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Treating Survivors of Childhood Abuse Treating Survivors of Childhood Abuse (cid:1) Psychotherapy for the Interrupted Life MARYLENE CLOITRE LISA R. COHEN KARESTAN C. KOENEN THE GUILFORD PRESS New York London ©2006TheGuilfordPress ADivisionofGuilfordPublications,Inc. 72SpringStreet,NewYork,NY10012 www.guilford.com Allrightsreserved Exceptasnoted,nopartofthisbookmaybereproduced,translated,storedinaretrieval system,ortransmitted,inanyformorbyanymeans,electronic,mechanical,photocopying, microfilming,recording,orotherwise,withoutwrittenpermissionfromthePublisher. PrintedintheUnitedStatesofAmerica Thisbookisprintedonacid-freepaper. Lastdigitisprintnumber: 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 LIMITEDPHOTOCOPYLICENSE Thesematerialsareintendedforuseonlybyqualifiedmentalhealthprofessionals. The Publisher grants to individual purchasers of this book nonassignable permission to reproduceallmaterialsforwhichphotocopyingpermissionisspecificallygrantedinafoot- note.Thislicenseislimitedtoyou,theindividualpurchaser,forusewithyourownclients andpatients.Itdoesnotextendtoadditionalcliniciansorpracticesettings,nordoespur- chase by an institution constitute a site license. This license does not grant the right to reproduce these materials for resale, redistribution, or any other purposes (including but notlimitedtobooks,pamphlets,articles,video-oraudiotapes,andhandoutsorslidesfor lectures or workshops). Permission to reproduce these materials for these and any other purposesmustbeobtainedinwritingfromthePermissionsDepartmentofGuilfordPubli- cations. LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Cloitre,Marylene. Treatingsurvivorsofchildhoodabuse:psychotherapyfortheinterruptedlife/Marylene Cloitre,LisaR.Cohen,KarestanC.Koenen. p.cm. Includesbibliographicalreferencesandindex. ISBN-10:1-59385-312-2 ISBN-13:978-1-59385-312-9(pbk.) 1. Adultchildsexualabusevictims—Treatment. 2. Psychotherapy. I. Cohen,LisaR. II. Koenen,KarestanC. III. Title. [DNLM: 1. StressDisorders,Post-Traumatic—therapy. 2. ChildAbuse— therapy. 3. Survivors—psychology. 4. Adult—psychology. 5. Psychotherapy— methods. WM170C643t2006] RC569.5.A28C482006 616.85′83690651—dc22 2006007900 This book is dedicated to Caleb for his inspiring optimism and capacity for love and to all other children for whom we hold the enduring wish that they grow up to be their best possible selves A survivor ultimately has two psychological possibilities: to shut down or to open up. Usually the survivor does both. . . . The protean self opts for opening out. . . . This includes the basic satisfaction, even joy, in being alive, in not having died, along with the sense of having undergone an experience that is illuminating in its pain. Survival also implies persevering, holding on, maintaining one’s existence . . . a physical and mental strength. That sense of victory over destruction is evident in gatherings of survivors . . . where one hears clearly the words, even if actually unspoken: “We are here! We’re alive! We have won!” —ROBERT JAY LIFTON (1993, pp. 81, 82) About the Authors MaryleneCloitre,PhD,isthefoundingdirectoroftheInstituteforTraumaandStressattheNew YorkUniversityChildStudyCenterandisalsoNYU’sfirstCathyandStephenGrahamProfessorof ChildandAdolescentPsychiatry.Dr.Cloitre’sprimaryclinicalandresearchinterestsfocusonthe developmentalconsequencesandtreatmentofchildhoodabuseinadultsandadolescents.Shehas published widely on this topic and has received several grants from the National Institutes of Healthandotheragenciesforevidence-basedinterventionandpreventionprogramsaddressingthe psychologicalandsocialeffectsoftraumainadultsandchildren.Dr.Cloitreiscurrentlyamember oftheBoardofDirectorsfortheInternationalSocietyforTraumaticStressStudiesandwasamem- beroftheAmericanNationalCommitteetoDevelopTreatmentGuidelinesforPTSD.Shereceived her BA in philosophy from McGill University and her PhD from Columbia University. Lisa R. Cohen, PhD, is a Research Scientist with the Social Intervention Group at the Columbia UniversitySchoolofSocialWork,whereherworkfocusesondevelopingandtestingtreatmentsfor womenwithPTSDandsubstanceusedisordersthroughgrantsfundedbytheNationalInstituteon DrugAbuse.Shealsoconductsresearchontheimpactoftraumaonparentinganditsintergenera- tional implications. Dr. Cohen