Psychophysiological "stress" underpins many conditions including anxiety, depression, phobias, chronic fatigue syndrome and non-specific musculoskeletal pain such as fibromyalgia. In this article we develop an understanding of chronic psychophysiological stress from a psychological educational perspective, by drawing on supporting evidence that significant emotional events in early life (traumatic and benign) can influence health and well-being later in life. We suggest that traumatic events instigate psychophysiological "stress" responses and the formation of emotional memory images (EMIs) within very short time frames, i.e., "split-second learning." Once formed these emotional memories are triggered in daily living "re-playing" psychophysiological stress responses, resulting in chronic psychophysiological "dis-ease." We describe a novel therapeutic approach to scan clients for mannerisms signifying a subconscious "freeze-like" stress response that involves the client as a curious observer within their own experience, feeding back the non-verbal cues as they arrive in the moment. By breaking down the observable fragments of their split-second Pavlovian response to the trigger, clients can detach their EMI from the psychophysiology stress response, i.e., "split-second unlearning." Our split-second unlearning model recognizes the EMI as a barrier to moving forward and needs to be unlearned before the client can become naturally adaptive again. We argue that this approach places the client at the center of the work without the need of getting bogged down in a life-long narrative.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.716535 | DOI Listing |
Front Psychol
February 2024
Psychiatrie Baselland, Liestal, Basel-Landschaft, Switzerland.
This theoretical perspective examines the proposition of shared complex trauma between a parent and child, arising from blurred relational boundaries and societal oppression, leading to inequality both at home and within the larger paternalistic system of society. Specifically, the focus is on living within a paternalistic, authoritarian system where rules are unjust, demanding obedience and compliance without questioning the behaviors of the authority. Individuals growing up in these circumstances are subject to adverse and emotionally overwhelming experiences, which lead to the creation of emotional memory images (EMIs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Pain Res (Lausanne)
December 2023
Centre for Pain Research, School of Health, Leeds Beckett University, Leeds, United Kingdom.
This article explores how paternalistic control and power reside within the family system and how this may influence pain and its persistence. Drawing upon clinical case studies and existing literature, this exploration emphasises the role of paternal dysfunction in creating emotional memory images and delves into how this may influence the chronification and treatment resistance of pain (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Pain Res (Lausanne)
July 2023
Centre for Pain Research, School of Health, Leeds Beckett University, Leeds, United Kingdom.
Multiple influences prevent recovery from pain. Our viewpoint is that non-conscious emotional memory images (EMIs) triggers outdated stress responses contributing to the intractability of pain. In this perspectives article we explore the concept that EMIs contribute to the persistence of pain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
November 2022
Centre for Pain Research, Leeds Beckett University, Leeds, United Kingdom.
Background: Previously, we proposed a "" model to explain how emotional memories could be preventing clients from adapting to the stressors of daily living, thus forming a barrier to learning, health and well-being. We suggested that these emotional memories were mental images stored inside the mind as 'emotional memory images' (EMIs).
Objective: To elaborate on the nature of these emotional memory images within the context of split-second learning and unlearning and the broader field of psychoanalysis, to initiate a conversation among scholars concerning the path that future healthcare research, practice, and policy should take.
Front Psychol
November 2021
Centre for Pain Research, Leeds Beckett University, Leeds, United Kingdom.
Psychophysiological "stress" underpins many conditions including anxiety, depression, phobias, chronic fatigue syndrome and non-specific musculoskeletal pain such as fibromyalgia. In this article we develop an understanding of chronic psychophysiological stress from a psychological educational perspective, by drawing on supporting evidence that significant emotional events in early life (traumatic and benign) can influence health and well-being later in life. We suggest that traumatic events instigate psychophysiological "stress" responses and the formation of emotional memory images (EMIs) within very short time frames, i.
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