Overcoming Trauma-Related Shame and Self-Loathing with Janina Fisher, Ph.D. – Janina Fisher

Shame has an insidious impact on our traumatized clients’ ability to find relief and perspective even with good treatment. Feelings of worthlessness and inadequacy interfere with

Overcoming Trauma-Related Shame and Self-Loathing with Janina Fisher, Ph.D. by Janina Fisher,
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Shame has an insidious impact on our traumatized clients’ ability to find relief and perspective even with good treatment. Feelings of worthlessness and inadequacy interfere with taking in positive experiences, leaving only hopelessness. This 60-minute recording was webcast live from the office of Dr. Janina Fisher and introduces shame from a neurobiological perspective—as a survival strategy driving somatic responses of automatic obedience and total submission.

Learn to help clients relate to their symptoms with curiosity rather than automatic acceptance, discriminate the cognitive, emotional, and physiological components of shame, and to integrate somatic as well as traditional psychodynamic and cognitive-behavioral techniques to transform shame-related stuckness.


  1. Discriminate the clinical implications of physiological and cognitive contributors to shame.
  2. Describe cognitive-behavioral, ego state, and psychoeducational interventions to address shame in clinical practice.

The Neurobiology of Shame

Shame’s Evolutionary Purpose

Making Meaning of Shame

Working from the “Bottom Up”

A New Relationship to the Shame: Acceptance and Compassion

The Social Engagement System and the Healing of Shame

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