Wonderful Screen Home Healing Program Part One next www.natalialevisfox.com.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Define the following term:
Advertisements

The Human Nervous System
Mental Health A better view of mental illness. What are mental disorders?  A _____________________: is an illness of the mind that can affect the thoughts,
Dissociative and Somatoform Disorders
ANXIETY DISORDERS.  Anxiety is a state of emotional arousal. WHAT IS ANXIETY?
Chapter Five: Lesson 5 Page 159 Mental And Emotional Problems.
Mental Health Awareness. By the end of the session students will be able to…. Describe the different categories of mental disorder Outlines a few strategies.
Mental Illness Ch. 4.
Roberta Schweitzer, PhD, RN, FCN.  What is PTSD?  Symptoms of PTSD  PTSD causes and factors  Getting help for PTSD  Types of treatment for PTSD 
Sam Bechtel Tech and Assess of HES course POST TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER (PTSD)
LEARNING AND THE TEENAGE BRAIN
How Does the Brain Develop?
THE BRAIN AND LEARNING. OBJECTIVES With support of notes, participants will be able to: describe how learning is related to brain structure and functions.
Guadalupe Jaramillo Psychology Period:3.  Post-traumatic stress disorder is a type of anxiety disorder. It can occur after you've seen or experienced.
SOLVING ANXIETY Joseph LeDoux. 20 million Americans (15%) suffer from anxiety disorders Anxiety exacerbates all other mental and medical problems Economic.
By: Brooks Mitzel.  Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a condition of persistent mental and emotional stress occurring as a result of injury or.
MENTAL ILLNESS The term mental illness/disorder is used to describe many different types of emotional & mental problems.
S. Jett, NBCT MMS Physical Education.  M&E Disorder 1. Anxiety Disorder 2. Depression 3. Bipolar Disorder 4. Conduct Disorder 5. Eating Disorders 6.
A CHIEVING M ENTAL & E MOTIONAL H EALTH M ENTAL D ISORDERS.
Module 2 Stress and coping COMMUNITY-BASED PSYCHOSOCIAL SUPPORT · MODULE 2.
Virginia Tech April 19, 2007 Recovery Strategies.
How does anxiety affect adults and children differently?
Chapter 41 The Nervous System.
Mental Health What is it? How do we maintain it?.
Anxiety Disorders Lesson Bell Ringer Read intro p. 455.
Psychology December 11, 2011 Warm Up Get your homework out because we will have several philosophical chairs discussions. If it is incomplete, you will.
Eye Movement Integrator Home Stress Healing Program Part One next
Mental Illness A Physical brain disorder that profoundly disrupts an individuals’ ability to think, feel, and relate to others and their environment.
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 8 Somatoform and Dissociative Disorders.
Attachment Disorders.
Sleeping Well How to Improve Sleep and Why It Is a Good Idea.
What is anxiety? Anxiety disorder is a general term that is used for several disorders like fear apprehension and worrying.
Distress and Disorder Fernanda Garcia-Costas Child and Adolescent Consultant Psychiatrist Plym Bridge House
What Brain Research Says About Learning. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.4 | 2 Brain-based or brain compatible learning is based.
KNOW WHAT CATEGORY ANY DISORDER FITS INTO Categories of Disorder: 1. Anxiety 2. Mood 3. Dissociative 4. Schizophrenia 5. Personality 6. Somatoform (Not.
Part 3 of Unit 2: Ch. 5 – Biological influences on behaviour This Chapter Presents: How the Nervous System works The Role of the Brain in Behaviour A Discussion.
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). What is PTSD? PTSD is anxiety disorder that is triggered by a very traumatic event. Someone might get PTSD after.
Depression and suicide By Tristan, Orie, and Leslie.
Post- Traumatic Stress Disorder
Stress and Depression Common Causes Common Signs and Symptoms Coping Strategies Caring & Treatment Tips.
Chapter 16 Abnormal Psychology “To study the abnormal is the best way of understand the normal.” -William James.
 40 years ago more focus on how children develop and nature versus nurture  Attachment literature started with animals (imprinting) and moved to babies.
What is life like with PTSD? PTSD- Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.
Functional neuroimaging of anxiety A meta-analysis of emotional processing in PTSD, social anxiety disorder and specific phobia.
Bell Ringer When you are under stress during “Fight or Flight” your body produces adrenaline. Please describe a situation where adrenaline has been released.
 What are mental & emotional disorders?  Causes of mental & emotional disorders  Vocabulary.
Mental and Emotional Problems In this lesson, you will Learn About… Types of mental and emotional problems. The warning signs of serious mental and emotional.
Logia- study of Psychology psyche- breath, spirit, soul.
SECTION 3: SOMATOFORM AND DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS CHAPTER 16.
WARM UP 6.Self-Concept 7.Pressures 8.Empathy 9.Confidence 10.Positive Stress 1.Positive 2.Stressors 3.Personality 4.Emotions 5.Heredity Take out your notes.
Long-term Memory Explicit Memories (fact-based info, conscious retrieval) Semantic memories (memory of facts) Episodic memories (events) Implicit Memories.
1 Bereavement The path to healing July What is grief? Grief is: The emotional, psychological, and physical reaction to death or loss. A healthy,
Childhood Anxiety DISORDERS AND TREATMENT. What is Anxiety?  Anxiety - Feeling worried nervous, or uneasy about a certain thing.  Ex: Feeling anxious.
Abnormal Psychology: True or False
Dissociative Amnesia.
Biological basis of behavior
Project Self-Discovery
Mental and Emotional Health
Content Vocabulary mental illness phobia
Early Brain Development
Module 22 Assessment & Anxiety Disorders
Intro to Wellness Mental Health.
A better view of mental illness
Mental/Emotional Anxiety Disorders
Modal Answers Psychopathology.
MENTAL HEALTH Chapter 5.
By: Lindsay, Austin, Kayla & Drew
MENTAL HEALTH Chapter 5.
Health 9/6/18.
Module 66 – Anxiety Disorders
Presentation transcript:

