AFFECT REGULATION
TOOLBOX
Tenth International Conference
on Ericksonian Approaches to Hypnosis & Psychotherapy
December 6 – 9, 2007
Phoenix, AZ
Presenter: Carolyn L. Daitch, Ph.D.
28592 Orchard Lake Rd., #301
Farmington Hills, MI. 48334
www.anxiety-treatment.com
Carolyn.daitch@mac.com
248-626-8151 1
Topics
Over reactivity
Consequences of over reactivity
Interventions
Applications
2
Over Reactivity: Definition
The distorted and unnecessarily
intense reaction to routine stimuli of
daily life and interpersonal contact with
accompanying psychophysiological
hyper-arousal.
3
Three Components of
Over Reactivity
Physiological
Psychological
Temperamental
4
Over Reactivity: Experience
Frequently includes the internal
experience of being overwhelmed with
emotion and feeling out of control.
(Daitch, 2007)
5
Stress and Over Reactivity
Stress is part of the normal experience of
being human.
With sufficient levels of stress, each of
us can be flooded with a release of
neurochemicals that elicit and maintain
a state of hyperarousal and reactivity.
6
Flooding
One of the hallmarks of affect
dysregulation is flooding.
Flooding leads to emotional (escape)
conditioning.
7
The Emotional Brain
Fear conditioning
A process in which the amygdala plays a
crucial role (phobias)
Chronic Stress
HPA Axis (G.A.D)
Impulsivity
Prefrontal Cortex
8
Fear Conditioning
and the Amygdala
Brain is adept at storing long-term
memory events when experience fear
Amygdala plays a crucial role
Adaptive
Problematic for those with anxiety
disorders
9
Normal Reactions vs.
Over Reactions
The distinction between normal
reactions and over reactivity is when
the reactivity creates chronic
discomfort, impedes life functioning,
and/or seriously interferes with
relationships.
10
Profile of the
Over reactive Client
Experience a series of conflicted
relationships, particularly intimate
and/or work relationships.
Displays symptoms of anxiety.
Experience psychosomatic illnesses
and over reactions to bodily symptoms.
11
Painful Consequences
of Over Reactivity
Excessive emotionality can disruptive
the accomplishment of goals
Intensity exhausts others
Parents lose effectiveness and
closeness with children
Leads to addictive behaviors as an
attempt to self soothe
12
Skills Needed
Remain calm and clear in the face of stress.
Observe and reflect on their emotions and
behavior.
Tolerate uncomfortable, “negative” affect or
concurrent conflicting emotions without
defensiveness.
Suspend judgment
Soothe themselves or their partners.
13
Underlying Assumptions
Talk therapy is often insufficient.
One must diffuse the stress response
first before a change of interpretation of
an event or reaction is possible.
Rehearsal and practice of new
responses must be an integral part of
the treatment.
14
Speed and Power
Since the over reaction is triggered
so quickly and powerfully, the
therapist must teach clients to
intervene with rapidly induced calm
states.
15
Transfer and Maintenance
Skills mastered in the therapeutic
setting often do not transfer into the
home.
Long lasting changes of interpersonal
patterns are hard to effect.
16
The Toolbox
17
The Affect Regulation Toolbox
The Affect Regulation Toolbox
comprises a collection of therapeutic
interventions consisting of four
components or “tiers” to help clients
develop new ways of thinking, feeling
and behaving.
18
Toolbox Tiers
Tier 1: Recognition of an overreaction, and
initiation of a brief pause to interrupt it.
Tier 2: Standard hypnotic induction and
deepening techniques.
Tier 3: A set of tools aimed at shifting
unhealthy reactive styles.
Tier 4: Tools to address therapeutic
transfer of suggestion and practice.
19
Tier 1: Identify the Start of an Over
Reaction and Respond Appropriately
Tool 1: Recognizing somatic,
cognitive and emotional cues
Tool 2: Time out
20
Tier 1: Time Out
Response patterns cannot be
spontaneously altered.
Individuals must be trained to take an
immediate “cease fire”.
Establish a habit of taking a time out to
practice the self-regulation tools.
(Daitch, 2007)
21
Tier 1: Interrupting and
Identifying Over reaction
Somatic cues
Dysfunctional cognitions
Emotions
22
Tier 2: Focus, Calm, Deepen
Focus: These tools help clients narrow
and focus their attention on their internal
experience.
