarousal, Levine (1997)
writes that trauma symptoms "… stem from the frozen residue of energy that has
not been resolved and discharged..." and the individual exposed to trauma must
"discharge all the energy mobilized to negotiate that threat or [the person]
will become a victim…" (p. 19-20). Although we agree that discharge of energy
may be an element in trauma therapy, just as expression of emotion also may be
an element of trauma therapy, we disagree with the discharge model. We believe
that trauma symptoms stem from unassimilated reactions on all three levels of
information processing, and that these reactions must be integrated through
restoring the balance and synergy between top-down and bottom-up processing.
Rather than to "complete the freezing response" by discharging energy (Levine,
1997, p. 111) our immediate intention is to teach the client to modulate
sensorimotor processes, which sometimes means stimulating arousal if the
client is hypoaroused.
Hyperarousal involves "excessive sympathetic branch activity [which] can
lead to increased energy-consuming processes, manifested as increases in heart
rate and respiration and as a "pounding" sensation in the head" (Siegel, 1999,
p. 254). Over the long term, such hyperarousal may disrupt cognitive and
affective processing as the individual becomes overwhelmed and disorganized by
the accelerated pace and amplitude of thoughts and emotions, which may be
accompanied by intrusive memories. As Van der Kolk, Van der Hart, et al.
(1996) state, "This hyperarousal creates a vicious cycle: state-dependent
memory retrieval causes increased access to traumatic memories and involuntary
intrusions of the trauma, which lead in turn to even more arousal" (Van der
Kolk, Van der Hart, et al., 1996, p. 305). Such state-dependent memories may
increase clients' tendency to "interpret current stimuli as reminders of the
trauma" (p. 305), perpetuating the pattern of hyperarousal. Van der Kolk
points out that high arousal is easily triggered in traumatized persons,
causing them to "…be unable to trust their bodily sensations to warn them
against impending threat, and cease to alert them to take appropriate action"
(p. 421), thereby disrupting effective defensive responses.
At the opposite end of the Modulation Model, "…excessive parasympathetic
branch activity leads to increased energy conserving processes, manifested as
decreases in heart rate and respiration and as a sense of 'numbness' and
'shutting down' within the mind" (Siegel, 1999, p.254). Such hypoarousal can
manifest as numbing, a dulling of inner body sensation, slowing of
muscular/skeletal response and diminished muscular tone, especially in the
face (Porges, 1995). Here cognitive and emotional processing are also
disrupted, not by hyperarousal as above, but by hypoarousal.
Both hyperarousal and hypoarousal often lead to dissociation. In
hyperarousal, dissociation may occur because the intensity and accelerated
pace of sensations and emotions overwhelm cognitive processing so that the
person cannot stay present with current experience. In hypoarousal,
dissociation may manifest as reduced capacity to sense or feel even
significant events, an inability to accurately evaluate dangerous situations
or think clearly, and a lack of motivation. The body, or a part of the body,
may become numb, and the victim may experience a sense of "leaving" the body.
Additional long term and debilitating symptoms might include "emotional
constriction, social isolation, retreat from family obligations, anhedonia and
a sense of estrangement" (Van der Kolk, 1987, p. 3) along with "…depression…
and a lack of motivation, as psychosomatic reactions, or as dissociative
states" (Van der Kolk, McFarlane, and Van der Hart, 1996, p. 422). As we can
see, these symptoms are reminiscent of passive defenses, in which a person
does not actively defend against danger.
Figure 2 The Modulation Model: The Bi-Phasic Response to Trauma
The traumatized individual may reside primarily either above or below the
parameters of the optimum arousal zone, or swing uncontrollably between these
two states (Van der Kolk, 1987, p 2). This bi-phasic alternation between
hyperarousal and numbing or freezing (Van der Kolk, p. 3) -- the top
and bottom segments of the modulation model in Figure 2 -- may become the new
norm in the aftermath of trauma.
