A Symphony of Gifts From Relational Neuroscience

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the

the

T RAI NI NG SU MMI T

T RAI NI NG SUMMIT

neuroscience

neuroscience

a symphony of gifts from

relational neuroscience

HOW UNDERSTANDING
OUR EMBODIED BRAINS CAN
SUPPORT LIVES OF
HOPE & RESILIENCE

Bonnie Badenoch, PhD

contents
Introduction . . . 1
Our Divided Brains . . . 2
The Polyvagal Theory . . . 6
Social Baseline Theory . . . 10
The Seven Emotional-Motivational Systems . . . 12
Memory Reconsolidation . . . 16
Resonating with One Another . . . 19
Coda . . . 21

introduction

ew technologies have opened doors for us to just begin to glimpse the wondrous
neural universe within. We are standing on the shore of new territory, and even

with these little wisps of understanding, we are finding a different kind of foundation
developing beneath our feet. At least two consistent patterns are emerging from these
discoveries: our embodied brains are far more capable of recovery/rewiring than we
ever imagined; and a cradle of safe, warm, responsive relationships provides the support
most in tune with our brains inherent developmental and healing processes. It turns out
that neuroplasticitythe brains ability to change in response to experienceabounds,
and nonjudgmental, agenda-less presence is the soil in which healing and meaning grow.
Here, we will explore a small sample of these discoveries that are offering so much
hope, and trust they will inspire you to ask more
questions, to look further into the wisdom that
embodied relational neuroscience is illuminating.

There are some suggested reading/listening/


viewing opportunities at the end of each section
to whet your appetite. Some of these are the
discoveries of individual scientists and some are
perspectives arising out of the synthesis of the
work of many researchers. I believe beginning
to embody each of them might enliven the
potential to shift our experience in a significant
way toward the life-giving value of connection
with one another, a possible antidote for the

B O N N I E BA D E N O C H , P H D

cultural pressures toward self-sufficiency and


disconnection. We may also sense the depth of our vulnerability side by side with the
profound resilience of our systems, particularly when we accompany one another along
lifes uncertain, emerging path.

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our divided brains


OUR WAY OF ATTENDING
CHANGES THE WORLD

ere going to begin with the work of a man who was so put off by academias
dissection of poems in order to ascertain their meaningan experience that

was physically painful for himthat he left his English literature studies to become a
doctor and a psychiatrist in order to better understand how our brains allow us to both
hear the symphony of endless meanings in a poem and to dismember it to understand it.

Twenty years of subsequent research underlie Iain McGilchrists eloquent exploration of


the two hemispheres in The Master and His Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making
of the Western World. This was a brave undertaking when we consider the checkered past
of beliefs about the two halves of our brains. For a while, we talked about what the right
and left each dothe left is rational, the right creative, for example. Then we found that
both hemispheres fire for everything, so we began to wonder if there was any significant
difference between the two. With Iains work, we are invited to look at the hemispheres
through a different lens. Instead of asking what each does, he encourages us to inquire
about how each attends to the world and how in that attending the world is changed.
In a very small and incomplete nutshell, when we attend from the right, we
experience the world of relationships as it is emerging in this moment. We attend to the
space between with open receptivity and far fewer judgments. This is the perspective
that allows us to be truly present with one another in ways that are profoundly
supportive of the health of both people and society as a whole. This way of seeing is the
basis for parents and children securely attaching, and for each of us to feel seen and
held in the midst of joy and suffering. It is also foundational for the sense of meaning
that arises when we are connected with one another. Our right-hemisphere way of
perceiving is comfortable with paradox and can embrace many different viewpoints at
once, although at times it may feel tentative, uncertain, and unsettled as it tunes in to the
emerging moment.
The left hemispheres way of attending is entirely different. It is less engaged with
current experience and more intent on taking what has already been learned, making it

