Publisher's Synopsis
If you work with children and families, this may be the book you have been waiting for!
This Book provides a new, easy to follow roadmap for understanding and working with children with some of the most challenging and treatment-resistant behaviors and their families.
Some of the most challenging children to help are those who have been injured early in life in their first relationships through disrupted or injured attachment. These children can be both hurting and hurtful to others, and are often anxious and depressed, yet push away that which they most need for healing. Traditional child therapies are largely ineffective, and parents or caregivers often feel hopeless in the face of their child's needs.
Multi-Modal Attachment Therapy (M-MAT) brings new hope for healing to children and families. M-MAT is specifically designed to meet the needs of attachment-injured children. In a whole-brain approach, M-MAT blends a number of modalities to target precisely those areas most impacted by the attachment injury: attachment, self-image, worldview, and skills deficits. The result is a powerful, cohesive, and comprehensive attachment-based therapy.
In clear, concise language, Young lays forth for the reader an easy to follow roadmap for understanding and implementing M-MAT with children and their caregivers. She additionally outlines how to work with those children who are most at risk: children who do not have a permanent, committed caregiver.
The talk component engages the power of language and the child's thoughts by addressing cognitive distortions, responsibility, and self-concept through re-storying, skill building and psychoeducation, creating a new narrative in which the child can organize and make sense of his/her experiences in a healthy, adaptive way.
The two components together reinforce each other, allow for deeper integration and healing, and are far more powerful than either alone. Together they access many parts of the brain and harness the incredible healing power inherent in both left and right brain modalities."