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SOMATIC THERAPY: THREE KEY COMPONENTS
Psychotherapists are often curious about, how do I bring the body into my clinical practice?
Chronic Shame: Meeting the Underlying Emotion
Chronic shame is deeply woven into the stories and neurophysiology of many of clients seeking therapy. Because chronic shame is a relational injury, with its roots in early life, it is woven into the fabric of the self and largely nonverbal in origin.
Attachment Theory and Research: Application to Clinical Practice
Attachment theory and research seems to be everywhere these days and I routinely hear from clinicians, how do I apply attachment theory to my clinical practice?
Hiding in Plain Sight: Chronic Shame in Clinical Practice
In my clinical practice I see a thread of chronic shame woven throughout the fabric of life of many of my male, or male identifying clients; a thread just waiting to be plucked that sets in motion a degree of dysregulation and personal pain.
The Clinical Heart of Bringing the Body into Practice: Somatic Attachment Psychotherapy
In reflecting on what it means to practice Somatic Attachment Psychotherapy, to be an attachment oriented, relationally focused, somatic psychotherapist and educator, I come to three questions that speak to the heart of the matter.




