Pre-Congress Workshop 1 12 October (10:00 – 13:30 and 15:00 – 18:30)

Integrating Movement, Sensation, and Breath in Body Psychotherapy

By balancing conscious movement impulses with supportive breathing and bodily tracking, clients can enter and sustain powerfully healing states.

This workshop will introduce the fundamentals of this explicit and precise processing of implicit material, while also learning to use the therapeutic relationship to help the client work directly with associations that arise in the moving, breathing, and aware body. Drawing on attachment theory, sensorimotor processing principles, breath physiology, and implicit relational knowing skills, participants will study and practice a cyclic form of somatic healing called the Moving Cycle, developed by the presenter.

Christine-Caldwell

Christine Caldwell, Ph.D., BC-DMT, LPC, NCC, ACS.
She is the founder and former director of the Somatic Counseling Psychology Program and Dean of Graduate Education at Naropa University in Boulder, where she currently teaches coursework in somatic counseling theory and skills, clinical neuroscience, research, and diversity issues. Her work began thirty five years ago with studies in anthropology, dance therapy, bodywork and Gestalt therapy, and has developed into innovations in the field of body-centered psychotherapy. She calls her work the Moving Cycle. This system goes beyond the limitations of therapy and emphasizes lifelong personal and social evolution through trusting and following body states. The Moving Cycle spotlights natural play, early physical imprinting, the transformational effect of fully sequenced movement processes, the practice of dying, the opportunities in addiction, and a trust in personal essence. She has taught at the University of Maryland, George Washington University, Concordia, Seoul Women’s University, Southwestern College, and Santa Barbara Graduate Institute, and trains, teaches and lectures internationally. Her books include Getting Our Bodies Back and Getting In Touch.