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static, taking it apart, and reassembling it into systems. It tends toward judgments and
has no felt sense of being in relationship with others. Without a felt sense of we, the
left focuses more on tasks and behaviors, creating algorithms and, in the process, losing
touch with what is individual and unique.
We can easily sample these two ways of experiencing by attending to our bodies
from these different perspectives. Our left brain regards the body as an object to be run
around the block and fed certain foods in order to look or feel a certain way. In those
moments, it as though
we are standing back
and viewing our bodies
as separate entities,
judging them according
to accepted criteria, and
seeking to control and
improve them. The
right brain engages
in a different kind of
relationship with the body,
listening to its language
which is sensationas
it emerges in this moment. In the diffuse and tentative way that is characteristic of the
right, we may sense when it is time to stop exercising, when sleep is being requested, and
even what foods the body needs right now. Instead of stepping apart, we step into our
bodies as we would into a friendship. Lets see if we can move back and forth between
the two ways of attending. Then we might also sense how these two experiences would
literally foster different life experiences for us, and by extension for the culture at large.
It would be easy to make the left hemisphere the bad guy, but that is not the point.
Neither hemisphere does well alone. For all the isolation, deadness, and rigidity that
the left offers when cut off from the right, sometimes our right hemisphere is so filled
with pain, fear, and overwhelm that when it is dominant, life is chaos. Even with a
fairly healthy right, its focus on emergence leaves us without an anchor for functioning
from day to day. As with so much else we are learning from neuroscience research, the

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relationship between the hemispheres is all-important. When the right provides the
vision and the left creates the systems to manifest that vision, we are on solid ground for
long-term sustainable living. For example, the right is able to see and feel the strain on
the environment caused by our current practices, while the left is skilled at developing
processes to alter this potentially disastrous pathwhen, as Iain says, the right is the
master and the left is the emissary (no gender reference intended). Right now, research
from a number of sources suggests that about 75 percent of us are living in a left-centric
way. However, the potential to shift toward whole-brain living is always there. In every
area, we will see that our vulnerabilities are accompanied by inherent capacities that
can lead toward health when they receive the support they need.
There seems to be much value in looking at our experience through this lens. Iain
may be providing us with an opportunity to consider how we each might have a role
to play in the survival of this culture and the world as a whole. I have found that
as I deepen into what he is offering, I become more aware when I have moved into
disconnection and can more easily find the roadway back toward relational living.
One question he raises but doesnt answer is how we might strengthen the master and
emissary relationship so that we move toward fulfilling, meaningful, sustainable lives
as individuals and societies. What if we were all part of communities dedicated to deep
listening and support for one another so that our wounds can be held and integrated
rather than buried and then acted out in ways that hurt each other? What if we were
then able to feed our always-hungry left hemispheres with wisdom drawn from the
right hemispheres way of seeing the world (something that interpersonal neurobiology
offers in abundance)? Might we then be able to offer true presence to those around
us, with the left hemisphere offering its wisdom and structure in support of the rights
ongoing humane vision? I believe he is saying that it might be possible and that it is
certainly essential.

The Master and His Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World (2009). A big
book, with abundant research. Worth its weight and worth our attention. The concluding chapter
is deeply moving and crucially important.
The Divided Brain and the Search for Meaning (2012). A small ebook that summarizes the big book.
A very good place to begin.

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Iain McGilchrist at Schumacher College: Things Are Not What They Seem (2011). https://www.
youtube.com/watch?v=oXiHStLfjP0. A heartfelt, mesmerizing talk about how we experience life
from the two hemispheres and what is happening in our culture. Many other talks are available
on YouTube for your pleasure.
Podcast interview with David VanNuys/Shrink Rap Radio. Brain Lateralization and Western
Culture with Iain McGilchrist. http://shrinkrapradio.com/?s=Iain+McGilchrist. For those who prefer
listening to reading or viewing.

