1st Edition

Deep Brain Reorienting Understanding the Neuroscience of Trauma, Attachment Wounding, and DBR Psychotherapy

    248 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    248 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Deep Brain Reorienting introduces a novel, evidence-based approach to the treatment of trauma-related disorders. Steeped in neuroscience, this book builds on recent scientific contributions to the effects of shock, trauma, and neglect on the brain at the deepest levels. Enhanced by detailed case material and underpinned by a strong theoretical framework, the authors give special attention to clinically significant forms of dissociation, as well as attachment wounding and its treatment. This neurobiologically informed focus offers fresh perspectives, reaching beneath the level of cognitive, affective and defensive components of traumatic responding.

    Written at the interface of neuroscience and psychotherapy, this book will be invaluable to psychotherapists whose clinical practice is calling for new ways to work with the effects of traumatic experiences. In addition, several hypotheses will appeal to research-oriented psychotherapists and clinically led researchers in a range of fields.

    1. Introduction 
    Frank M. Corrigan and Hannah Young

    Part 1: Delving Deep Beneath the Cortex 
    2. Orienting to ‘Where?’ 
    Hannah Young and Frank M. Corrigan

    3. Preaffective Forces of Shock 
    Frank M. Corrigan and Hannah Young

    4. Affected by ‘What’ We Encounter   
    Hannah Young and Frank M. Corrigan

    5. Seeking Attachment from the Brainstem Upwards 
    Frank M. Corrigan and Hannah Young

    6. A Composite Model of Dissociative Disorders 
    Frank M. Corrigan and Hannah Young

    Part 2: Deep Brain Reorienting in Clinical Practice

    7. Clinical Research Manual 
    Frank M. Corrigan and Hannah Young

    8. The Deepest Sense of Being in a Body 
    Frank M. Corrigan

    9. Promoting the Healing of Attachment Wounding 
    Frank M. Corrigan and Hannah Young

    10. Composite Model of Clinical Dissociation Applied 
    Frank M. Corrigan, Cindy Shrigley, and Hannah Young

    11. Observations of the Head-body Relationship 
    Martin Warner and Frank M. Corrigan

    12. The Where-Self, the Innate Connection System, and the Origins of Attachment 
    Jessica Christie-Sands, Frank M. Corrigan, and Hannah Young

    Biography

    Frank M. Corrigan, MD, FRCPsych, is an independent psychiatrist in private practice in Scotland. He is the developer of Deep Brain Reorienting.

    Hannah Young, PhD, is a chartered psychologist and psychotherapist working in private practice in Dundee and St Andrews, Scotland, specialising in attachment wounding and dissociative disorders.

    Jessica Christie-Sands, PhD, is a chartered psychologist and clinical director of a multidisciplinary psychology service that provides therapeutic work for children, young people, and adults with histories of developmental trauma.

    "Corrigan focuses our attention on what happens at the brain stem during trauma. He hypothesizes that the shock of trauma resides in the brain stem, not as an analogy, but as a reality and has formulated a theory and a therapy, Deep Brain Reorienting, to address it. I have quieted the aftermath of trauma in the brain with neurofeedback and often, along with standard psychotherapy, that has been all that was needed. But not for everyone. When I heard Corrigan’s hypothesis about the effects of shock on the brain stem, I realized that shock retained there might be the best explanation for relapses we’d seen. I tried the therapy, and it does what he says it does. DBR takes you into a conversation with the unconscious. It is now the therapy that I recommend along with neurofeedback. If you are treating trauma, you will want to read this book. Both Freud and Jung have already endorsed it."

    Sebern Fisher, MA, author of Neurofeedback in the Treatment of Developmental Trauma: Calming the Fear-Driven Brain

    "‘Groundbreaking’ is an often misleading description of new psychotherapies. Corrigan and coauthors not only break new ground, but the soil they till is fertile and generative. Corrigan’s gift, honed over many years as an untiring student of the latest neuroscientific findings and creative integrator of brain/body/mind with trauma-informed psychotherapy, led to his developing Deep Brain Reorienting. All too often, the latest brain findings tell us, in scientific lingo, what we therapists already knew. In contrast, this book eloquently connects what we are learning about the deepest, subcortical structures, particularly the midbrain of the brainstem, with what we do in psychotherapy, never reducing the brain’s complexity yet keeping the Deep Brain Reorienting method deceptively simple and elegant. Deep Brain Reorienting helps patient and therapist access and process moments immediately following trauma’s shock and painful, often nonverbal experience. 

    The structure of this book first affords the reader entry into the relevant brain science underlying Deep Brain Reorienting, followed by its clinical applications in Part Two.  Readers learn what phenomena indicate cortical processing (e.g., structurally dissociated parts), as contrasted with brainstem activation (e.g., orienting tension, shock, and pre-affective defense), in order to work at the deepest, subcortical level of traumatic experience and attachment wounding. 

    Corrigan and his coauthors apply their sophisticated understanding of the most current brain science to several clinical challenges and conundrums familiar to therapists working with complex trauma and dissociation including profound, early attachment neglect and unbearable aloneness, as well as structural dissociation. One remarkable chapter describes the hypothesized sensorimotor experience of a fetus that, perhaps one day, might contribute to psychotherapy attenuating the deleterious effects of pre-birth trauma. Corrigan and Warner further offer the reader a wonderful bonus, clearly demonstrating how Deep Brain Reorienting can be interwoven with the Alexander Technique to ameliorate the traumatic disruption of basic movement.

    Deep Brain Reorienting is already proving pivotal in providing therapists pathways to working with pre-verbal, pre-affective traumatic sequelae previously out of reach.  This unique book and approach was developed by a brilliant and humble man dedicated to helping therapists reduce their patients’ suffering and reclaim their aliveness."

    Ken Benau, PhD, author of Shame, Pride, and Relational Trauma: Concepts and Psychotherapy

    "In Deep Brain Reorienting, Frank Corrigan and colleagues skillfully introduce us to highly relevant and neglected brain regions. They present the powerful concept of attachment shock, which illustrates the profound and enduring traumatic impacts of irregularities, absence, and loss of attachment in early life. By showing how these impacts may be held in brain regions, Deep Brain Reorienting offers new hope for those affected by childhood trauma, neglect and dissociation. The authors provide a neuroscientific and theoretical foundation, case examples illustrating clinical application of concepts, and a practical overview of this highly effective approach. A rich and illuminating read! Thank you to Frank Corrigan and co-authors for an invaluable contribution to our field!"

    Ruth Cohn, MFT, CST, BCN, author of Working with the Developmental Trauma of Childhood Neglect: Using Psychotherapy and Attachment Theory Techniques in Clinical Practice