Wonderful Screen Home Healing Program Part One next

Your computer can heal you, your family members, even kids! from:  Post Traumatic Stress Disorders  Anxiety  Phobias  Stammering  Sense of guilt  Nightmares  Fears  Burden of the past  Physical tension  You name your problem next

next You have every right to know why suffering occurs

Our brains record experience and its meaning by forming extremely complex neuro chains (networks), connecting brain structures with various areas of cortex. This is how complex memories are formed. This is how stress and fear govern your brain next

To create these networks, the neurons grow an array of new dendrites – connectors between neurons. next

Neuron issuing information about stressful experience show Connections between neurons form complex experience Connection between neurons of the chain through cleft Receiving neuron next

Information flows into the neurology via the five senses from outside, from other areas in the neurology, and also as part of the various non-sensory connections formed during life process. next

Under certain conditions of stress, small neural networks become divided from the rest of the brain, by a boundary which interferes with the flow of electrical information between neurones, much as a pane of dark glass interferes with the flow of light. Flow of electrical information from rest of the brain Flow of information inside the isolated neural network, where traumatic experience is recorded Boundary show next

Rest of the Brain This leaves the neural network functionally separated out from the rest of the brain. That is why you suffer when painful memories keep returning to you. show Isolated network next

In case of traumatic memory people find themselves unable to use their healthy resources. next

This is because as soon as they begin to re- experience the stressful event, they are operating from a neural network, which has inadequate connection to their “healthy” state. next

When relieving the accident, people are unable to remember their usual skills. They can only run the emotional responsiveness, behaviour, strategies, values and beliefs that are associated with the neural networks laid down at the time of the event. next

show Traumatic experience is recorded in the presence of stressful substances. Their release re-activates isolated networks and causes physical tension & emotional responsiveness. next Wave of stress & physical tension

next

next

next

End of part I