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the polyvagal theory


LEANING TOWARD
SAFETY & CONNECTION

s a teenager, Stephen Porges discovered that playing the clarinet helped him
regulate his bodily state. As young as he was, he had become curious about

how bodily feelings could disrupt social interactions and even cognitive functions. The
ongoing internal dialog between these feelings and rational thinking really caught his
attention. So he was fascinated to discover that his body calmed down considerably as

he played, and it seemed that both the long exhalation and the way he was listening to
the beautiful sounds helped make this change. By the time he was in graduate school,
he began to attend to how quality of voice and facial expression were communicating
something independent of the language being spoken. As he followed these trails, they
eventually led him to the awareness that, The linchpin was the detection of features of
safety and how that actively changed autonomic state and fostered health, growth, and
restoration as well as provided opportunities to connect and co-regulate. He noticed how
we also telegraph danger to one another through face and voice. In other words, we are
constantly looking toward one another
for guidance about whether we are
safe or not. What we discover there
influences our autonomic nervous
system (ANS) to respond adaptively to
keep us safe. These ANS fluctuations
underlie our bodily feelings and direct
our behaviors. For the next twenty or
so years, Steve studied the intricate
details of how our autonomic system
responds to emerging conditions, and
named it the Polyvagal Theory.
As with the two hemispheres,
perspectives on our ANS have changed

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over the years. Research generally begins with curiosity about some experience we are
having and then moves through stages of refinement. Originally, researchers identified
two branches of the ANSsympathetic for activation and parasympathetic for calming.
They imagined that these systems needed to come into some kind of balance with each
other. However, one of the viewpoints missing from this conceptualization is how
dedicated this system is to fostering interpersonal connection.
The Polyvagal Theory supplies this missing element. The branches of our ANS
are three rather than two, and work together not toward balance but according to a
hierarchy of preference. They constantly respond to relational conditions. Stephen
coined the word neuroception to indicate how our systems sense, below the level of
conscious awareness, whether we feel safe or not in this emerging moment by drawing
on cues in our internal and external environment. We attend both to what is coming
in through our senses and what is arising in our internal world, and the two are
entangled with one another. We can easily sense this if we recall a time when we felt
our bodies respond to someones face or voice by relaxing into a warm, calm state or
felt a movement toward heightened alertness and agitation. Our earlier experiences are
constantly being touched by the winds of current events, and our ANS automatically
adjusts to provide for our protection.
When a neuroception of safety arrives, our ventral vagal parasympathetic system
activates and we can settle down with one another in close and vulnerable relationship.
In this state, our voices become melodic, our faces mobile, and we are able to focus on
the meaning of the words being spoken to us. We are able to offer receptive, agenda-less
attention that lets us be responsive to the needs of the other. People near us feel received
and attended to. One person in this state becomes a magnet for others and soon we
are in the beautiful co-regulating relationships that nourish our systems at every level.
As early as 1994, Stephens research showed that ventral vagal lateralizes to the right
hemisphere. Here we see the overlap between the insights of Iain and Stevewhen we
are attending with the right in the lead, our autonomic system offers the possibility of
opening to one another. We may be able to recall a recent time when we felt our bodies
respond to such an offer of safe connection.
Only if we no longer feel safe does the sympathetic system activate (fight/flight/
momentary freeze to prepare for taking action). The prosody of our voices changes, as

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does the tension in our ears, so that we can listen to the broader environment for sounds
of danger while losing our ability to attend to what another is saying. In the process, we
disconnect from others and narrow our field of attention to scan for the source of the
threat. People around us will also sense a lack of safety and their systems may well follow
us into preparation for protecting themselves. If the threat escalates to the point that we
feel helpless, the unmyelinated
dorsal vagal parasympathetic
pulls us into collapse and
dissociation, feigning death to
avoid death and conserving our
metabolic resources.
All three of these states are
adaptive, and come online on
our behalf from moment to
moment. Their hierarchical
arrangement, with ventral
vagal and social engagement
in the lead, also points toward
how we can become safe and healing landing strips for one another if we cultivate
our own ventral capacities. That is why Stephen says to us therapists, Safety IS the
treatment. We might second that in regard to all our relationshipsfamily, friends,
business, and nations. Currently, cultural conditions that include speed, information
overload, increasing amounts of screen time, focus on tasks and behavior over
relationship, the push toward successall of which are mutually reinforcinghave a
tendency to keep us in persistent sympathetic activation.
However, two aspects of these discoveries offer us substantial hope. One is that we
are always leaning toward ventral, even when we are strongly activated. Our systems
continually ask, Are you with me? As soon as we have a felt sense that someone is
nonjudgmentally, receptively present, our system will move toward ventral as well. The
second hopeful piece is that as we deepen into our embodied awareness of the workings
of our ANS, we seem to have fewer judgments about ourselves and others. Our ANS
and the behaviors that accompany its activation are automatic and not motivated by

