Supporting Survivors of Sexual Trauma
Taking Flight International

 Supporting Survivors of Sexual Trauma  Certification Course Benefits   

Course Benefits 

 

Upon certification by Taking Flight International Corporation, graduates of this course May:

1. Support and counsel those who have experienced sexual trauma.

2. Apply to CCPC Global to be recognized globally as a Certified Sexual Trauma Counselor and use the acronym (CSTC). Application to CCPC Global must be made within one year following completion of the training. Re-certification is required annually.

3. Apply this certification for 40 Continuing Education Units (CEUs) toward certification and/or recertification as an Addictions Counselor with the Canadian Addictions Certified Counselors Federation (CACCF), and with the international certifying body, ICADC.

Application of CACCF CEU Hours
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Retrieving a soul part that fractured during trauma

 © Jane Simington and Joan I. J. Wagner

 

Abstract

A post-traumatic response includes alterations in functioning on the physical, mental, emotional, social, and spiritual levels. Interest in using complementary therapies resulted from PTSD patient requests for modalities that address their spiritual needs. The positive neurophysiology effects on PTSD symptoms produced by spiritual practices generates renewed interest in the approaches to the psyche proposed by Carl Jung, and also in traditional cultural practices for healing trauma. In traditional worldviews the shock of trauma can cause a part of the soul to fracture off and remain trapped in a non-ordinary reality. Jung encouraged therapeutic regression to connect with the lost part. Regression therapy gained support following MRI studies showing that trauma narratives are replayed through the brain’s right hemisphere. MRI studies support research showing that right hemisphere options, such as visualization, increase the possibility for healing trauma. The purpose of this research was to determine if there were pre- and post-intervention differences when using spiritually-focused guided visualization to regress subjects to a traumatic event, there to reclaim and reintegrate a soul part that had fractured off during trauma. Eight study participants from an Indigenous Community in Canada participated. Pre-to-post score differences on the PCL-5 suggest a positive and clinically meaningful response to the intervention. The themes derived from the narrative descriptions indicate that the soul retrieval intervention increased the well-being of the study participants.

Read the article Retrieving a Soul Part that Fractured During Trauma