When a person's arousal is outside the optimum zone at either end of the
spectrum, upper levels of processing will be disabled, and holistic processing
will be replaced by bottom-up reflexive action. As Siegel (1999) notes,
internal states outside the "window of tolerance" are "characterized by either
excessive rigidity or randomness. These states are inflexible or chaotic, and
as such are not adaptive to the internal or external environment" (p.255).
Siegel goes on to say, "In states of mind beyond the window of tolerance, the
prefrontally mediated capacity [cognitive processing] for response flexibility
is temporarily shut down. The 'higher mode' of integrative [cognitive]
processing has been replaced by a 'lower mode' of reflexive [sensorimotor]
responding" (bracketed text added; pp. 254-255).
Stephen Porges's (1995, 1997) work, which elucidates a hierarchical
relationship among the levels of the autonomic nervous system, has important
implications for the regulation of both arousal and defensive responses. He
concludes that hypoarousal (described above) is due to a specific branch of
the parasympathetic nervous system, the "dorsal vagal complex," which causes
the organism to conserve energy by drastically slowing heart and breath rates.
The other branch of the parasympathetic nervous systems, the "ventral vagal
complex", which Porges calls the "Social Engagement System, " is the "smart"
vagal because it regulates both the dorsal vagal and sympathetic systems. This
"smart" system is much more flexible than the other two more primitive levels
of the autonomic nervous system, which if unregulated, tend to the extremes of
hyperarousal or hypoarousal. The Social Engagement System gives humans immense
flexibility of response to the environment (1995, 1997). For example, during
social engagement, interaction and conversation can rapidly shift from strong
affect and animation one moment, to calm listening and reflection the next.
This "smart" branch of the parasympathetic nervous system regulates the
sympathetic and "freeze" (dorsal vagal parasympathetic) responses to trauma
and allows human beings to fine-tune their arousal to the needs of the
situation. This sophisticated "braking" mechanism of the Social
Engagement System facilitates the regulation of overall arousal and is akin to
Schore's "interactive psychobiological regulation."
In effective modulation, the Social Engagement System regulates the more
extreme behavior of the autonomic nervous system. Under the stress of trauma,
an individual may at first attempt to use the Social Engagement System to
modulate, but, if ineffective, social engagement/interactive regulation will
tend to shut down. As this occurs, the person has a compromised capacity to
use relationships for regulation and instead reverts to the more primitive
sensorimotor and emotional systems. The healthy functioning of cognitive
direction is diminished. As we shall see below, in Sensorimotor Psychotherapy
the Social Engagement System is activated as the therapist/client interaction
effectively serves to regulate and modulate arousal. After the therapist
fulfills this role (in other words, becomes an "auxiliary cortex" for the
client), the client can learn the auto-regulation capacities of observing and
tracking sensorimotor reactions. That is, the therapist's ability to
interactively regulate the client's dysregulated arousal creates an
environment in which the client can begin to access his own ability to
regulate arousal (Schore, in press-b) independent of relational interaction.
Through this process, the client is helped to move from frozen states and/or
hyperarousal to full participation with the Social Engagement System.
Sensorimotor Psychotherapy: Essentials and Case
Discussion
Essentials of Sensorimotor Psychotherapy are 1)
regulating affective and sensorimotor states through the therapeutic
relationship, and 2) teaching the client to self-regulate by mindfully
contacting, tracking and articulating sensorimotor processes independently. We
believe that the former promotes the reinstatement and development of the
client's Social Engagement System through interactive regulation, while the
latter promotes an independent assimilation of sensorimotor reactions. The
former is a prerequisite for the latter. As Schore observes, the therapist's
"interactive regulation of the patient's state enables him or her to begin to
verbally label the affective [and sensorimotor] experience" (bracketed text
added; Schore, in press-b, p. 20). Interactive regulation provides the
conditions under which the client can safely contact, describe and eventually
regulate inner experience.