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anything but the need to protect and move toward safety. They are not calculated and not
truly chosen. If my friend cant connect with me on a particular day, it isnt because she
planned it, but simply because her ANS is being drawn to orient more toward the sense
of danger in those particular moments. The possibilities for increased compassion are
almost endless here, along with the encouragement to make ongoing offers of connection.
I often imagine what the world might be like if leaders at every level began to
understand and embody the meaning of what Steve is saying about safety being the
linchpin for every systemfrom individuals to nationsdeveloping in a healthy,
interdependent way. Schools might focus on connection before curriculumas my
friend, Kirke Olson (author of The Invisible Classroom) saysto foster both better
learning and the development of our childrens relational capacities. How respectful
and productive might Congress become if the first concern was establishing relational
safety before beginning to consider legislation? On a much smaller scale, I have seen so
much change for feuding couples when they begin to ask the question, How safe are
we feeling right now? This open curiosity leads them away from judgment and blaming
toward connection with one another. From that place, so much becomes possible that is
otherwise out of our reach.

Neuroception: A Subconscious System for Detecting Threats and Safety (2004). Available at http://
www.frzee.com/neuroception.pdf. A paper on Polyvagal Theory written for parents.
The Polyvagal Theory: New Insights into Adaptive Reactions of the Autonomic Nervous System
(2009). Available at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3108032/. A more technical
paper, and well worth reading and rereading.
Many talks on YouTubefrom technical to Dr. Drew.
Podcast interview with David VanNuys/Shrink Rap Radio. The Polyvagal Theory with Stephen
Porges, PhD. http://shrinkrapradio.com/?s=stephen+porges. For those who want to hang out on the
treadmill with Steve.

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social baseline theory


BUILT FOR INTERDEPENDENCE

hat Iain and Steve have given us converges with other ongoing research that
increasingly points to the healthy benefits of our radical interdependence

throughout life. While I dont know the personal stories that might let us glimpse what

underlies this research, Social Baseline Theorythe work of Lane Beckes and James
Coantells us that (for most of us), when we are in a challenging situation, the presence
of anotheroften even a strangercalms our systems so that we use fewer somatic and
emotional resources to deal with upset than if we were managing the situation on our
own. They say, Social Baseline Theory (SBT) proposes that the primary ecology to which
human beings are adapted is one that is rich with other humans. In our view, the human
brain is designed to assume that it is embedded within a relatively predictable social
network characterized by familiarity, joint attention, shared goals, and interdependence.
That is a powerful statement that flies in the face of our cultures emphasis on autonomy,
self-regulation, and individual successvalues that arise from an isolated lefthemisphere orientation, which deprives us of having a felt sense of each other. Such
focus on going it alone is an actual violation of our inherently relational nature.
Instead, the wisdom of our embodied system is that we flourish most when we are
in safe proximity with each other. If we have some sort of mountain to climb, whether
that involves taking on an actual challenging task or the unexpected need to persevere

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through physical pain, the arrival of another changes our perception of the difficulty
or the degree of pain without changing the facts of the situation. The closer and more
trusted the person is, the greater the help. The most astonishing part of this discovery
is that our brains regulatory circuits dont begin to fire more strongly when a friend
arrives, as we might expect. The studys unexpected results showed that they actually fire
less, and much less if a trusted beloved is accompanying us. If I have a felt sense that you
have my back, my system simply isnt as afraid, even if theres nothing you can actually
do about the challenging situation. In this way, being accompanied frees our neural
resources for exploration, relating, creativity, and anything else meaningful to us. I am
imagining that each of us can recall moments in which we felt our nervous systems settle,
our widened eyes relax, our hearts calm, and our muscles let go a little bit when a friend
arrived to just be with us in moments of suffering. Given the left-shifted nature of our
culture, we all need relationships and communities where we advocate for and support
one anothers inborn interdependence every day.

Social Baseline Theory: The Role of Social Proximity in Emotion and Economy of Action (2011).
Available at https://lifespanlearn.org/documents/SocialBaselineTheory.pdf. A statement in
scientific terms of the importance of supportive relationships.

