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Bessel Van Der Kolk Describes What 'Dissociation' Is Truly Like 

Freedom Pact
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Dr Bessel Van Der Kolk is a psychiatrist, author, researcher and educator based in Boston, USA. Since the 1970s his research has been in the area of post-traumatic stress. He is the author of The New York Times best seller, The Body Keeps the Score. Bessel Van der Kolk served as a past president for the International Society for Traumatic stress Studies and former co-director of the National Child Traumatic Stress Network. He is a professor of Psychiatry at Boston University School of Medicine and president of the Trauma Research Foundation in Brookline, Massachusetts.
In this short clip, Dr Van Der Kolk describes what disassociation truly feels like.
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23 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 5   
@Rae_777
@Rae_777 Год назад
*dissociation not “disassociation”
@cristinaevans139
@cristinaevans139 Год назад
Get a life…really?Rachel
@jomymatthews
@jomymatthews Год назад
Good video. Does Bessel Van Der Kolk have a book or program teaching you "how to feel"?
@pathofthezebra
@pathofthezebra Год назад
I have no idea if he has a book about that, but he has written a book the body keeps the score, (probably you know it) and I have read it (well listened audiobook version) and I find it a very useful book, especially when you struggle yourself (or in my case "myself") with complex trauma (or complex PTSD) due to childhood issues. It's more in the overall perspective it gives. Like it gets to the hard of the matter and as someone struggling with complex trauma and dissociation I gave me the feeling "he knows what he is talking about", like he has experienced it himself. Almost like feeling heard and seen by the content of the book, recognizing it and that many aha moments that you start to understand why some things don't work in your life etc. It has really opened up my perspective on myself and trauma. So yes if I can recommend a book it would be this book (but again maybe you know it already)
@robynhope219
@robynhope219 2 месяца назад
No need to be taught how to feel...it is intrinsic. You just buried your feelings bc it was too painful. I recommend a few sessions with a trauma informed therapist.
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