90
Parent-Child ACT Chris McCurry, Ph.D. ABCD, Inc. Seattle, WA [email protected]

Parent-Child ACT Chris McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

A Practical Guide. Parent-Child ACT Chris McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA [email protected]. Disclosure. The presenter has a pitifully small financial interest in two books in the bibliography. Objectives. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Parent-Child ACTChris McCurry, Ph.D.

ABCD, Inc. Seattle, [email protected]

Page 2: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Disclosure

The presenter has a pitifully small financial interest in two books in

the bibliography

Page 3: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Objectives Participants will learn how ACT theory and

concepts help clinicians understand typical child development and important parent-child transactions

Case presentations will describe, from an ACT perspective, presenting problems commonly seen in child clinical practice

Research-informed strategies and techniques for improving child and parent functioning will be demonstrated

Page 4: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

The Referral Path Children rarely refer themselves

Who owns the problem- The child? One parent or the other? The pediatrician? A teacher? A grandparent?

Relates to values and goals

Page 5: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 6: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 7: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

The Hairball Model of Psychopathology

Page 8: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 9: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

We need an understanding of

Page 10: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 11: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

“Me? I thought you were raising them.”

Page 12: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Attachment Between about 6 months and 1

year of age a child will develop certain behaviors in response to the absence of the caregiver or the presence of a threat

These behaviors will coalesce into a predictable pattern marked by general distress, signaling, withdrawal or proximity seeking

Page 13: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Attachment Depending on the caregiver’s response,

a child may reliably obtain relief or not

A child’s “distress behaviors”, shaped by the parenting environment, will be subtle or dramatic, clear or ambiguous

Internal Working Models of how the world operates (safe or threatening, helpful or unhelpful) will develop

Page 14: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

“Individuals whose needs for security are not met come to

view the world as comfortless and

unpredictable, and they respond either by shrinking from it or doing battle with

it”

John Bowlby

Page 15: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

In Other Words

Avoidanceor

Control

Page 16: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Cognitive Development:Born Fused and Inflexible

Egocentric

Idiosyncratic / Magical

Literal (psychic equivalence)

Rigid

Binary

Fusion (internal and external)

Page 17: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 18: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 19: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Under stress, they (we) will

regress

Page 20: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

A Common Process: The Distress Gambit

A child’s distressed behavior invites (compels) the caregiver to

participate in the distress as a witness, confidante, cheerleader, task master, lifeguard, or most

commonly, as a rescuer

Page 21: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

The Distress Agenda

The child’s behaviors are an effort to engage the caregiver in the dance, in order to achieve …

Emotional Avoidance utilizing …

Escape/Avoidance Attempts at Control

Page 22: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 23: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 24: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Fear is meant to feel bad!!!

Page 25: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 26: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

MomRescue

“Good”

Cry

Page 27: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 28: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 29: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

“Mom”

Job

Mother

Yell

Spouse

GuiltStressMore

Stress

Danger!!

Page 30: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

The Limits of Parent Training

Parent Management Training (skill building) has been shown to be helpful, but parent and child may have reverted to old patterns at follow-up

High stress families are most vulnerable to this erosion positive behavior change

Stress is known to constrict attention and enhance a negative attentional bias

Page 31: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

The Parent-Child Ecosystem Parenting is a large and diverse

class of behaviors embedded within a larger ecosystem or “field”

Parenting behavior is influenced by distal, indirect, unhelpful, and (dare I say) unconscious factors- Setting Events

Page 32: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 33: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

“It’s a magic potion that makes everything you say interesting”

Page 34: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

The Reactive Dance1. Child becomes distressed (and regressed)

2. Child, seeking rescue, acts out his distress in dramatic, regressed, or confusing ways

3. Parent becomes distressed (and regressed)

4. Parent seeks escape from this situation

5. The immediate goal for both parent and child becomes escape or control in the present, avoidance in the future

Page 35: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Mutual Parent-Child Experiential Avoidance