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the seven emotionalmotivational systems


SEEKING CONNECTION FIRST

man in a white lab coat gently picks up a white rat and strokes him, then
rolls him over and begins to tickle him. At first, the rat makes hardly any

sounds and the man speculates that this rat hasnt been handled for awhilewhich

others in the lab confirm. So he continues to cuddle the little guy while talking to the
interviewer about how the circuits of emotion are buried deep in the midbrains of all
mammals. On another day, with a rat who is handled regularly and is familiar with his
surroundings, the little guy easily and joyously laughs as soon as he is put on his back
and tickledhigh chirping sounds and kicking feet. This rat tickler is Jaak Panksepp,
who has been studying the roots of emotion for decades.
The significance of his work for me is twofold. At the theoretical-experiential level,
we now know that we have inherent emotional systems that are not dependent on
higher cortical functions. We may need our cortex to name them, but we dont need it to
experience and be conscious of emotion and share in vivid, emotion-based relationships.
This might speak to how we relate with people who suffer severe cognitive decline. At
the practical level, an understanding of Panksepps work might support our efforts to
parent in ways that help our children develop neural resources for resilient, meaningful,
and joyous lives filled with sustaining relationships.
Lets begin by exploring the seven systems a bit. Jaak capitalizes them to indicate
that these words stand for specific circuits in the midbrain, even though they are
also commonly used terms. The first, the grandmother of them all, is the SEEKING
system. Supporting curiosity and exploration, this urge leads to us find resources that
are most meaningful for our survival. For we humans, that means connection with
other humans (see Social Baseline Theory above). When we experience disconnection,
SEEKING joins three systems that are available to help us draw in support. The first is
SEPARATION DISTRESS/ PANIC/ GRIEF and leads to the biologically helpful behavior
of clinging. If our distress is met with connection, this system subsides into the more

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relaxed state of holding and being held. If it isnt met, then the next system to activate
may be FEARwith particular facial expressions and sounds that are meant to elicit the
response to connect in others. If that doesnt draw another to us, then the next system to
activate may well be RAGE. As our SEEKING system tries and tries to draw in help, but no
one responds, frustration builds toward needing release.
We can hear this movement from system to system in the cries of babiesthe
whimpering request of DISTRESS moving to the escalating cry of FEAR, and finally to the
screams of RAGE. However, as someone whose CARE system has been touched by these
cries comes with the intention of
providing comfort and connection,
those wails suddenly or gradually
subside to be replaced by the cooing,
responsive sounds of being together.
Once connection is established, the
PLAY system comes alive and the
SEEKING system is free to move
toward whatever is of most interest
in the moment. A felt sense of
disconnection requires our SEEKING
system to focus its resources toward
regaining contact and a felt sense of
connection opens our systems to joyous engagement with those around us. In our teen
years, that free-ranging exploration includes the seventh system, LUST, as we seek not
only to procreate, but to honor a deeper connection through the inclusion of sexuality.
Most meaningful for me in all of this is that the signs of disconnectionclinging,
fear, and rageare generally considered maladaptive/bad behavior in a left-shifted
society, and many of our young ones are shamed or punished for exhibiting them. This
isnt meant to blame parents. These norms are deeply rooted in our culture. According
to Carol Gilligan, an author dedicated to the well-being of our young ones, research
suggests that clinging and fear are discouraged in many young boys by the age of three,
leaving them with only rage to express their losses. In many girls, this same suppression
happens, but not until about thirteen when their peers begin to consider it improper.

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If we are able to hear what Jaak is saying, we might find the strength to buck the tide
of society and hear these signals welling up from deep within the brains of our children
as pleas for connection. We might welcome their clinging and respond with holding
them until the emotional storm subsides. We might even welcome their rage. With the
release complete and connection reestablished, the other systems of CARE and PLAY
that lead to cooperation will come online
naturally. If instead we send them for time
out or punish them with shaming looks and
lectures about behavior, we only create
more pools of traumatic isolation within
their developing brains.
Jaaks work also supports a different
way of caring for those who experience
cognitive decline with aging. We are so
used to valuing ourselves and one another
according to our cognitive capacities that
when those slip away, we feel we have lost the person. It turns out that what weve lost
is really a small slice of what makes us humanand not the most significant capacity,
which is finding meaning through connection. I hope if the day comes that I no longer
remember my daughters name, she will feel how much I recognize and am comforted by
her touch, her eyes, the sound of her voice. Jaak points us toward a kinder world for all
of us at every stage of life.

