| TCA Stage | Report | ||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Student | Joe Duquette | ||||||||||||||||
| Entry ID | 3963 | ||||||||||||||||
| Date Created | October 30, 2021 | ||||||||||||||||
| Date Updated | June 3, 2022 | ||||||||||||||||
| Advisor | Sarala Evans | ||||||||||||||||
| Core Module Name | Stress Management | ||||||||||||||||
Plan Information | |||||||||||||||||
| Selected key teaching (specific core concept): | Progressive Muscle Relaxation is a systematic way to reconnect with your peaceful center. For highly stressed people, scanning the body from the head to the toes rather than the other direction, grounds the student in the sensations of the body to help them out of the racing mind, a significant adaptation to standard Integral Yoga deep relaxation. | ||||||||||||||||
| Goal for implementation with client (Specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, time-bound relating to the client): | The goal is to use PMR and Intellect-based Guided Centering/Meditation to help ease client’s Stress Response. In 2 30-minute sessions, I will cue the client to relax her body through chair yoga exercises, ask her to become aware of her breath, guide her through a meditation and finally, offer her Relaxation/Imagery techniques to consider. | ||||||||||||||||
| Relevant Client(s) Details | The client is a divorced 65-year-old female being fitted with a heart monitor; has family history of pacemakers, 94-year-old wheelchair-bound father in a senior facility, live-in 30+year-old special needs son, another 30+year-old son with feeding tube who contracted a life-threatening disease serving in Afghanistan; she takes him to doctor’s visits and homeschools his 10-year-old son. She is unable to get a good night’s rest, gets up in the middle of the night unable to sleep, and is up at 4am. | ||||||||||||||||
| Session Outline |
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Report Information | |||||||||||||||||
| How did you envision working with the client(s) to incorporate the selected teaching? (Define the plan) | I planned to do PMR and Guided Centering/Meditation in two 30-minute sessions, gave a good class and achieved a good outcome (0-stress at end), but had not focused on my selected key teaching – I did so in our second meeting! Concentrate specifically on PMR to help client connect with her peaceful center | ||||||||||||||||
| What branch(es) of IY did you use? How does each support your goal/relate to the key teaching? | Hatha: Hatha - Seated forward bends and inversions allowed client’s spine, head and shoulders to relax even before cueing PMR | ||||||||||||||||
| Short notes on time with client: | Session #1 Session #2 | ||||||||||||||||
| Follow up suggestions for your client (whether with you or on their own): | Client will do the following suggestions as she is able: | ||||||||||||||||
| Reflection | |||||||||||||||||
| Did you apply your intended plan once you met with the client(s)? Was the goal achieved? Explain. | Not in the first session - I forgot to cue Progressive Muscle Relaxation which was my Selected Key Teaching, but did so in our second session. That being said, knowing the client very well, a close relative, I had her complete trust and that might even have been the first step toward complete relaxation and following any directions I might have given her. Yes. Client was very tired after a very stressful week, as well as the two mornings and early afternoons of the days we met, and even though I did not stick to my original plan during the first session, client was relaxed and her mind was not racing by the end of the session. PMR and Intellect-based Guided Meditation fit like a glove with client, witnessed by the fact that she slept through the night without getting up, and her sleep was very restful. | ||||||||||||||||
| Did you have to adapt anything in your plan? What lessons did you learn? | No. I found that I need to be always aware of my Specific Core Concept as I work with a client, before and during our sessions, as well as when I offer the client suggestions for what he/she can do at home. I had no resistance to my directions or barriers to achieving the desired outcome because I had a willing client, where with another client, challenges might have presented themselves. Sat Bir Khalsa PhD, Director of Yoga Research at Yoga Alliance, has found that clinical trial studies of insomnia treatments aimed at reducing arousal, including relaxation and meditation, have reported positive results through having clients keep a diary two weeks before and eight weeks after being taught relaxation techniques measuring stats such as sleep efficiency, total sleep time, and total wake time. This might be a good practice to suggest to long-term clients. | ||||||||||||||||
| If you are faced with the same situation again in the future, would you approach it in the same way? Why or why not? What went well? What you might change and why? Summarize. | I believe so. I am very happy with the results of both of our sessions. The client went from a stress level of 10 down to a 0 for the first session, 8 down to a 2 in the second session, and her mind was not racing, certainly very different from when we started when she carried in so many worries from the outside world. I would definitely follow my plan – I might do research first to find relevant quotes to relate to the client which might add even more insight to my therapy. Our session gave my client a respite from the ever-changing outside world and hopefully she knows that she has the tools to tap into her peaceful center, sometimes even within minutes, by incorporating them if she chooses to do so. | ||||||||||||||||
| Will you be uploading suplimental images or documents? | No | ||||||||||||||||
| Upload supplemental images or documents | |||||||||||||||||
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