Calm: Eliciting a calm state is the first
goal of reversing the stress reaction.
23
Tier 2: Deepen
Provide suggestions for deepening
the relaxation experience.
Facilitates optimal receptivity to
interventions in Tier 3.
24
Tier 2: Tools for Deepening
Arm and leg heaviness
Hand warming
Elevator / Stairway
25
Tier 3: Healing Strategies
Interventions designed to prepare the
client to regulate affect.
Include a variety of approaches that
incorporate imagery, cognitions and
affect.
26
Tier 3: Therapeutic Objectives
Mindfulness
Sensory awareness and cues
Impulse control
Coexisting affective states
Resource utilization
Positive affect development
27
Objective: Mindfulness
Development of mindful, detached
observation of transient affective
states.
28
Mindfulness
“Paying attention in a particular way on
purpose, in the present moment, and non-
judgmentally.” Kabt-Zinn, 1994
29
Mindfulness
I am my feeling
I breathe through my feeling
I am more than my feeling
30
Objective: Sensory
Awareness and Cues
Develop awareness of bodily
expressions of stress
Regulate and modify somatic
expressions
31
Objective:
Sensory Alteration: Anesthesia
Create tangible evidence for client that
the mind can alter one’s response.
Make a link between physical and
psychological numbing.
(Edgette and Edgette, 1995)
32
Objective: Impulse Control
Master a combination of regulatory
interventions for impulse control.
33
Thought Stopping
Interrupt intrusive thoughts
Use cognitive, visual and kinesthetic
approaches
34
Self-statements
I am fully present in this moment
I choose to stay calm
I breathe through my fear (anger,
irritation, impulse, etc.)
I can handle it
I release judgment of him/her
“Om… grow up!”
35
Kinesthetic Cue
Goals:
Quickly access a calm state.
Establish an “anchor” with an Ok
signal.
Signal to him or herself that
everything is fine or “OK” in the
moment.
Focus attention to the present
moment.
36
Objective:
Coexisting Affective States
The ability to have two conflicting
feelings or thoughts at the same time.
37
Coexisting Affect States
Juxtaposition of two feelings
Ego states
Switching channels
Alternating hands
38
Juxtaposition of Two Feelings
Tolerate the juxtaposition of two opposing
feelings
Recognize that we can elicit an alternative
affective state
Elicit a feeling of amusement to help soften
reaction to a stressor or trigger
Know that there is always more than one
feeling available
39
Alternating Hands
Experience the merging of negative
and positive feelings.
40
Objective:
Resource Utilization
Imaginary support circle
Parts of self
Watchman
41
Objective: Positive Affect
Gratitude … incompatible with
anxiety and conflict
Age regression
Age progression
42
Tier 4: Rehearsal and Practice
Behavioral Rehearsal
Practice Rehearsal
43
Developing New Responses
Referring to yoga wisdom, internationally
recognized yoga teacher Shakta Kaur
Khalsa (2001) stated that it takes 40 days
to change a habit, 120 days for the new
habit to become who you are, and a
thousand days to master the habit.
44
Practice
With repeated practice, we retrain our
neural pathways to respond differently.
Rehearse newly acquired behaviors and
the home practice sessions while still in
the hypnotic trance.
45
Homework
and Success of Therapy
A client’s willingness to engage in
therapeutic “homework” is directly
related to the success of the therapy.
46
Why Hypnosis is Helpful with
Affect Regulation
Identifies diffuse physiological arousal
Calms arousal response with relaxation
Rehearse appropriate responses
47
Why Hypnosis is Helpful (cont’d)
Hypnosis increases effectiveness of
cognitive behavioral treatment.
(Lynn, Kirsch & Rhue, 1996)
Hypnosis can help patients to notice
early warning signs and prevent full-
blown flooding response.
48
Applications of the Toolbox
49
Applications
Anxiety disorders
Marital relationships
Other relationships
50
Anxiety Disorders
51
Anxiety Disorders
Most common type of psychological
disorder affecting both children and
adults
Often goes untreated
Women are particularly
vulnerable…three times the rate of men
52
Common Anxious Profiles
Specific phobias and aversive
associations
Generalized anxiety
Somatic manifestations
Obsessive compulsive disorders
Post-traumatic stress
53
Anxiety and the Brain
Anxiety is very easy to acquire, but once
the brain circuits are in place they are very
difficult to delete.
