Habituation Fades. Reconsolidation Holds.
The mechanism gap behind exposure relapse — and the in-session signature that distinguishes a habituated trace from a rewritten one. Nader, Schiller, Lane, Ecker.
Sixty minutes each. Diagnostic, not promotional. The lead session gives the five-gap structural account; the three channel sessions go deep on the mechanism, the belief class, and the relational pattern most clinicians have logged as wins.
Five structural reasons manualized therapy stalls with complex patients — each documented in primary literature, none of it ours to discover. A diagnostic talk. By the end you will recognize at least two of the five in your current caseload.
What you will be able to do afterThe mechanism gap behind exposure relapse — and the in-session signature that distinguishes a habituated trace from a rewritten one. Nader, Schiller, Lane, Ecker.
The distinction between beliefs tied to a specific memory (restructuring works) and beliefs with no event behind them (it structurally cannot) — and what addresses the second class instead.
The compliant complex patient as diagnostic blind spot — and a detection discipline based on therapist-observed, non-volitional markers rather than self-rating endpoints.
Named primary sources on screen. Citation-vs-synthesis discipline kept visible throughout.
Composite, de-identified case material drawn from a complex-trauma caseload. No patient data, no outcome claims.
At least 15 minutes for clinical questions, including disagreement. The objections that come up most often are answered live.
What the framework does and does not claim — stated by the presenter at the front of every session, not buried.
If you can't make the live session, register anyway — the link to the recording lands in your inbox the next morning. No re-registration needed.
Licensed physician and psychotherapist (Germany & Spain) · Method developer
Over a decade of clinical work with patients who are complex, chronic, and treatment-resistant — the ones psychotherapy trials underrepresent. The framework is the working integration of that decade — additive to CBT's first three waves, additive to schema and trauma work, replacing none of them.
CE eligibility varies by jurisdiction and is being expanded. Current CE-eligible sessions are flagged at registration, and the per-state status is stated transparently on the training page. Where CE is not yet available, the session remains free and is positioned as professional education — not as a substitute for accredited CE.
The five structural gaps and the reconsolidation mechanism are documented in primary literature — Porges, Schiller, Nader, Ecker, Lane, van der Kolk, Linehan, Herman. Citations are shown on screen during the talks. Integrating them methodically into one clinical framework is a working hypothesis; it has not yet been tested as an integrated package in randomized controlled trials. This is stated at the front of every session.
It sits underneath those methods rather than competing with them. The claim is that reconsolidation is the shared process each of them reaches through a different door. Credit is explicit; what differs is the procedure — with clear preconditions, postconditions, and an observable end point you can verify (recall without emotional activation).
No. Sessions are for licensed mental-health professionals. Content is professional education, not clinical advice or patient-directed treatment guidance, and not a substitute for licensure or jurisdictionally required supervision.
A confirmation; the session link 24 hours before; the recording afterward. Future webinar invitations on the same topic — and nothing else. No drip sequences, no upsells inside the webinar content. Unsubscribe is one click and immediate.
Yes, with a supervisor's awareness. The material is calibrated for licensed practitioners but is appropriate for advanced trainees, postdoctoral fellows, and residents whose supervisor has cleared it. Indicate your training status at registration.
60 minutes · live with Q&A · recording sent after. Free for licensed mental-health professionals.