How to Work with the Patterns That Sustain Depression – NICABM

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Depression can overwhelm a client’s life and rob them of meaning, joy and a sense of value.

Left untreated, it can feel like a life sentence – like nothing will ever change.

How to Work with the Patterns That Sustain Depression by NICABM,
Salepage link: At HERE. Archive: http://archive.is/wip/q5vok

Overcoming Barriers to Healing Depression

How to Disrupt the Patterns That Sustain Your Client’s Depression

Depression can overwhelm a client’s life and rob them of meaning, joy and a sense of value.

Left untreated, it can feel like a life sentence – like nothing will ever change.

So to successfully treat depression, we have to look at the issues that sustain it.

First, we have to look at low motivation, because without motivation it’s hard for a client to take any action, and lack of action can often foster feelings of shame.

Beyond that, we also need to break up the two critical thought patterns that can leave clients defenseless against depression’s power.

Trauma also plays a role in depression, and we need to look at the way it can trick the mind into shutdown.

15 top thought leaders shared their personal insights and strategies for working with depression and reducing relapse. We put all their practical ideas together into a brand-new program . . .

Brand New Short Course

How to Work with the Patterns That Sustain Depression

How to Work with Toxic Self-Narratives That Sustain Depression

Marsha Linehan, PhD

  • A practical depression strategy for working with a client’s feeling of “nobody likes me”
  • One way to break the harsh self-narrative that drives a client into depression
  • How to help clients escape depression when their critical thoughts are based on a truth

How to Disrupt the Low Motivation Driving a Client’s Depression

Shelly Harrell, PhD     Kelly McGonigal, PhD

  • Why low motivation can often trap a client in shame
  • Two aspects of low motivation that can sustain a client’s depression

Key Strategies to Disrupt Trauma-Driven Depression

Pat Ogden, PhD

  • How the dorsal-vagal system can hold a client hostage to depression
  • Why it’s vital to address both the body and the nervous system to correct a depression posture
  • How to unhook the emotional trigger that sets off a depression response in the body

Critical Skills to Help Clients Avoid Depression Relapse

Christine Padesky, PhD     Rick Hanson, PhD       Bill O’Hanlon, LMFT

  • Why your relapse plan could be the most critical part of therapy
  • Two essential antidepressant skills that can significantly reduce depression relapse
  • An important part of depression treatment that helps the client know when to activate their relapse plan

How to Break the Depression-Rigid-Thinking Loop

Lynn Lyons, LICSW      Kelly McGonigal, PhD      Rick Hanson, PhD

  • The small language change that can break a client’s rigid depressive thought
  • Why some clients with depression are more willing to talk about feelings (and the big reason you might want to avoid doing this)

How to Keep a Client’s Low Motivation From Sabotaging Treatment

Richard Schwartz, PhD      Joan Borysenko, PhD

  • Two ways depression shows up (and why it’s crucial to work with each one differently)
  • The critical first step to prevent a client’s low motivation from sabotaging treatment
  • What can go wrong if you focus on a client’s pain before addressing their low motivation

Overcoming Depression After a Major Life Loss

Marsha Linehan, PhD      Ron Siegel, PsyD      Joan Borysenko, PhD

  • How to help clients find effective ways to alter their relationship with depression
  • The “grieving pact” that allows clients to suffer while also helping them out of depression

Two Powerful Skills to Reduce a Client’s Depression Risk

Michael Yapko, PhD      Kelly McGonigal, PhD

  • How to resource clients struggling with depression so they can withstand change
  • A common factor in depression treatment that results in higher success rates
  • The number one reason a client with depression will leave therapy after the first session

How to Lead the Traumatized Brain Out of Depression

Bessel van der Kolk, MD

  • A crucial first step for treating clients who are too shut down to feel any motivation
  • How trauma can corrupt the “savings network” of the brain and leave a client more vulnerable to depression
  • Why traditional therapy may be ineffective against shutdown patterns linked to depression

Get 3 Bonuses That Give You Even More Strategies for Working with a Client’s Depression

Bonus 1: How to Work with the Patterns That Sustain Depression in Couples (When Only One Person is Depressed)

Stan Tatkin, PsyD, MFT      Bill O’Hanlon, LMFT      Ron Siegel, PsyD

  • One simple way for a person to upregulate their partner’s depressed state
  • How the prefrontal cortex keeps a client’s brain bound to depression (and how their partner can disrupt it)
  • One change to a couple’s sleep pattern that can help relieve depression

Bonus 2

Part 1: The Patterns That Can Turn Depression Dangerous

Christine Padesky, PhD      Ron Siegel, PsyD      Joan Borysenko, PhD

  • One way to help clients determine if they’re suffering from grief or from depression
  • An investigation skill to help clients reverse depressed thoughts
  • How to shift a client’s rigid beliefs about their life’s value
  • How to help clients assess the most devastating belief that powers their depression

Part 2: Working with a Depressed Client Who is Suicidal

Marsha Linehan, PhD

  • One technique to disrupt suicidal patterns of thought and help clients focus more on bettering their life
  • How to use missing evidence to help clients step back from thoughts of suicide
  • How to shift your approach to a client’s depression when they’re considering suicide

Bonus 3: How to Activate a Client’s Support System to Help Them Beat Depression

Shelly Harrell, PhD      Terry Real, MSW, LICSW
Joan Borysenko, PhD      Rick Hanson, PhD

  • The vital ingredient a partner brings to treatment that makes the healing process so powerful
  • The fundamental strategy that can help your most challenging clients commit to depression treatment
  • How to empower the partner to stand up to their loved one’s depression while motivating them to change

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