The therapist must cultivate in the client an acute awareness of inner body
sensations, first via the therapeutic interaction as the therapist observes
and contacts sensorimotor states, and second as the client herself notices
these inner body sensations without prompting by the therapist. Inner body
sensations are the myriad of physical feelings that are continually created
within the body through biochemical changes and the movement of muscles,
ligaments, organs, fluids, breath, and so on. These bodily feelings are of a
distinctly physical character, such as clamminess, tightness, numbness, and
electric, tingling, and vibrating sensations, and of course many others.
However, when clients are asked to describe sensations, they frequently do so
with words such as "panic" or "terror," which refer to emotional states rather
than to sensation itself. When this occurs, clients are asked to describe how
they experience the emotion physically: for example, panic may be felt in the
body as rapid heart beat, trembling and shallow breathing. Anger might be
experienced as tension in the jaw, an impulse to strike out accompanied by a
sense of heaviness and immobility in the arms. Similarly, a belief about
oneself, such as "I'm bad" might be experienced as collapse through the spine,
a ducking of the head, and tension in the buttocks.
Through cultivating such awareness and ability for verbal description,
clients learn to distinguish and describe the various and often subtle
qualities of sensation. Developing a precise sensation vocabulary helps
clients expand their perception and processing of physical feelings in much
the same way that familiarity with a variety of words that describe emotion
aids in the perception and processing of emotions.
As clients describe traumatic experiences or symptoms, the therapist
observes their arousal level, tracking for either hyperarousal or hypoarousal.
The therapist's task is to "hold" the client's arousal at the optimal limits
of the Modulation Model, accessing enough traumatic material to process but
not so much that clients become too dissociated for processing to occur. When
arousal reaches either the upper or lower limit, clients are asked to
temporarily disregard their feelings and thoughts and instead follow the
development of physical sensations and movements in detail until these
sensations settle and the movements complete themselves. In this way, the
therapist acts as an auxiliary cortex, interactively modulating clients'
levels of arousal, keeping them from going too far outside the optimum arousal
zone, where it becomes difficult or impossible to process information without
dissociating. At the same time, clients develop their capacity to
self-regulate as they learn to limit the amount of information they must
process at any given moment, which develops the capacity for self-regulation
independent of their relationship with the therapist and prevents their being
overwhelmed with an overload of information coming from within.
When a client describing a past trauma experiences panic, the therapist
asks her to disregard the memory content and just sense the panic as bodily
sensation. When the client then reports a trembling in her hands and a rapid
heart rate, the therapist instructs her to track these sensations as they
change or "sequence". As Levine notes, "Once you become aware of them,
internal sensations almost always transform into something else" (Levine,
1997, p. 82). The trembling changes from affecting only the hands to
involving the arms, which begin to shake quite strongly, then gradually quiet
and soften; the heart rate also eventually returns to baseline. Only when this
sensorimotor experience has settled is additional content described and
emotional and cognitive processing included.
The therapist must learn to observe in precise detail the moment-by-moment
organization of sensorimotor experience in the client, focusing on both subtle
changes (such as skin color change, dilation of the nostrils or pupils, slight
tension or trembling) and more obvious changes (collapse through the spine,
turn in the neck, a push with an arm, or any other gross muscular movement).
These sensorimotor experiences usually remain unnoticed by the client until
the therapist points them out through a simple "contact" statement such as,
"Seems like your arm is tensing," or "Your hand is changing into a fist," or
"There's a slight trembling in your left leg." Any therapist is familiar with
noticing and contacting emotional states ("You seem afraid") to facilitate
clients' awareness and processing of emotions; the procedure is similar for
sensorimotor reactions.
Mindfulness is the key to clients becoming more and more acutely aware of
internal sensorimotor reactions and in increasing their capacity for
self-regulation. Mindfulness is a state of consciousness in which one's
awareness is directed toward here-and-now internal experience, with the
intention of simply observing rather than changing this experience. Therefore,
we can say that mindfulness engages the cognitive faculties of the client in
support of sensorimotor processing, rather than allowing bottom-up
trauma-related processes to escalate and take control of information
processing. To teach mindfulness, the therapist asks questions that require
mindfulness to answer, such as, "What do you feel in your body? Where exactly
do you experience tension? What sensation do you feel in your legs right now?
