SUMMIT SESSIONS
Day Sessions Menu
Day 1: Understanding the Nervous System
Peter A. Levine, PhD: Trauma and the Nervous System: Foundations for Safety, Regulation, and Healing
Arielle Schwartz, PhD: Nervous System Literacy in Therapy: Foundations for Healing and Resilience
Linda Thai, MSW, LMSW: Mapping the Nervous System: Understanding Survival Responses and the Path to Regulation (replay)
Rick Hanson, PhD: Neuroplasticity, Resilience, and The Nervous System
Jordan Quaglia, PhD: What is Nervous System Regulation? Bridging Neuroscience and Practice
Day 2: Clinical Tools & Practices for Regulation
Manuela Mischke-Reeds, MA, MFT: Attunement and Regulation in Virtual Therapy: Tracking the Nervous System Online
Pat Ogden, PhD: Regulation and Resilience: Exploring the Sensorimotor Approach to Developing Resources
Chinwé Williams, PhD: Regulating from Within: Nervous System Tools for Therapists and Clients
Bonnie Badenoch, PhD: Co-Regulation as Treatment: How Safety and Attunement Rewire the Nervous System
Day 3: Nervous System Resilience & Integration
David Treleaven, PhD: Broadening the Window of Tolerance for Resilience and Healing
Bessel van der Kolk, MD and Licia Sky: Synchrony and Safety: Embodied Presence in Trauma Healing
Raymond Rodriguez, Rev., MSW, LCSW: Coping with Toxic Stress in Difficult Times: Nervous System Regulation & Resilience
Jordan Quaglia, PhD: Compassion as Container and Compass: Navigating Nervous System Regulation Through Care

Synchrony and Safety: Becoming an Anchor for Healing in Somatic Therapy

Bessel van der Kolk, MD and Licia Sky

Subtitles Available!

What you'll learn

  • Explore how the therapist’s grounded presence and bodily rhythms can create a sense of physiological safety and connection for traumatized clients
  • Learn how to support clients in feeling what’s alive in their bodies now—not just the story of the past, but the embodied experience of the present
  • Reflect on your own healing and regulation as a therapist, and how embodied self-awareness supports deeper, more authentic therapeutic connection

About the speakers

Bessel van der Kolk, MD

Bessel van der Kolk, MD, is a clinical psychiatrist whose work integrates mind, brain, body, and social connection in the understanding and treatment of trauma. An internationally recognized leader in the field of psychological trauma, he is the author of more than 150 peer-reviewed scientific articles and several books, including Psychological Trauma, the first integrative text on the subject; Traumatic Stress: The Effects of Overwhelming Experience on Mind, Body, and Society; and The Body Keeps the Score: Mind, Brain, and Body in the Healing of Trauma.

Licia Sky

Licia Sky is the co-founder and Global Ambassador of the Trauma Research Foundation. She is a somatic educator, artist, singer-songwriter, and bodyworker who works with individuals recovering from trauma and trains mental health professionals to use mindful movement, theater exercises, writing, and voice as tools for attunement, healing, and connection. She is a regular instructor in trauma healing workshops throughout the U.S. and has spent the past decade teaching expanded awareness practices to clinicians and laypeople around the world.

Raymond Rodriguez, Rev., MSW, LCSW

Raymond Rodriguez, LCSW-R, Rev., is an Afro-Latino Clinical Social Worker with over twenty years of experience in working with community-based programs. He received his Social Work degree from Columbia University School of Social Work. He is a family therapist with clinical interests in the areas of immigration, diversity, LGBTQ empowerment, spirituality, and working with marginalized communities. In the last decade he has become a trauma specialist assisting clients with complex psychological trauma and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. He is certified in Sensorimotor Psychotherapy and in Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR).  He has extensive training and practice in family systems therapy, psychodynamic psychotherapy, Internal Family Systems, and Emotionally Focused Therapy.  Raymond has served as a counselor faculty at Hostos Community College of the City University of New York; is faculty and a member of the Executive Committee of the Trauma Studies Center of the Institute for Contemporary Psychotherapy; and is faculty at the Integrative Trauma Studies Program of the National Institute for the Psychotherapies. He has served as faculty with the Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Institute and as an Adjunct Lecturer at Columbia University School of Social Work and Smith College School of Social Work. He formerly served on the Boards of the National Association of Puertorrican and Hispanic Social Workers and the No More Fear Foundation.  He lives in Westchester, NY (on unceded Lakota lands) with his partner, son, and dogs.

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What do you think?

Leave a comment below

26 Responses

  1. Some things I found important that were emphasized by Bessel and Licia were:
    The impotence of movement in helping us get in touch with ourselves.
    The importance of spending a lot of time getting intuned inwardly to how we feel in our bodies.
    Doing synchronistic activities with other people, such as dancing, music, etc.
    Pleasure and having fun are ket indicators of one’s degree of healing. Or at least are important in finding our way towards healing.
    IFS parts work is a great advance for therapy and Bessel feels is essential work.
    I am grateful for the The insights of Licia and Bessel. Thank you!

