081 -Addressing Abandonment Anxiety




Counselor Toolbox Podcast show

Summary: <p>Love Me Don’t Leave Me<br> Addressing Fears of Abandonment<br> Dr. Dawn-Elise Snipes PhD, LPC-MHSP, LMHC, NCC<br> Executive Director, AllCEUs<br> *Based in part on Love Me Don’t Leave Me by Michelle Skeen, PsyD.</p> <p>Counseling CEUs can be earned for this presentation here: <a href="https://www.allceus.com/member/cart/index/product/id/517/c/">https://www.allceus.com/member/cart/index/product/id/517/c/</a></p> <p>Objectives<br> ~    Help clients increase awareness of their story including beliefs about and behavioral reactions to situations that trigger their fear of abandonment<br> ~    Learn about fear of abandonment<br> ~    Explore the concept of schemas or core beliefs<br> ~    Examine common traps in thinking, reacting and relationships<br> ~    Learn skills necessary to<br> ~    Accept their past as part of their story<br> ~    Acknowledge that their past does not have to continue to negatively impact them in the present</p> <p>How It Impacts Recovery<br> ~    Connection is a basic human need<br> ~    As infants and children, survival was dependent upon the relationship with the primary caregiver<br> ~    People’s beliefs about other people and relationships was formed largely based on their interactions with their caregivers<br> ~    Healthy relationships serve as a buffer against stress</p> <p>How It Impacts Recovery<br> ~    Addressing beliefs that formed as a result of these relationships will help people:<br> ~    Create a new understanding of these events<br> ~    Better understand themselves and their reactions<br> ~    Help them make more conscious, healthy decisions in their current relationships</p> <p>Abandonment Experience<br> ~    In childhood, survival depends on caregivers.<br> ~    Fear of abandonment is a natural survival response<br> ~    Meeting biological needs and safety are key triggers for anxiety at any age.<br> ~    When focused on survival people cannot focus elsewhere<br> ~    Every stressful situation becomes a crisis in the insecurely attached child</p> <p>Abandonment Experience<br> ~    In infancy/early childhood, caregivers were:<br> ~    Away for long periods (Work, military, jail, choice, death)<br> ~    Been inconsistently or unpredictably physically or emotionally present. (emotional distress, addiction, ill equipped to deal with a child)<br> ~    In later childhood<br> ~    Poor family fit/black-sheep<br> ~    Trauma that ruptures the relationship with the primary caregiver<br> ~    Introduction of a new, less emotionally or physically safe caregiver</p> <p>Reactions to Fears of Abandonment<br> ~    Fight or flight<br> ~    Anger toward someone who is unavailable<br> ~    Sadness (helplessness) when someone goes away<br> ~    Shame (Self anger) about feeling needy<br> ~    Fear<br> ~    Rejection/isolation<br> ~    Loss of control/the unknown<br> ~    Failure<br> ~    Questions for clients<br> ~    What caused these fears as a child?  How were they reasonable/helpful.<br> ~    What causes these fears now?  How are they unhelpful?<br> Temperament<br> ~    Based on their temperament, children need different types and amounts of caregiver interaction<br> ~    Wide open and easily overstimulated<br> ~    The energizer bunny<br> ~    The introvert<br> ~    The extrovert<br> ~    If abandonment fears are triggered in early childhood, it can be addressed.</p> <p>*It is important to pay attention to the behaviors that are being reinforced<br> Schemas</p> <p>~    Based on their needs and caregivers reactions, children form schemas or core beliefs about the world and others<br> ~    Important points about children under 7:<br> (ages 8-12 children are developing alternate cognitive skills)<br> ~    Children think dichotomously<br> ~    Children are egocentric<br> ~    Children can only focus on one aspect at a time<br> ~    Children cannot think abstractly (consider other “possibl</p>