What happens in the rest of your body when your hand makes a fist?" Questions
such as these force the client to come out of a dissociated state and future-
or past-centered ideation and experience the present moment through the body.
Such questions also encourage the client to step back from being embedded in
the traumatic experience and to report from the standpoint of an observing
ego, an ego that "has" an experience in the body rather than "is" that bodily
experience.
For traumatized individuals, fully experiencing sensations may be
disconcerting or even frightening, as intense physical experience may evoke
feelings of being out-of-control or being weak and helpless. On the other
hand, traumatized individuals are often dissociated from body sensation,
experiencing the body as numb or anesthetized. Our view is that failed
active defensive responses along with the inability to modulate arousal
can be sources of such distressing bodily experiences, and that this distress
can be at least somewhat alleviated by helping clients experience the somatic
sequence of an active defensive response. Subsequently clients may access
sensation without dissociating or feeling uncomfortable.
To illustrate the above points, we will describe three sessions with Mary,
a middle aged, successful businesswoman who suffered both relational and shock
trauma from being raped repeatedly by her uncle from ages four to ten.
Although she suffered from panic attacks, depression, and what she described
as having "no boundaries," she had no clear memory of the trauma until a
recent altercation with an authority figure triggered flashbacks accompanied
by insomnia and disturbing physical symptoms such as hyperarousal,
uncontrollable shaking, unprecedented vaginal bleeding, and a bout of
immobility that lasted for over an hour. Mary reported that during the abuse
she had tried to fight her uncle at first, but eventually she submitted and
"watched from the ceiling."
As Mary recounted her history, she spoke rapidly with few pauses that would
provide opportunity for verbal interaction with the therapist. Her Social
Engagement System was markedly diminished; it was almost as though she were
talking to herself, unable to utilize the relationship to interactively
regulate her arousal. Mary appeared increasingly isolated and alone as
she spoke. At times she experienced panic and hyperarousal, and she repeatedly
spoke in judgment of herself for having allowed the abuse: "Why did I ever
change clothes in front of him? Why didn't I tell my mother what was
happening?" She also condemned herself for her inability to defend against the
abuse, interpreting her dissociation and freezing as a personal weakness, a
common response among trauma survivors (Nijenhuis & Van der Hart, 1999, p.
54).
This first session with Mary illustrates an important point: The initial
stage of therapy usually entails the therapist helping the client to begin to
regulate arousal. This is accomplished at first through the interactive
regulation within the therapeutic relationship, which sets the conditions
under which the client can learn self-regulation. Obviously, a healthy
relational rapport between client and therapist must be present for
interactive regulation to occur. In Mary's case, the therapist facilitated
interactive regulation through tracking changes and movements in her body,
making contact statements, demonstrating an ability to understand Mary's
distress and tolerating the description of her traumatic experience without
withdrawing or becoming hyperaroused himself. Gradually, Mary began to soften
slightly in her body, slow her speech, and engage in reciprocal interaction
with the therapist.
It was difficult at first for Mary to be mindful of her bodily sensations
because when she tried to do so, the hyperarousal, shaking, panic and terror
became overwhelming. Similar to Levine's notion of "exchanging …an active
response for one of helplessness" (Levine, 1997, p. 110), the therapist knew
that if Mary could fully experience a physical defensive sequence, these
symptoms might lessen. To accomplish this, he asked Mary if she would be
willing to experiment by pushing with her hands against a pillow that he held,
and to notice what happened in her body. Mary consented and as she performed
this action, she first experienced nausea and increased fear, not uncommon
when first working with activating a defensive sequence that has failed in the
past. The therapist then asked Mary to temporarily disregard all memory and
simply focus on her body to find a way to push that felt comfortable. Mary's
sense of control was increased as she was encouraged to guide this physical
exploration by telling the therapist how much pressure to use in resisting
with the pillow, what position to be in, and so on. As Mary began to
experience the active physical defense, the therapist tracked her body and
made contact statements such as, "The strength of the pushing is increasing,"
and "You seem to be settling down," etc. Mary was also instructed to be
mindful of the details of her sensations: "What's happening in your body as
you push? What do you feel in your back and spine?"
