About this course
From Implicit Encoding to Narrative Reconstruction
A 2-Hour Advanced Clinical Seminar
Trauma is not remembered. It is relived until it is reconstructed.
Why This Seminar Matters
Most approaches to trauma focus on “processing the event.” However, trauma is not just an event. It is a pattern encoded in the body, mind, and meaning system, replaying itself in the present. If we don’t understand how trauma is encoded, we cannot effectively help patients transform it.
The Shift is from “What happened to you?” to “How is this still happening through you?”
Date: Wednesday, May 6, 2026
Time: 12-2pm (EDT)
CEU: 2
Location: Online via zoom
What You Will Learn
In this powerful, clinically advanced seminar, you will:
• Understand implicit vs. explicit trauma memory and why patients “relive” instead of “recall”
• Learn how trauma is encoded through predictive processing and the nervous system
Apply the Four Layers of Transformation:
• Conscious (symptoms)
• Preconscious (patterns)
• Unconscious (drivers)
• Existential (meaning)
Use the Body–Mind–Meaning Framework to intervene in real time:
• Body → regulate and track
• Mind → reframe and reinterpret
• Meaning → reconstruct identity
Implement the SDAF Framework to move from insight to sustained change:
• Stabilize → Discover → Align → Forward
• Facilitate narrative reconstruction safely—without re-traumatization
Nuggets
• “The individual is not overreacting. They are remembering without words.”
• “Trauma is not the past. It is the past predicting the present.”
• “If you only treat the symptom you leave the trauma intact.”
Who Should Attend
• Social Workers
• Psychologists
• Psychiatrists
• Mental Health Counselors
• Case Managers
• Anyone working with trauma and high-acuity populations
The Outcome
Move from symptom management to deep and sustained transformation
Final Reflection
What if the symptom you are trying to eliminate is the person’s best attempt to survive?
Register now.
