doi.org/10.1017/cha.2015.30

Article type: Original Research

PUBLISHED 17 August 2015

Volume 40 Issue 3

Being in Touch: Healing Developmental and Attachment Trauma at the Clay Field

Cornelia Elbrecht and Liz Antcliff

name here
Cornelia Elbrecht1 *

name here
Liz Antcliff2

Affiliations

1 Claerwen Retreat, Apollo Bay, Victoria, Institute for Sensorimotor Art Therapy, Australia

2 Heartspace Artspace & Counselling, Maleny, Queensland, Institute for Sensorimotor Art Therapy, Australia

Correspondence

* Cornelia Elbrecht

Contributions

Cornelia Elbrecht -

Liz Antcliff -

Part of Special Series: Interpreting Neuroscience, Creating Evidence - a Collection of Australian Based Trauma Informed Research and Practicego to url

CITATION: Elbrecht C., & Antcliff L. (2015). Being in Touch: Healing Developmental and Attachment Trauma at the Clay Field. Children Australia, 40(3), 1979. doi.org/10.1017/cha.2015.30

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https://childrenaustralia.org.au/journal/article/1979
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Abstract

Developmental trauma is a term that describes the impact of adverse childhood experiences that results in the loss of capacity to integrate sensory, emotional, cognitive and relational information into cohesive, trusting and safe lived experiences. Infants’ and children's brain, nervous systems and neural development are vulnerable to these traumas. Trauma is stored in the implicit memory and is manifest through body gestures, breath, body behaviours, sensory perceptions, emotions and thoughts. Play therapy, sand tray therapy and creative arts therapy are all offered as interventions for childhood trauma. Work at the Clay Field®, is a sensorimotor art therapy and differs from play, sand and visual arts therapy as it focuses on haptic perception, the use of the hands and touch as a tool of perception. Touch is one of the most fundamental human experiences and is the basis of secure attachment, linked to our earliest body memories. Work at the Clay Field® is grounded in theories of developmental psychology, object relations, sensorimotor therapy and haptic perception. Haptic object relations as skin sense, vestibular sense of balance and depth sense are presented as the underpinning principles of Work at the Clay Field®. Children from the age of 2 years old onwards are enabled through work at the Clay Field to satiate developmental needs, in particular those from the preverbal age of early infancy. They also can complete trauma-related fragmented or incomplete action cycles through safe touch and restore their developmental path.

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