Mary eventually experienced a full sequence of active defensive response:
lifting the arms, pushing tentatively at first with just her arms, then
increasing the pressure and involving the muscles of her back, pelvis, and
legs. The therapist continued to evoke mindfulness of sensation, and Mary
began to experience the physical pleasure of pushing, reporting, "This feels
good!" Because many traumatized clients are anhedonic (unable to feel physical
pleasure), experiencing and savoring pleasurable sensations can increase their
overall capacity for experiencing pleasure and also can change their
relationship with the body, which heretofore may have felt like "the enemy,"
the source of disconcerting sensations and physical pain. When the defensive
sequence had been thoroughly explored and completed, Mary was calmer and able
to be mindful of sensations without becoming hyperaroused -- in other words,
she was now situated within the optimum arousal zone of the Modulation Model.
The intention in Sensorimotor Psychotherapy is to work at the edge of the
Modulation Model, accessing enough of the traumatic material to work with, but
not so much that the client becomes overwhelmed and dissociated. To serve this
end, as Mary returned to describing the trauma (her decision, not the
therapist's), she was instructed to stay mindful of her body sensations. As
she described her abusive experience her jaw began to tighten, her right
shoulder and arm began to constrict, and her breath became labored -- all
possible signs of defensive responses emerging spontaneously. After making
contact statements with these physical observations by saying, "Your jaw and
arm seem to be tightening up and your breathing is changing," the therapist
directed Mary to be mindful of her bodily sensations: "Let's take a few
moments to sense what's happening in your body before we go on with the
content." Mary described the tension and stated that her head seemed to want
to turn to the left, at which point she remembered a wall being on her left
during the childhood abuse. Instead of interpreting her statements, or
returning to the content of the memory, the therapist directed her to "allow
that turning in your neck and notice what happens next."
At this point, Mary was no longer describing the past but was attentive
only to present bodily experience. As she was mindful of her head and neck
turning to the left, she was also aware of physical impulses that seemed
involuntary, as if they were happening "by themselves." Her body seemed to
take on a life of its own as she was encouraged to be mindful of her
sensations and movements. Mary reported that "my hand wants to become a fist"
and the therapist encouraged her to "feel the impulse and allow that to
happen" without doing it voluntarily. While the previous pushing motion
against the pillow was entirely voluntary, Mary's hand now slowly began to
curl into a fist spontaneously.
Mary reported that her arm wanted to "hit out." The defensive movement
sequence was now emerging without conscious top-down direction from either the
client or the therapist. The therapist said, "Feel that impulse to hit out and
just notice what happens next in your body." Mary was encouraged to simply
track and allow the involuntary micromovements and gestures, rather
than "do" them voluntarily. Sensorimotor processing was occurring
spontaneously through mindful attention to body sensation and impulses, and by
harnessing cognitive direction in suspending content and emotion to support
the body's processing.
As the therapist directed Mary to track her sensations and involuntary
movements, and as her right hand formed a fist, her forearm also tightened,
and her arm slowly rose off her lap without conscious intention on her part.
Mary stated that she was starting to feel panicky, and the therapist asked her
to just experience the physical elements of the panic (which Mary reported as
increased heart rate and constriction) rather than the emotion. This was an
important directive to separate trauma-based emotions from sensation so that
sensorimotor processing could occur without interference from emotional or
cognitive processes, and without overloading Mary with more information than
she could effectively handle. Gradually, Mary's head and body turned back
toward the center, and her right arm progressed through a slow rising and
hitting motion accompanied by shaking. (Inwardly this experience of shaking is
similar to shudders passing through the body when one is cold.) After several
minutes of sensorimotor processing during which both Mary and the therapist
followed the slow and unintended progression of movements, Mary's arm finally
came to rest in her lap. Mary continued to shudder, and she was instructed to
"stay with the shudders and sensations as long as you are comfortable doing
so."
