Download PDF BookBroken Hearts; Wounded Minds The Psychological Functioning of Traumatized and Behavior Problem Children

[Download PDF.LYUH] Broken Hearts; Wounded Minds The Psychological Functioning of Traumatized and Behavior Problem Children



[Download PDF.LYUH] Broken Hearts; Wounded Minds The Psychological Functioning of Traumatized and Behavior Problem Children

[Download PDF.LYUH] Broken Hearts; Wounded Minds The Psychological Functioning of Traumatized and Behavior Problem Children

You can download in the form of an ebook: pdf, kindle ebook, ms word here and more softfile type. [Download PDF.LYUH] Broken Hearts; Wounded Minds The Psychological Functioning of Traumatized and Behavior Problem Children, this is a great books that I think are not only fun to read but also very educational.
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[Download PDF.LYUH] Broken Hearts; Wounded Minds The Psychological Functioning of Traumatized and Behavior Problem Children

Broken Hearts; Wounded Minds: The Psychological Functioning of Traumatized and Behavior Problem Children When People Treat you Like you are Crazy Stupid or ... When people treat you as if you are crazy it isnt because they think you are crazy it is because they want YOU to think you are crazy. When people treat you as ... Nightmares about Children Falling - Privilege of Parenting The dreams below organized from younger to older children all involve kids falling. It seems that when we fall asleep it is common to have the sensation of ... The Grooming Process of Discrediting Children and the ... There is a reason why abusers and controllers will start the grooming process for any type of abuse on young children... When we have Bad Dreams about our Children When we wake up in the middle of the night horrified that our kids have come to harm in our dreams what could it mean Evil NarcissisticAbuse.com EVIL M.Scott Peck and Sam Vaknin disagree on whether narcissists are evil. Is it evil to belittle denigrate scapegoat and make fun of someone until they are ... Health News Articles Healthy Living - ABC News Yahoo!-ABC News Network 2017 ABC News Internet Ventures. All rights reserved. U.S. News Latest National News Videos Photos - ABC ... Get the latest breaking news across the U.S. on ABCNews.com How to Deal with a Narcissist - Dr. George Simon I am still trying to deal with the pain and suffering my sister felt at the hands of her ex husband narcissist.This article described him to the T. Every Mass Shooting Shares 1 Thing In Common NOT Guns Nearly Every Mass Shooting In The Last 20 Years Shares One Thing In Common Its NOT Weapons AmmoLand Gun News The overwhelming evidence points to the signal ... Find a Program EAGALA Primary site Find an EAGALA Model program in your area using the map below or the Search options. All listings have at least one or more members of the facilitating team EAGALA ... Rank: #546190 in BooksPublished on: 2001Binding: Paperback252 pages 1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.TraumatizedBy Donna AinsworthThis is a very informative book. I don't agree with all the treatment types but over all, it is beneficial for someone who is studying in this area of practice.4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.Interesting, but be cautiousBy Alyssa A. LappenThis is an interesting 202-page handbook for those treating or living with attachment disorder children. Randolph breaks the volume into two six-chapter parts, the first on understanding and living with attachment disorder children, the second on research results into the issue. Unfortunately, some of the statements of "fact" in this book seem highly controversial, at best.Chapter one covers "Attachment Theory and Attachment Disruptions," reviewing the history of the disorder's preliminary discovery in the 13th Century by King Gustav of Sweden, its recognition by British psychoanalyst John Bowlby in a seminal 1944 study and further research into the topic in the 1960s by Mary Ainsworth and others with whom she later collaborated.The later studies identified the differences in behavioral and psychological health in "securely attached children" from "insecurely attached children." In the 1970s researchers began to consider the effects of maltreatment on attachment styles. These found that children raised in orphanages had more severe problems than those raised in foster care.In the second essay, Randolph covers "The Impact of Severe Traumatization on Infant Monkeys and Human Children." In 1958, Harry Harlow studied whether infant monkeys attached to their mothers because they provide food, and surprisingly found that the comfort of the infants was more important to them than eating. This was determined by the use of two surrogate mother figures-a wire monkey that provided food and a cloth monkey for comfort. Harlow found that the infants clung to the cloth "mothers," in many cases, to the point of starvation.Randolph also covers the effects of severe neglect and deprivation on human children, as evidenced by case studies of children from Romanian orphanages, where infants experience no human contact at all except when their diapers are changed three to four times a day.In monkeys, it was found that early deprivation is extremely difficult to treat, with few if any therapies successfully rehabilitating infants to the point where they are willing and able to establish close attachments to others. While intelligence seems unaffected, most are unable to fully utilize their intelligence to solve problems with which they are presented.Bruce Perry and his collaborators Bessel van der Kolk and Schwartz found that traumatization has profound neurological, psychological, physiological, developmental, ethical and interpersonal effects on children. Children were more likely to have these effects if the source of their trauma was "man-made" than the result of natural disasters. Positron emission tomography scanning was used to measure the brain impulses experienced by traumatized and normal children. These found that traumatized children store all their traumatic memories on the right side of the brain, all their positive memories on the left side