In Unlocking the Emotional Brain, authors Ecker, Ticic, and Hulley
equip readers to carry out focused, empathic therapy using the potent
process of memory reconsolidation, the recently discovered and only
known process for actually unlocking emotional memory at the synaptic
level. The Routledge classic edition includes a new preface from the
authors describing the book's widespread impact on psychotherapy since
its initial publication.
Emotional memory's tenacity is the familiar bane of therapists, and
researchers had long believed that emotional memory forms indelible
learning. Reconsolidation has overturned these views. It allows new
learning to truly nullify, not just suppress, the deep, intensely
problematic emotional learnings that form, outside of awareness, during
childhood or in later tribulations and generate most of the symptoms
that bring people to therapy. Readers will learn methods that precisely
eliminate unwanted, ingrained emotional responses--whether moods,
behaviors, or thought patterns--causing no loss of ordinary narrative
memory, while restoring clients' well-being. Numerous case examples show
the versatile use of this process in AEDP, coherence therapy, EFT, EMDR,
and IPNB.