All the while, Mary was encouraged to trust her body by allowing the
movements to occur without trying to direct them or change them in any way,
and she was also encouraged to stop at any moment if she felt too much
discomfort to go on. Since physical constriction from the gradual "exposure"
to the traumatic memory can be extremely intense before it begins to unwind
and soften, clients need the therapist's help in following the sensorimotor
process. They are also encouraged to self-regulate -- to stop if ever it
becomes too intense.
Eventually the shudders ceased, and Mary said she felt relief and a
sensation of tingling throughout her body. The therapist instructed her to
savor her bodily feeling and sense of relief, and to describe these physically
in detail. Reporting a softening in her musculature, a slowed heart rate and a
good feeling of heaviness throughout her body, Mary stated that she felt
peaceful for the first time in weeks. In speaking about the abuse, Mary was
less judgmental of herself, saying she was angry that her mother had turned a
blind eye to her uncle's behavior, and that no four-year-old girl should have
to worry about changing clothes in front of a relative. While she had not
worked directly with her self-judgments, beliefs, or emotions associated with
the traumatic experience, working with sensorimotor processing had a positive
effect on both her emotional and thinking processes. Toward the end of
this session, the therapist helped Mary address emotional and cognitive
processing. Mary gave full expression to her sadness and arrived at new
meanings while she also became more fully conscious of her sensorimotor
reactions. Mary experienced a new integration and reorganization of the
physical, emotional, and cognitive levels of her experience as these three
levels were addressed simultaneously.
At her next session, Mary reported that her sleep pattern had returned to
normal, and she was much calmer in general. Her panic attacks had nearly
ceased, and she wanted to continue to explore her childhood trauma, more
confident in her ability to do so with an expectation of personal mastery.
Mary was increasingly able to interact with the therapist, which was
demonstrated by her asking questions, engaging in more dialogue in contrast to
her original monologue, and in her using the relationship with the therapist
to soothe herself. In subsequent sessions, Mary further developed her ability
to actively defend herself and to set boundaries, which expanded her capacity
to engage in interactive regulation, for the ability to actively defend and
set boundaries increases one's safety in relationship. Mary was increasingly
able to process emotional and cognitive elements of the trauma and to address
relational issues with the therapist, while frequently returning to
sensorimotor processing when physical impulses and sensations emerged, or when
she again felt hyperaroused or dissociated.
Eventually, Mary experienced a therapy session in which she confronted the
memory of the moment she first dissociated and "watched from the ceiling to
what he [her uncle] was doing to another little girl," while another part of
her submitted to the abuse. However, she now had developed the skill of
tracking her body sensations, and she felt more confidence in being able to
get through these experiences. Mary writes:
At the time of this session I had recently been experiencing what seemed
like a new wave of earlier memories that had brought an increase both in the
level of physical activation and in emotional terror and despair. This time
though, it felt like I knew I could get through this, I'd been here before and
knew there was a process and steps that led to a better, more whole
experience.In this session, Mary was again instructed by the
therapist to be mindful of her body, and as she remembered the trauma, she
became aware of the physical reactions she had experienced as a child. She experienced the physical components of submitting and dissociating
from her body (numbness, muscle flaccidity, feeling paralyzed) along
with the impulse to fight back (tension in her jaw and arms).
Awareness of sensation became the unifying force in resolving this
"dissociative split," as Mary realized: "This disintegration is not real...I'm
two bodies in the same body, doing two different things." As Mary experienced
this split somatically and processed the physical components of it (such as
the impulse to fight her uncle), she was able to experience the grief
associated with the abuse without dissociating from her body. More able to
process cognitively, her negative beliefs about herself eventually were
replaced by a sense of accomplishment of having been able to defend herself
through dissociation and submission, acknowledging that these passive defenses
had been effective in her particular situation and realizing that active
defenses at that time would probably have made her trauma worse. At one point
in the session, Mary proudly says, "There's nothing wrong with me -- look what
I did!" referring to her dissociation as a way to survive unbearable abuse.