The wiring of the brain at this point in our
evolution is established so that connections
from the emotional systems to the cognitive
systems are more developed.
(LeDoux, 1996)
54
Components of the Anxiety
Response
Overestimates risks
Underestimates available resources
Repeats rigid behavior patterns
(Yapko, 2003)
55
Characteristics of Individuals
Vulnerable to Anxiety and Phobias
Sensitivity to bodily stimuli
Unusual capacity for vivid imagery
Excellent focused-attention, absorption
High hypnotic susceptibility
(Crawford & Barabasz, 1993)
56
Treatment Goals
for Anxiety Disorders
Mastery over self with calming responses.
Skills to interrupt negative and irrational
thoughts.
Diminishment of worry.
Elimination of fear of future anxiety
reactions.
Increased resiliency in face of short- or long-
term stress.
57
Treatment Goals (Cont’d.)
Diminishment of restlessness and irritability.
Diminishment of somatic expressions of
anxiety such as racing heart, sweating,
dizziness.
Improved sleep and/or well-modulated
appetite.
Diminishment of obsessive thoughts.
58
Often Missed yet Critical
Aspects of Assessment
Assess for side effects of prescription
medications
Assess for over the counter drugs
Assess caffeine consumption
Assess diet
59
Case Example:
Using the four tiers of the toolbox
Client with G.A.D.
History of trauma
Temperament
Life stress
60
Treatment Goals
Proportional emotional reactions and
worry to triggering events.
Diminishment of focus on the future.
Acceptance of uncertain outcomes.
Diminishment of somatic expressions.
Diminishment of irritability.
61
Tier 3
Dialing Down Anxiety
“Think of a stressor. . .
notice what number
the needle on the dial
is registering. . . use
the power of your
imagination to dial the
number down. . .”
62
Gratitude Intervention:
The Glass Half Full
After induction and deepening, patient is
told that anxiety is incompatible with
gratitude.
Introduced the glass half full metaphor
Client is directed to imagine a large glass (she
chose a large brandy snifter).
Spoke of glass half empty/half full themes.
Directed to fill the glass with symbols, representing
the things in her life for which she was grateful.
63
Mindfulness Intervention
Attending to the symptom inevitably
softens its intensity.
“I am aware of my anxiety.”
“I breathe through my anxiety.”
“I am more than my anxiety.”
64
Thought Stopping Intervention:
Interrupting Obsessive Thoughts
“. . . and now I’d like to teach
you three things for when you
are ruminating....I’d like you to
bring your right arm up as if
you’re stopping traffic...see
that stop sign....and say stop
it!...bring your right arm up as
if you’re stopping traffic...see
that stop sign....and say stop
it!.…” (Daitch, 2007)
65
Rehearsal in Fantasy:
Screen Technique
“Imagine yourself on a screen, looking up
and seeing yourself beginning to have an
anxiety attack. Imagine three scenes in
succession with different ways you could
cope with it.”
“And you can be curious, about just how
easily you can develop strategies that will
enable you to handle what ever emotions
arise.”
66
Sensory Anesthesia for
Diminishing Emotional Reaction
Numbing / Sensory Anesthesia
Hypnotic anesthesia diminishes
sensation. It is typically used in pain
management but it can also be used
to diminish psychological suffering.
(Edgette and Edgette, 1995)
67
Imaginary Support Circle
Client is directed to imagine a circle of
people who would be loving and supportive
to surround her when she was afraid.
Supporters could be people she actually
knew, or people from history or religious
entities. In trance she was directed to
imagine her imaginary circle.
68
Tier 4: Behavioral and
Practice Session Rehearsal
Extended time out
Mini sessions
When triggered or anxious
When triggered or anxious but unable to
take a time out
69
Rehearsal of Self-Talk
Direct client to see herself in a variety
of anxiety provoking scenes supporting
herself with affirming self-statements.
70
Setting the Right Tone
in the First Session
This initial session is particularly
important to the client who suffers from
anxiety because this population is
particularly reluctant to seek treatment.
