Treating Personality Disorders: Advances from Brain Science and Traumatology


Clients with personality disorders—narcissistic, borderline, antisocial, sociopathic—often have profound traumatic childhoods, which leave them without a solid inner core from which to function. Often “nudged” into treatment by others, including the law, their inability to trust and their need for power make forming a therapeutic alliance seemingly impossible. They come armed with defenses developed at very early ages that are designed to ensure their survival by protecting their fragility. In this workshop, you’ll explore:

OUTLINE

            Risk factors, therapeutic options

            Cluster characteristics

            Developmental characteristics

            Differential diagnostic criteria and defining characteristics

            Pathological v. healthy narcissism                 

            Differential diagnostic criteria and defining characteristics

            Boundary setting and treatment approaches

            Attachment and therapeutic relationship considerations

            Differential diagnostic criteria and defining characteristics

            Victim v. perpetrator symptom expression

            Complex therapeutic history

            Common underpinnings to varied personality diagnoses

            Relationship characteristics

            Family systems

            Neurophysiological systems

            Determining level of intervention

            Self-regulation, positive regard, mirroring

            Creating attachment and inserting self into therapy

            Importance of non-verbal communication

            Language selection and techniques

OBJECTIVES