Shortly after this session, Mary's therapy terminated. Six months later,
she writes:
I am aware that there has been a lasting and profound change in both my
body (the way I hold it) and my sense of integration and ability to stay
present with fearful situations, memories and sensations that would previously
have been so overwhelming that they would be suppressed…
I also feel emotionally integrated in a new way. It's as though the part of
me that had been the victim of … abuse is not alone any more but has other
stronger, more whole and resistant parts mixed up with it. I no longer so
desperately need the contact [with the therapist] to go into the memories.
It's though I can be there for myself.
Conclusion
Sensorimotor Psychotherapy was developed entirely
from clinical practice, and although there has been no formal empirical
research at this time, there are many anecdotal reports from both clients and
therapists that attest to the efficacy of the method. Professionals who have
learned Sensorimotor Psychotherapy report that it often reduces PTSD symptoms
such as nightmares, panic attacks, aggressive outbursts and hyperarousal, and
that the ability to track body sensation helps clients experience present
reality rather than reacting as if the trauma were still occurring. Such
reductions of distressing bodily-based symptoms and increased capacity for
both tracking body sensation and interactive self-regulation appears to help
clients become increasingly able to work with other elements of trauma, such
as attachment, meaning-making, and dissociative patterns that were previously
overshadowed by bodily states and the inability to utilize interactive
self-regulation.
Sensorimotor Psychotherapy provides clients with tools to deal with
disturbing bodily reactions, and they frequently report feeling
increasingly safe as they begin to learn how to limit the amount of
information they must process at any given moment by focusing attention on
sensation. Clients also report that their feeling of safety is enhanced when
they experience the potential to physically protect and defend themselves. It
should be noted that clients who experience hyperactive defenses in the form
of uncontrollable rage may also increase their feeling of safety by learning
to sense the physical precursors to full-blown aggressive outbursts, and at
that moment begin to engage mindfulness. This intervention increases
self-regulation and prevents the escalation of arousal to the point of
discharge through aggression or other undesirable behavior.
On the other hand, therapists using Sensorimotor Psychotherapy report that
some clients are not so available for, or interested in, body processing as
was Mary. Such clients must slowly and painstakingly learn to experience
sensation and be open to the potential value of doing so. They must gradually
learn from their own somatic experience that paying full attention to body
sensation and movements can be safe and even pleasurable. Additionally,
severely disorganized or dissociated individuals may be unable to be mindful
of sensation without becoming further disorganized or dissociated. It must be
realized that accessing too much sensation too quickly, particularly before
clients are able to observe their experience and put aside content and
emotional states, may be counterproductive and may in fact increase
dissociation and exacerbate PTSD symptoms. Therefore therapists must proceed
appropriately according to each client's pace and ability to integrate.
Nevertheless, an occasional client may remain unable or unwilling to work with
sensorimotor processing, finding body sensations too overwhelming and
distressing, or otherwise finding a somatic approach uninteresting or
unappealing. In such cases, sensorimotor processing is contraindicated and the
therapist must use other techniques.
Although we have focused almost exclusively on sensorimotor processing in
this article, the full spectrum of Sensorimotor Psychotherapy integrates
sensorimotor processing with emotional and cognitive processing. During
therapeutic sessions, the therapist must evaluate moment by moment which level
of processing to address that will produce the most positive overall effect.
Emotional or cognitive processing is often called for, and in fact can have a
positive effect on further sensorimotor processing.
It should also be noted that while this article has emphasized sensorimotor
processing, numerous other therapeutic maps and body-inclusive techniques
exist in the overall approach developed by the authors and their colleagues
that deal in different ways with relational dynamics, psycho/structural
patterns and dissociation. Above all, it is important to stress that the
ultimate and overriding goal of Sensorimotor Psychotherapy is to foster
holistic processing by integrating the three levels of our being: cognitive,
emotional, and sensorimotor.
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TRAUMATOLOGY
Volume VI, Issue 3, Article 3 (October, 2000)
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