Anxious patients are typically in a hurry
to yield quick results from therapy.
Crucial that this session provides much
needed reassurance.
71
Affect Regulation in
Relationships
Couples
Adult child/parent
Friendships
Siblings
Co-workers
72
Treatment Goals for the Couple
Develop skills of self-soothing and
soothing of partner
Develop ability to tolerate vulnerability
Diminish reactivity to slights and criticism
Develop attitude of curiosity
73
Challenges of Transfer and
Maintenance of Skills
Skills mastered in the therapeutic
setting often do not transfer into the
home.
Long lasting changes of interpersonal
patterns in couples are hard to effect.
(Jacobson and Addis, 1993)
74
Challenges of
Relationship Therapy
The need to…
Create a safe space for both people
Assist people to manage over-reactions
Help them survive power struggle without
exiting the relationship
75
Case Example:
A Couple in Conflict
Characteristics
Flooding/withdrawal patterns
Minimizer/ maximizer dynamic
76
Treatment Goals
Contain verbally damaging exchanges.
Increase empathy.
Close “exits.”
Establish date nights together, away from the
children.
Develop positive expectations about the
relationships.
Increase awareness of impact of verbal and
non-verbal communication.
77
Interventions
Tier 1
Time Out
Tier 2
Arm and leg heaviness
78
Tier 3
Parts of self
Age progression
79
Positive Affect
Gottman asserted that the most
important finding in his extensive
research was that “more positive affect
was the only variable that predicted both
stability and happiness in marriages”.
(Gottman, J. 1998, p. 11)
80
Specific Strategies Are Needed
Transition to mature love cannot
happen through insight alone
Specific hypnotic tools are useful to
develop new patterns
Tools must be practiced repeatedly (in
and out of the office)
81
Structuring the Sessions
Audio-tape the long trance sessions with
the recommendation that the client listens
to the tape daily.
Practice quick interventions five times
daily, or when symptomatic.
Provide the patient with notes that
delineate the steps of the self-hypnotic
interventions.
82
The First Steps in Treatment
Setting the right tone
Psycho education
Structuring the session
83
Setting the Right Tone
The therapist must communicate that they
are in capable hands with a clinician who
has a clear treatment plan to address and
treat their symptoms.
Build positive expectancy in the client.
Milton Erickson suggested that “a good
therapist should be utterly confident”.
(Zeig, 1980, p. 61)
84
Self-Care
All too often we teach well, but we don’t
always practice what we teach.
Inward attention is mandatory when we
spend so much time with an external focus.
Setting aside time each day for meditation
or self-hypnosis is crucial to maintaining
one’s own equilibrium and for avoiding burn
out.
85
References
Crawford, H.J., & Barabasz, A. (1993). Phobias and fears: Facilitating their treatment with hypnosis. In
J. Rhue, S. Lynn, & I. Kirsch (Eds.), Clinical handbook of hypnosis. (pp. 311-337). Washington, DC:
American Psychological Association.
Daitch, C. (2007). Affect Regulation Tool Box: Practical and effective hypnotic interventions for the
over-reactive client. New York: Norton.
Edgette, J.H., & Edgette, J.S. (1995). The handbook of hypnotic phenomena in psychotherapy. New
York: Brunner/Mazel.
Gottman, J.M. (1998). Marital therapy: A research-based approach. Seattle: The Gottman Institute.
Jacobson, N.S., & Addis, M.E. (1993). Research on couple therapy: What do we know? Where are we
going? Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 61(1), 85-93.
Khalsa, S. (2001). K.I.S.S. guide to yoga. London: Dorling Kindersley.
Lynn, S.J., Kirsch, I., & Rhue, J.W. (Eds.) (1996). Casebook of clinical hypnosis. Washington , DC:
American Psychological Association.
LeDoux, J. (1996). The emotional brain: The mysterious underpinnings of emotional life. New York:
Simon & Schuster.
Yapko, M.D. (2003). Trancework: An introduction to the practice of clinical hypnosis. (3rd ed.). New
York: Brunner/Routledge.
Zeig, J.K. (Ed., with commentary). (1980b). A teaching seminar with Milton H. Erickson. New York:
Brunner/Mazel.
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