Bioenergetics therapy training gives us a new approach to unlocking a psychotherapy client’s hidden story and understanding their personality through observing and better understanding their body and its energetic processes. By observing mood, posture, and movement, therapists can better see how the unconscious works on the somatic level. This can help us explore beyond the client’s verbal story to reveal their full history.
Here, one of our online therapy training teachers, Laurie Ure, explains the benefits of engaging the body through bioenergetics in psychotherapy.
Bioenergetics for Therapists
How Engaging the Body Can Enhance Your Psychotherapy Practice
by Laurie Ure, LICSW, Certified Bioenergetic Therapist
Perhaps you have training in EMDR, know about tapping, have read The Body Keeps the Score, or studied body-based therapy approaches that focus on awareness but have not experienced the value of working directly with the body in therapy. Bioenergetic analysis incorporates the body through movement linked with feeling and as central to the psychotherapy process. Based on the notion that the body needs to change, along with the mind, to address the roots of the issues which bring clients to psychotherapy, bioenergetic therapists learn to read a person’s history in the structure of their bodies.
Body-based Therapy and Bioenergetic Analysis
The movement-based tools of bioenergetic analysis integrate an understanding of a client’s history and ability to address the roots of their presenting problems. This understanding fosters compassion in the therapeutic relationship and a capacity to facilitate change on a deep level. Bioenergetic therapists incorporate exercises to release chronic tension, which may be out of a person’s awareness but profoundly impacts how they feel. In addition, bioenergetic therapy focuses on exercises to open unconscious breathing patterns, increase a person’s connection to the ground, link verbal and non-verbal communications in personal boundaries, and allow emotions to move through the body beneficially.
Bioenergetic Therapy Techniques: Movement
Studies confirm that exercise helps alleviate depression. However, getting a depressed person to exercise can be challenging. Bioenergetic therapy addresses this by introducing movement as part of psychotherapy. Further, neuroscientists such as Dr. Lisa Feldman Barrett teach that the body acts as an antenna for the brain, constantly providing information about how to respond.
In her book How Emotions Are Made, Dr. Barrett reminds us that no matter how much a person changes their thoughts, if their body does not feel good – from being tired, hungry, in pain, or filled with tension – they will not feel good. Therefore, working with the body in the context of psychotherapy makes sense and becomes essential to helping clients feel better and enjoy their lives more fully.
To learn more about how you can incorporate movement and bioenergetic therapy into your sessions, click below to visit the course page for Laurie Ure’s online therapist course taught in collaboration with Robert Coffman and Vincentia Schroeter.
Engaging the Body in Psychotherapy
Contemporary Bioenergetic Analysis
With Laurie Ure, LICSW, Robert Coffman, PhD, and Vincentia Schroeter, PhD.
In this course you’ll learn how to apply bioenergetic therapy practices to support deep transformational change in your clients´ lives. The bioenergetics approach combines psychoanalytic theory with somatic focus within a relational matrix.
CE credit is offered for this course.
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