Jaak Pankseppin the lab of happy rats. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WLfubEzV23M. A


small introduction to his work, while watching him cuddle a rat. Jaak goes toward considering
pharmacological means of using this knowledge to support the systems, but we also now
understand that relationships may be able to influence epigenetics and neurochemicals so that
these systems come online again without medical intervention.
How rats laugh. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ieP3lpyOHtU. A familiar rat goes immediately
to playfulnessSEEKING and PLAY systems easily responding to Jaaks overtures.
Archaeology of Mind: Neuroevolutionary Origins of Human Emotions (2012). His most recent and
detailed book, written with Lucy Biven, about the seven emotional-motivational systems. Well
worth the read and reread to begin deepening into the sense of these systems in ourselves.

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Affective Neuroscience with Jaak Panksepp. Brain Science Podcast with Ginger Campbell, MD.
http://brainsciencepodcast.com/bsp/2010/1/13/affective-neuroscience-with-jaak-panksepp-bsp-65.
html. A very knowledgeable interviewer on neuroscience. For those who want to take Jaak for a
brisk walk.

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memory reconsolidation
CHANGING THE FELT SENSE
OF OUR IMPLICIT MEMORIES

ruce Ecker, with his colleagues Laurel Hulley and Robin Ticic, has collected
the research on memory reconsolidation and illuminated a pathway toward

permanently changing the quality of life for those of us who have suffered traumas large
and small. Each of us may apply this emerging research according to our own paradigm

of practice, but the underlying science can support all of us.


For many decades, it was generally believed that we could only regulate our degree
of discomfort from unhealed and unintegrated implicit memories arising in our
bodies, but not actually change the core felt sense. When these old experiences arise,
they change our perception of the world around us, stimulate our autonomic nervous
system, influence our digestion, often strongly affect how we are relating to others,
and so much else. Our suffering is much
more influenced by these implicit arisings
than by the cognitive memory of what
happened to us.
In the last couple of decades, evidence
has accumulated that it is possible to
change these memories at their corenot
what explicitly happened, but what
implicitly lingers within us from these
events. When we experience something
frightening or painful and dont have
the internal resources (circuitry based
on previous co-regulation) or external
resources (other people) to help us
integrate it, certain chemicals are released
that allow us to store these memories
primarily in neural networks in our bodies

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and limbic system. They quickly become molecularly locked into long-term memory.
Reminders of the trauma can touch and awaken these memories, and then they wash
through our bodies with the feeling that the experience is happening again right now.
Each such arising may be a request for help in resolving and integrating these sufferings.
One of the significant contributions of Coherence Psychotherapy, the paradigm of Bruce
and colleagues, is their realization, based on the research, that our symptoms make sense
in light of what is being implicitly held out of awareness. This enables us to come from
a place of trusting that our clients (and ourselves) were always adapting in response to
experience rather than becoming disordered. The mutual respect that arises from this
understanding is of inestimable help in healing.
Based on this science, which works within any paradigm, I will tell the rest of the
story from the viewpoint of my own experience with itfor myself and with my clients.
The key to change lies in two experiences happening at once. First, we need to be in
embodied contact with the implicit memory. This means feeling it in our bodies, not
just thinking about it. The intensity of the embodied memory needs to also be within
the combined window of tolerance that blossoms when we are with someone we trust,
so that we still feel connected to that person even if the emotions are intense. This in
itself does not open the neural network holding the trauma. That happens only with
the arrival of a disconfirming, reparative experience most often embodied in the other
person. If we are afraid, a sense of safety and protection from another provides this
disconfirmation. If we are feeling shame, nonjudgmental acceptance is needed, and so
on. Then our circuits open to let in this new information, which includes internalizing
the sense of accompaniment along with whatever new experience is being offered. It is
as though this memory has been awaiting the arrival of such support.
Often, the most immediate change people experience is from a feeling of me alone
in this suffering to a sense of we are together here. Each of us can perhaps feel the
relief that brings as we imagine it. It is possible for some implicit memories to change
through a single disconfirming experience, but for many of us who have experienced
considerable trauma, the complexities of these neural networks means they need a
period of support before there is a sense of something resembling completion.
Holding the possibility of this change in my own body, mind, and heart when I am
with my clients brings a quality of hope into the room that wasnt there quite as fully