and are unable to efficiently and effectively coordinate actions that require the use of both brain hemispheres.Severely traumatized children are also "chronically hyperaroused."Up to this point, the book is useful and informative. But I begin to have doubts when Randolph notes that, according to Dr. van der Kolk found, children must be allowed to experience intense feelings during therapy, so as to be able to work through the traumatic memories and to be able to provide a different outcome than the original one. According to Randolph, he concludes that "therapists who feel incapable of pushing children to intensify their feelings...so that trauma can be resolved shouldn't work with [traumatized] children, as they will only end up re-traumatizing these children...."I am unsure if this accurately represents Dr. van der Kolk's findings.But, I question Randolph's conclusion, based on her assessments of his work, that "Traumatic memories can only be resolved when children are in a high state of high automatic arousal...."These Attachment Therapy (AT) methods are discussed in chapter 5 of the book. The list Randolph provides may be a complete roster of attachment treatments available today. But some of them sound like complete quackery.As Jean Mercer notes in a 2002 online article, "Attachment Therapy: A Treatment without Empirical Support," although death and injury have resulted from AT, it nevertheless has the support of some state agencies in the U.S. While AT practitioners claim that research "supports the effectiveness of their techniques," however, Mercer examined the evidence based on the research design and statistical analysis, and concluded "that AT remains without empirical validation."Another reason for caution is that the book may be a publication of the Attachment Treatment and Training Institute in Evergreen, Colorado, whose core theories and practices are reportedly at odds with "accepted principles of psychological practice."--Alyssa A. Lappen5 of 6 people found the following review helpful.Abusive "Therapy"By ReviewerOh god, the things the author says in this book are so awful! Here are just a few that send chills down my back:"Children with...[Attachment Disorder] really hate being touched...they commonly complain constantly about various aches and pains, things that itch, and parts of themselves that they need to move whenever they're being held. The therapist may sometimes need to briefly cover a child's mouth with a cupped hand...in order to cut off the child's constant complaints that are preventing therapy from being able to progress..." page 113"Whenever a therapist lies on top of a child, with the child face up, and with the therapist facing the child, this is known as compression. This technique is also used to help a child become enraged, to help to re-enact the need cycle, and to help a child to access and work through memories of past traumas..." pages 83-84"Compression can be very useful in the process of helping children to work through and release trapped feelings of terror, as the therapist can put a small amount of weight on children until terror is triggered, then takes that weight off, and helps children to calm back down. Then slightly more weight can be put on to again trigger terror ... This process can take several hours, and may even take several days..." page 98"It usually isn't necessary to put more than 50 pounds of weight on the child ... Occasionally more weight may need to be briefly put on a child if the issues the child is working on cause him to become assaultive, and he needs to be physically restrained..." page 101"If children appear to be particularly frightened about sexual abuse while in my lap, I usually ask them to look into my eyes, and decide whether or not I'm a person who hurts children, or who does sex things to children." page 94"Generally, children who won't contract to participate in holding or attachment therapy aren't family material, and do much better in a group home or residential treatment facility anyway." page 87"Remember, a key principle to successfully parent a child with AD is that being successful doesn't mean that the child is getting better, or is changing. It simply means that the parents are having more fun being this child's parents." page 118See all 3 customer reviews... Every Mass Shooting Shares 1 Thing In Common NOT Guns Nearly Every Mass Shooting In The Last 20 Years Shares One Thing In Common & Its NOT Weapons AmmoLand Gun News The overwhelming evidence points to the signal ... When People Treat you Like you are Crazy Stupid or ... When people treat you as if you are crazy it isnt because they think you are crazy it is because they want YOU to think you are crazy. When people treat you as ... Evil NarcissisticAbuse.com EVIL M.Scott Peck and Sam Vaknin disagree on whether narcissists are evil. Is it evil to belittle denigrate scapegoat and make fun of someone until they are ... Find a Program EAGALA Primary site Find an EAGALA Model program in your area using the map below or the Search options. All listings have at least one or more members of the facilitating team EAGALA ... When we have Bad Dreams about our Children When we wake up in the middle of the night horrified that our kids have come to harm in our dreams what could it mean? Health News & Articles Healthy Living - ABC News Yahoo!-ABC News Network 2017 ABC News Internet Ventures. All rights reserved. Nightmares about Children Falling - Privilege of Parenting The dreams below organized from younger to older children all involve kids falling. It seems that when we fall asleep it is common to have the sensation of ... U.S. News Latest National News Videos & Photos - ABC ... Get the latest breaking news across the U.S. on ABCNews.com The Grooming Process of Discrediting Children and the ... There is a reason why abusers and controllers will start the grooming process for any type of abuse on young children... How to Deal with a Narcissist - Dr. George Simon I am still trying to deal with the pain and suffering my sister felt at the hands of her ex husband narcissist.This article described him to the T.
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