maintains a private psychotherapy practice in New York City spe- cializinginthetreatmentofcomplextraumadisorders.ShereceivedherBAfromtheUniversityof PennsylvaniaandherPhDinclinicalpsychologyfromYaleUniversity. Shewasapostdoctoralfel- lowattheAnxietyandTraumaticStressProgramatthePayneWhitneyClinicofNewYorkHospi- tal–Cornell Medical Center. KarestanC.Koenen,PhD,isanAssistantProfessorofSociety,HumanDevelopment,andHealth andEpidemiologyattheHarvardSchoolofPublicHealth.Sheusesadevelopmentalapproachto understanding the epidemiology of trauma exposure and stress-related mental disorders such as PTSD and depression. Her research is funded by the National Institutes of Health, and she has receivedtheChaimDanieliYoungProfessionalAwardfromtheInternationalSocietyforTraumatic StressStudiesandtheRobins–GuzeYoungInvestigatorAwardfromtheAmericanPsychopatholog- ical Association. Dr. Koenen is also an experienced clinician, specializing in empirically validated treatments for PTSD. She received her BA from Wellesley College, her MA from Columbia Uni- versity, and her PhD from Boston University. vii Acknowledgments First,wewishtoacknowledgeourclients,whohaveinspireduswiththeircourageincom- ing to treatment, confronting their traumas, and daring to hope for the possibility of a life different from the one they have known. We wish to thank Stephanie Cherry, Sharon Feeney, Tamar Gordon, Dawn Hughes, Karen Heffernan, Jill Levitt, and Chase Stovall- McClough,whoasstudents,postdoctoralfellows,andcolleaguescontributedtothedevel- opment of this treatment as long-term members of the research team. We also thank Elissa Brown, Paul Frewen, Ruth Lanius, and Elizabeth Powers, who read parts of the manuscript and gave feedback with humor, energy, and appreciation of the task at hand. We wish to acknowlede innovators in psychotherapy intervention research, from whom we have learned much. We thank Marsha Linehan, who developed intervention strategies that have profoundly influenced our work and our effectiveness as traumatherapists.WegivespecialthankstoEdnaFoa,whogavegenerouslyandalwaysof herknowledgeandinsightsandwhohasservedasarolemodelinthescientificinquiryof posttraumaticstressdisorderintervention.Withpleasureanddeepestgratitude,wethank the pioneers in the field of complex trauma, who by their example and encouragement have guided and inspired our efforts: John Briere, Christine Courtois, Judy Herman, and Bessel van der Kolk. Lastly, we would like to thank those individuals who have been especially important in our professional development and personal growth: Susan and George Cohen, Diana Fosha, Fran Grossman, Denise Hien, Nick Jollymore, Harold Koplewicz, Kathleen and Austin Koenen, Alba Ludmer, Shaun Purcell, and Ron Taffel. viii Preface WHAT IS THE INTERRUPTED LIFE? Thereisanavalancheofdatathattellussomethingsurvivorsofabusealreadyknowthem- selves: Functioning in day-to-day life is much harder for them than for those who have experiencedasafeandsecurechildhood.Perhapslesswellknowntothemarethereasons why. Throughout this book we highlight and specify ways in which childhood abuse can derailthenormalcourseofdevelopmentanddeprivetheindividualofimportantlearning experiences that foster healthy and effective life skills. These include basic and complex skills such as the capacity for sustained attention, the capacity to express feelings effec- tivelyandappropriately,thecapacitytouseemotionsasaguideforaction,andthecapac- itytorelatewelltoothersandtoenjoyrelationships.Interventionsforchildrenandyouth who have experienced abuse are sensitive to these consequences and include strategies that repair and enrich emotional and social competencies, with the goal of realigning the young client back on the normative trajectory of development. But what of the adults who lived through an abusive childhood without help? Those who come to treatment often express concern about long-standing emotion management and relationship problems. And yet, there is no program or intervention that addresses their concerns. Instead, the suffering of the adult survivor is typically organized by diag- nostic status and symptom categories. The interpersonal and other difficulties are viewed as secondary to evident symptomatology: If the depression or anxiety is resolved, these other difficulties are expected to dissipate. The scientific