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before, and also opens me to greater change in my own ongoing healing. As we will see
when we visit resonance circuitry in the next section, we have neural pathways that
respond in microseconds that help us provide such healing experiences for others even
when we arent in the therapy room.

Unlocking the Emotional Brain: Eliminating Symptoms at Their Roots Using Memory
Reconsolidation (2012) A very thorough summary of the science of memory reconsolidation as
well as how Ecker and his companions practice it.
Memory Reconsolidation: Key to Transformational Change in Psychotherapy. https://www.youtube.
com/watch?v=_V_rI2N6Fco. A quick start guide to the principles of implicit change.
Coherence Therapy website: www.coherencetherapy.org

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resonating with
one another
INTERNALIZING EMPATHIC
INNER COMPANIONS

monkey eats a raisin and certain circuits light up in his brain. Later, a researcher
eats a raisin and similar circuits light upnot only in the researcher, but also

in the monkey. After numerous repetitions to make sure that it isnt an equipment

error, Giacomo Rizzolatti, Vittorio Gallese, and their colleagues realize they are seeing,
for the first time, what they would name mirror neurons. A number of years later,
Marco Iacoboni and his group found signs of mirror neurons in humans, and in 2010,
encountered them through direct observation of single cells in additional locations in
the brain.
Many now believe that these neurons form the beginning of a chain of neural events
that help us pass on so much of our culture, from language to the capacity for empathy. If
I see your sad face, I may first resonate with it and feel sadness myself (thats the work of
strictly congruent mirror neurons). Next, I may feel the desire to comfort you rise up in
my body automatically (thats a gift from the broadly congruent ones). And deep within,
below conscious awareness, my inner world will be able to distinguish between your
sadness and my own so that Im not overwhelmed (thanks to a group called inhibitory).
If I have a lot of unprocessed sorrow, I may not be able to get to the full experience of
empathy, but instead be stopped at the stage
where my feelings echo yours and well
both be sad together. In any case, there is
a kind of interpersonal oneness available
to us so that we arent isolated from each
otheran experience some authors have
called hell.
In addition to being neural bridges that
allow us to respond to one another from

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a felt sense of each others inner landscape, it is possible that this resonance circuitry
brings people outside us into our inner world in a most intimate way. It appears that
after the initial arrival of information from our relationships stimulates our mirror
neurons, other circuits pick up the intention, bodily sensations, and emotions of the
other person and encode them, intertwined with our own felt sense experience at that
moment. At the same time, our sensory experience of the person is being addedhow
this person sounds, looks, tastes, smells, and touches. In this way, through mutual
internalization, we become inner communities for one another.
When our repeated experience with someone is warm and responsive, we will carry
that relationship in our very bodies as a resource for the rest of our lives. My smiling,
playful father tosses me in the air and we both laugh with delightand that implicit
memory lives in my body right now as I write these words. These dear ones become
part of our regulatory process, an inner referent for reassurance that builds resilience.
There may be no such thing as pure self-regulation, but instead co-regulation moving from
the outside to the inside. If our experiences with another are painful or frightening, a
chemical chain of events buries them in limbic-centric circuits to await the arrival of
enough safe support to heal these inner ones. Because we are woven together by this
invisible net of neural firings, we have the possibility of that depth of healing throughout
our lives.
This sense of our profound interconnectedness through resonance brings us full
circle to the beginning of our explorations. With each discovery, we find inherent within
us all the resources we need to engage in ways that will save our planet from being used
up to the point that it discards us and, at the other end of the spectrum, to support our
little ones in establishing a firm neural foothold on a life of resilience, meaning, and
flourishing interdependence. Even though the challenge to this way of living is strong
right now in our culture, a growing understanding of relational neuroscience may help
us have the strength to quietly embody this vision from moment to moment.