Held in place by negative reinforcement, also known

as “the coercion trap”

Page 36: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Tolerance Inconsistent parenting leads to increases in

negative child behavior

Inconsistent parenting is often due to the parent’s behavior falling under the control of distal setting events, typically life stressors

Basic parent “leaning in” and “leaning back” must be under the control of the child’s behavior and what the current situation actually calls for

Page 37: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 38: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 39: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Team Captains

Page 40: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

A Responsive Dance1. Child becomes distressed, regressed

2. Child acts out; seeks contact, communication, rescue

3. Parent is alert to becoming distressed, regressed

4. Parent models distress tolerance

5. Parent acknowledges distress with specific language and connects to cause

6. Parent orients child to the original goal, to a solution, or to appropriate coping strategies

Page 41: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Changing The Dance

1. Increase awareness

2. Shift the focus of attention

3. Take values-driven action

Page 42: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Increasing Awareness

Page 43: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Classic Definitions of Mindfulness

Paying attention in a particular way: on purpose, in the present moment, and non-judgmentally

Bringing one’s complete attention to the present experience on a moment-to-moment basis

Page 44: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

More “Active” Definitions of Mindfulness

Page 45: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Mindfulness Exercises Observing the breath Eating Listening Smell Touch Seeing Descriptions v. Judgments Taking your mind for a walk

Page 46: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

S.O.B.E.R. Stop Observe Breathe Expand Respond

Page 47: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

S.O.R.B.E.T. Stop Observe Relax Breathe Expand Teach

Page 48: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Graybar’s First Law of Human Behavior

“All behavior is a message, and a behavior won’t begin to change until the person

knows the message has been received”

Page 49: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Validation Closes the communication loop:

“message received” Provides accurate and nuanced

emotional vocabulary Replaces ineffective reassurance

in many situations Says nothing of the

“appropriateness” of that thought or feeling at the time

Page 50: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Validation Promotes mentalizing and

undermines fusion and psychic equivalence

Links outer events with private events and the wanna-do’s

Articulates the process; both currently and what’s possible

Page 51: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Validation Strategies

Simple and specific “Ah” statements; “Ah, you’re feeling …” “You’re having one of those ‘I can’t do it’ ideas

now”

Identify expectations; “You thought there would be popsicles” “Ah, you want me to carry you now”

“I wonder” statements

Page 52: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 53: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 54: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Shifting the Focus of Attention

Shift attention from unhelpful private events to actionable goals

Breathing and orienting to an “affect neutral” stimulus as a “pivotal response”

Page 55: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

The Role of Attention

Page 56: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Isabelle

7-year old female

Diagnosed with Separation Anxiety D/O and phobias: the word “Zombie”

Can’t be alone in any room of the house: “Marco Polo”

Lots of avoidance or trying to control situations

Mother, Holly, is the primary “dance partner”

Page 57: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Isabelle and Holly’s Dance The Situation: Any transition or anticipated separation

Setting Events: Holly’s work stress, other children

The Initial Behavior: Resistance and inertia from Isabelle, then focuses on some stimulus that evokes a pantrum

Holly’s reaction: Cajoling, reassuring, then pleading, then yelling/threatening

And then...? Holly may angrily physically guide Isabelle through the transition or Holly may acquiesce to Isabelle’s implicit demands

Page 58: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

For Isabelle’s Mother

Page 59: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Child Directed Play

Page 60: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Dictionary.comEnglish Portuguese

Page 61: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Dictionary.comEnglish

“I’m scared”

“It’s not fair”

“I’m a loser”

“I’m a loser”

Portuguese

“Tenho medo”

“Não é justo”

“Eu sou um perdedor”

Swahili

“Mimi nina loser”

Page 62: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Dictionary.com

English German

Page 63: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Sterling

Page 64: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 65: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Sterling and Alistair’s Dance The Situation: Getting homework started and completed