community’s careful tracking of the compromised social and emotional competencies caused by maltreatment ends with studiesofteensandyoungadults.Thereisaremarkabledisconnectbetweentheobserva- tionsmadebychildmentalhealthprofessionalsandtheclinicalworldthattreatstheadults who were once abused children. This book provides a treatment program that takes into account the long trajectory of disadvantages experienced by many abuse survivors that precedes their arrival into the therapist’soffice.Theconceptofthe“interruptedlife,”whichguidesthistreatment,refers ix x Preface tothedisruptioncausedbyabusetoself-regulationandinterpersonalcapacitiesthatother- wise would have been expected to develop. The treatment is intended to provide the sur- vivors with emotional and social skills they did not have the opportunity to obtain due to thediminishedpresenceofacompetent,caring,nurturingparentandtheburdenofman- aging the abuse, often alone or in secrect. The first module of this treatment, Skills Train- ing for Affective and Interpersonal Regulation (STAIR), has been explicitly developed to generate and strengthen social and emotional resources for effective living. Atreatmentfortraumawouldbeincompleteifitdidnotaddresstheequallyprofound although more recognized problem of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). PTSD symp- toms and associated disturbances such as depression, dissociation, anger, and feelings of shameandlossareindicatorsthatthereis“unfinishedbusiness”intheprocessingoftrau- matic experiences. Traumatic events, by their very nature, overwhelm the individ- ual’s capacity for understanding and analysis. The challenge to understanding is made even greater because the emotions associated with the abuse—terror, humiliation, and betrayal—are extremely painful and thus often avoided. Traumatic memories, when they remain unprocessed, are expressed through intrusive memories and reexperiencing, which interfere with the capacity to live meaningfully and fully in the present. Moreover, this processing work is a prerequisite to the integration of such memories into one’s auto- biographical narrative, the existence of which provides a coherent sense of self and one thatiscontinuousacrosstime.Theinabilitytoexperienceoneselfascoherentandexisting through time is another way in which life is “interrupted” for the trauma survivor. NarrativeStoryTelling(NST)providesastructureandstrategyforapproaching,man- aging,andorganizingtraumaticexperiencesthathavebeenunaddressedbutarestillquite alive with emotional power. NST begins with the emotional processing of fear memories using traditional imaginal exposure techniques (Chapter 6). However, this work is extended in two ways. First, we have developed and systematically employed “con- textualization”strategies,groundedinrecentmodelsofautobiographicalmemory,toorga- nize and construct a “narrative of self” (Chapter 7). Second, through these strategies, the client and therapist are able safely and effectively to explore and organize a sense of self around two critical affective themes that often burden the abuse survivor: shame and betrayal (Chapter 22) and loss and grief (Chapter 23). Finally, the phrase “psychotherapy for the interrupted life” has a third meaning, one thatalludestoaparticularhopefortheclient.Itrecognizesthatthemanagementandcon- sequences of abuse create circumstances in which the gifts and talents an individual may have had were irrelevant, unrecognized, or underdeveloped. In regenerating important life skills and a coherent and revitalized sense of self, we hope that the clients can, in essence, resume the realization of their hidden potential. WHO CAN BENEFIT FROM THIS BOOK? This book provides an evidence-based treatment for mental health providers who work with survivors of childhood abuse. These survivors include women and men who have experiencedsexualabuse,physicalabuse,andneglect.Thetreatmentwasoriginallydevel-

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Meeting a key need, this book presents a modular adult psychotherapy approach grounded in extensive clinical experience and research. Provided is a flexible, empirically supported framework for helping clients manage symptoms related to past physical or sexual abuse; build emotion regulation and int
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