Imitation, Empathy, and Mirror Neurons (2009), Marco Iacoboni. Available at https://
consciousmovements.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/iacoboni/annurevpsychol_2009.pdf. A
beautiful summary of 10 years of work with mirror neurons.

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coda
BELLY BRAINS
& GENE PLASTICITY

his small composition would feel unfinished without at least a brief mention of
the nascent exploration of our belly brain (100 million neurons) and its resident

microbiota (40 trillion gut bacteria). If the 90s were the Decade of the Brain, this is the

Decade of the Gut. At this very early stage, we know that what is unfolding along the
enteric nervous system and living and dying in our bellies has as much to do with
mood as digestionthat these systems are intricately interwoven with the brain in
our skulls and dynamically influenced by our internal and external environment.
Here is a reference that tells the intriguing story of microbiota research. This is a tale
worth following.
Peter Andrey Smith, Can the Bacteria in Your Gut Explain Your Mood? (2015). Available at http://www.
nytimes.com/2015/06/28/magazine/can-the-bacteria-in-your-gut-explain-your-mood.html?_r=0. A wellwritten summary of where we are in research about our microbiota and its many connections.

A second story that holds so much promise for the possibility of change at the
deepest levels is that the expression of our genes is always being altered by experience.
We once thought that genes were destiny in many ways, but now we know that is a
limited truth, and that through new
experiences, epigenetic switches
turn genes on and off. We humans
are so focused on relationships
that warm, responsive care can
play a vital role in altering how our
genes shape perception, emotion,
and behavior. Each new discovery
seems to illuminate the beautiful
possibility that we are meant to heal
one another when there has been

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wounding, and meant to develop one another gloriously when relationships are safe and
responsive. Here is an interesting documentary as a starting place with this vast subject
and an article about the process of discovery.
The Ghost in Your Genes (NOVA documentary). Available at https://www.youtube.com/
watch?v=2XzxNGkZsbI. Groundbreaking exploration of epigenetic inheritance.
Dan Hurley, Grandmas Experiences Leave a Mark on Your Genes (2013). Available at http://
discovermagazine.com/2013/may/13-grandmas-experiences-leave-epigenetic-mark-on-your-genes.
Fascinating article about the history of epigenetic discovery.

As this symphony has emerged, I am aware that there are at least three people who
have made the idea and experience of neural music available to me, and none of them
are directly mentioned in this piece. Dan Siegel, Allan Schore, and Lou Cozolino, the
fathers of interpersonal neurobiology, are the foundation on which I am blessed to stand
as I look out over these discoveries and sense which ones are touching me most deeply
right now. Utmost gratitude to the three of you for the depth of your relational vision.
It also seems important to say that any of us undertaking the task of writing this
article would choose a different group of discoveries based partly on our own life
experiences and how they guide us toward what matters most. For me, a history of
abuse and shattered attachments coupled with ongoing recovery in the embrace of
loving, nonjudgmental relationships of all sorts has led to a particular preoccupation.
My attention is always drawn to anything that tells us more about howin warm,
responsive relationshipswe continually shape one anothers brains toward a better
quality of life in every way.
Our physical health improves as we feel safe and welcomed. Inflammation decreases,
cortisol levels out, our bellies remember how to digest, and more oxytocin (and other
neurochemicals) bathe us in well-being. Our emotions, once tangled in the roots of the
implicit forest growing underground, now find a more peaceful relationship with these
same roots, and we can experience a wider range of emotions without feeling torn. We
are more drawn to find companions in our distress so we can help one another integrate
what hurts us. Our minds can let go of the some of the elaborate system of protections
that were needed to guard us against the unhealed past, so there is more room for
responding and relating, as well as exploration and creativity. Spirituallywell, that is

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a very individual matter, but in my experience, many find themselves drawn toward a
kinder and often more relational sense of the sacred than ever before. In the presence
of such relational nourishment, every part of us is fed and reassured. So, in both joy and
suffering, we are both sustaining and sustained.

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