Setting Events: Alistair’s own history with school, plus marital stress

Initial behavior: Sterling’s avoidance, arguing that homework is irrelevant to his future

Alistair’s reaction: Argues, debates, throws up hands and leaves

And then…? Sterling’s mother steps in and helps Sterling complete the work step-by-step

Projective Identification or The Hot Potato: “He who

cares least has the most power”

Page 66: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Rule-Governed Behavior “Behavior that is controlled by verbal

specification of contingencies rather than by direct contact with contingencies”

Enormously helpful: “Don’t eat those, they’re poisonous”

And, behavior based on rules tends to be insensitive to feedback from the environment: e.g., buying lottery tickets

Page 67: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

“And then it hit me: I’m salivating over a bell”

Page 68: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Defusion Exercises

Naming and cataloging

Emotional vocabulary

Boats on a river

Matt Smith

Page 69: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Common Categories of Private Events

Sterling

“Scorekeeping”

Frustration

Impatience

Worry

Alistair

Impatience

Frustration

Worry

Regret

Page 70: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Emotional Vocabulary Angry

Annoyed

Frustrated

Belligerent

Indignant

Dudgeon

Page 71: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Defusion Exercises

Naming and cataloging

Emotional vocabulary

Boats on a river

Matt Smith

Page 72: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Matt Smith is a big, fat idiot.

OKOK

Page 73: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle
Page 74: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

“Homework is irrelevant and stupid”

OKOK

Page 75: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

“It’s not fair”OKOK

Page 76: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

“This kid will never learn”

OKOK

Page 77: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Taking Values-Driven Action

Orienting away from avoidance and control of thoughts and feelings and toward the goal

“Oh, yeah. What were we trying to accomplish before all this commentary showed up?”

“When you’re going through Hell, keep going!”

Willingness vs “wantingness”

Page 78: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Commitment

A pledge or promise: obligation

The act of committing, pledging, or engaging oneself

The motivational story we tell ourselves

The choice to limit our choices

Page 79: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Commitment and Acceptance: Two Sides of the Same Coin

Effort, Frustration, Sacrifice,

Thoughtfulness

To Be A Good

Team-mate

Page 80: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Commitment and Acceptance: Two Sides of the Same Coin

Effort, Frustration, Sacrifice,

Thoughtfulness

To Be A Good

Student

Page 81: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Commitment and Acceptance: Two Sides of the Same Coin

Effort, Frustration, Sacrifice,

Thoughtfulness

To Be A Good

Brother

Page 82: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Commitment and Acceptance: Two Sides of the Same Coin

?????

To Be A Good Parent

Page 83: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

More Defusion Exercises

Passengers on the bus

Goggles

Page 84: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Fiona 15-year old female Anxiety by Hx- now emerging

depression; low mood, low energy, anhedonia

Starting to “try out” cutting Somatic: stomach aches, migraines Lots of school absences Comprehensive avoidance/paralysis

around school work Few friends

Page 85: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Fiona’s Family

Page 86: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Strategies For Fiona and Parents Facilitated Listening

Contingency and Sensitivity

Tolerance

Chess Board

Choices and Decisions

The Distraction Paradox Valued Living Questionnaire

(behavioral activation and parent-daughter time)

Page 87: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Acceptance

“Be equal to your fate”I Ching

“The Fates lead him who will. Him who won’t, they drag”

Seneca

Page 88: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Strategies For Fiona and Parents Facilitated Listening

Contingency and Sensitivity

Tolerance

Chess Board and losing an important piece

Choices and Decisions

The Distraction Paradox Valued Living Questionnaire (behavioral

activation and parent-daughter time)

Page 89: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Fiona’s VLQ (partial)

Page 90: Parent-Child ACT Chris  McCurry, Ph.D . ABCD, Inc.Seattle, WA cmccurry@abcdseattle

Carl Gustav Jung

“Life’s truly important problems cannot be solved, they can only

be outgrown”