    1. I think you meant the importance. Yes, I agree! How important it is to get moving the body – at all ages!

  2. Be humble about what you know, keep learning, do somatic/body sensing, exploration and connection work on yourself to be able to hold a truly embodied space for your clients. Maybe I will learn to tango dance. Thank you Licia and Bessel.

  3. Trauma analysed with the clarity of mind that Bessel v d Kolk has acquired over decennier, and the deep knowledge of mind AND heart that Bessel brings into the interview, as well as the wonderful somatic help by Lydia – what an immense gift this lecture is! Thank you all so much!
    Bessels knowledge is such a stabilizing kompass when exploring trauma landscape.

  4. Thank you Lisa & Bessel. All I can say that I want to keep learning more about you two and your way of encouraging everybody but definitely me, to keep learning and not to forget…keep moving. Sometimes I feel that people think or even say: “why do you still want to learn something new or why do you still work” and I question myself in a way of “Yes why? Am I strange for wanting this at my 65 years? I had the answer and you just confirmed it today. I’m not strange! :-))

    1. Ella,

      I am 65 and love to use Tai Chi movements for Wellbeing in sessions in different ways …and have know that slowing down in this way allows for growth, and the ‘kettle moments’ integrating this into life s business it s possible am with you….any age this can expand methinks 🤔☺️

  5. Very, very sophisticated! I was impressed by both of you and could even feel my body’s music and movement! Thank you for the minutes of pleasure I enjoyed with your knowledge and clever words!

  6. Great to have Licia and Bessel together reinforcing the presence and pace and prosody of therapists inviting experience. Loved the exercise and really felt touched deeply by the sense of not only giving touch and receiving it oneself, as well as respect and kindness …several client s came to mind ad I feel the exploration with them could take co regulation and witness consciousness to another level in self trust. Thank you too for Raymond pacing questions and mutuality 🤔🌻🫶

  7. Loved the inner /outer body ,breath meditation with Licia.
    Appreciate the teaching of : once we feel safe how important it is to experience pleasure and fun . As Bessel encourages us to go out and try new things …. In order to evolve we need new experiences. Talk on what does your body need in order to feels safe , and how we need movement in our healing and life – all interconnected and necessary….all essential practices and teachings , Thank you .

  8. Thank you for a wonderful interview, as always with Bessel and Licia. The two of you are resonance in action.
    Huge gratitude 🙏🙏🙏
    PS as a dancer, psychotherapist, and tango dancer, I also think a study of the benefits from tango dancing would be awesome. I learnt things about myself in relationship to another through tango dancing, that wouldn’t have happened any other way.

  9. Gosh, what an amazing time I had listening to you both. I have had Bessel’s book: The Body keeps the score next to my bedside for about 5 months now… and I feel read to head into it now. THANK YOU! You are in inspiration to us all.

  10. I was frustrated from the low quality of the sound in the beginning of the conversation, preventing me from understanding many answers from Dr Van Der Kolk.

  11. Amazing. Thank you, Bessel & Lucia????
    Great questions by interviewer as well!!

    With much warmth & gratitude,
    Franca

  12. Licia is the embodiment of presence and holding space for another. That guided practice was amazing. What Licia said about this being a practice and therefore no one perfect right way to do it really resonated with how I function. I struggle with a scripted process, and appreciate the permission and encouragement to simply practice and allow what arises to fit the moment. Having read “The Body Keeps the Score” my own practices with myself and with my patients has been informed by what Dr van der Kolk has written. His humility in acknowledging both our desire to feel in control, and the futility of that approach with the example of suicide echoes my own thinking and approach. I also very much appreciate his explicit acknowledgement that a lot of these sensory/somatic practices and their value in healing are not “new knowledge” but a re-learning and recognition of ancient practices that were informed by humans who had a profound understanding of what it means to go through this journey in a human body, and what it actually means in practice to be human. Thank you for a truly enlightening, thought provoking and safety invoking conversation.

  13. This was a wonderful session. Thank you Bessel and Licia!
    And, Bessel, there are still a few of us who do hypnosis to assist our clients in healing the trauma story. I have been doing this work for 3 decades and will continue as long as I am able…into my 80s? In 2014, my doctor introduced your book, The Body Keeps the Score, giving me incentive to do my own trauma healing and to learn more about somatic-held trauma and how to support my clients’ healing, making me a better hypnotherapist and trauma-informed movement coach. I love my work.
    Always, thank you for your work. And Licia, I need to learn more from you!

  14. A highly educational session, with the best I’ve taken in as a retired Counsellor. Therapists, if you want to become truly practiced, film your own faces! Lifelong learning is a common goal.

  15. I have been hungry for more information and more dialogue since reading The Body Keeps the Score. I very much enjoyed this conversation. I’m taking away the concept of emotion is meant to drive the human to move and also that fun and physical activity are important to attend to when healing from trauma. I feel that as true in my bones. Many thanks! Looking forward to more.

  16. Hi I’m not sure if it’s just me or the link is not working, it would be great if it could be fixed, thank you:)

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