The articles are for download in both US Letter & Europe A4 format, choose the one covering your region.
New articles fall 2014:
The article "Integrating polarities through regulation of hypo- and hyper-responses to stress An experiential keynote” is available at the following link: http://www.tandfonline.com. The article describes the concepts and process behind an experiential keynote presentation at the EABP conference in Cambridge in 2012. Video of the presentation can be seen on the frontpage of this website. The article is published in "Body, Movement and Dance in Psychotherapy" - a British peer-reviewed journal.
A longer original version of the article can be downloaded here: "Polarizing or integrating polarities", US Letter or Europe A4.
The following 4 articles, written 2006-2009, are being used as workshopmaterial in my workshops and trainings. Together they bring forward the basic method-development of Resource Oriented Skill Training.
Merete Holm Brantbjerg & Sally Stepath: “The body as container of instincts , emotions and feelings” 2007. US Letter • Europe A4
The article presents instincts, emotions and feelings as 3 levels of human emotional response. Focus lies on describing body and cognitive skills that can help us cope with all 3 levels. The model has been developed since the article was written back in 2006. You can download the new version of the model and have that next to you when you read the article. The principles described in the article are valid also for the widened version of the model. IEF model US Letter • Europe A4
Merete Holm Brantbjerg: “Resourceoriented Skill Training as a Psychotherapeutic Method” 2008. US Letter • Europe A4
The principles behind resourceoriented skill training are described - and related to psychotherapeutic work with both personality development and trauma healing.
Merete Holm Brantbjerg: "The Relational Aspect of Resource Oriented Skill Training" 2010. US Letter • Europe A4
This article - the newest in the series - focuses on ROST as a relational method. What is it that makes the skill training work as a psychotherapeutic method with a significant impact? and what role does the relationship between the facilitator/therapist and the participant/client play this?
Merete Holm Brantbjerg: "Hyporesponse - the hidden challenge in coping with stress" 2009, can now be downloaded for free. US Letter • A4 format.
This article focuses on what can be gained by addressing hyporesponsivity in the musclesystem when dealing with stress. Giving up emotions, impulses and presence as a survivalstrategy holds an entirely different challenge compared to the controlling strategy of tension or hyperresponse. The hyporesponsive part of us needs a different approach.
This article is also published in International Body Psychotherapy Journal Volume Eleven, Number 2, fall/winter 2012. You can download this volume for free by going to http://www.eabp.org/ibpj-subscribe.php
The following article by Merete Holm Brantbjerg was published in October 2009 in the magazine of the Danish Psychotherapist Organization: "When the therapist is aroused. Sexual feelings in the therapyroom". Click to download. The article holds examples of how concrete skill training can be used to support containment and coping with sexual energy in the contact field between therapist and client. The article is also published in International Body Psychotherapy Journal Volume Eleven, Number 1, spring 2012. You can download this volume for free by going to http://www.eabp.org/ibpj-subscribe.php.
Steen Jørgensen and Merete Holm Brantbjerg (2010): "Coping Skills and Survival Strategies in Relation to Trauma and Traumatic Stress" - can be downloaded for free. The article is developed as teachingmaterial for the Moaiku Trauma Therapy workshops in Scandinavia. Our understanding of survivalreactions - developed and widened over the last years in Moaiku - is described in the article.
"Muscular intelligence an introduction" is a 5 page article written in 2005. The article gives an introduction to
- psychological musclefuntion
understanding how certain muscles are connected to certain psychosocial skills
hypo- and hyperresponse as defensestrategies showing up in the muscles
resource oriented skill training. US Letter • Europe A4
"Caring for yourself while caring for others" is an older article. It presents bodysensing, centering, grounding and boundaries as tools in how to care for yourself in a helperrole. US Letter • Europe A4
The article is also part of the book: Ian Macnaughton (ed.): Body, breath and consicousness. A somatics anthology. A collection of Articles on Family Systems, Self-Psychology, The Bodynamics Model of Somatic Developmental Psychology, Shock Trauma and Breathwork. North Atlantic Books, 2004.