I facilitated my own play therapy session using Synergetic Play Therapy principles….

A while back, when I was teaching a six-hour seminar on Working with Sand in Play Therapy, I went downstairs to the hotel restaurant to eat and spend 30 minutes preparing. I felt poised and inspired to spend the day teaching and engaging with a room full of 100 eager therapists ready to learn.

I ordered food and grabbed my laptop. I pulled up my slide presentation and gasped. Why was only one of my 20 slides showing? My heart started to pound,  and panic quickly crept in. I frantically searched my computer, pulling up every folder I could think of in hopes that somewhere there was a copy. There wasn’t! 

I checked my thumb drive. Only one slide was on that one, too. What was I going to do? In 40 minutes I had to be in a taxi heading to the training center.

I started to observe the oscillation of my internal states as I was moving from feeling like somehow I could do something about this dilemma to wanting to give up and cry. 

I could feel the rapid change in my perception as it went back and forth between, “I can” and “I can’t,” and I felt my body respond accordingly each time. I was on my own internal roller coaster  between the activation of my sympathetic (fight, flight) and parasympathetic (collapse) responses.

As I sat there in a state of panic, I realized this was a play therapy moment! 

My students often tell me that Synergetic Play Therapy is a way of life. They describe it as a way of knowing how to deeply attune and connect with self and in this moment I felt the profound truth in their description. 

So I had two choices: continue to detach from myself and further the dysregulation I was experiencing or reattach and discover what was possible.

I chose to reattach, and I took a huge breath. I began to interact with the moment just like I would have if I had been in a session where a child engages me in play where I’m put in a position to feel complete panic, stuck, and holding an enormous amount of pressure that I might disappoint others.

I began to do what I teach my students to do…. Consciously move towards the uncomfortable thoughts, sensations, and emotions.

I used my breath to help me. 

I also noticed that my body wasn’t moving, so I began to move. I rubbed my legs and shook out my arms and allowed myself to begin to regulate my system. 

named my experience to myself — “I’m scared. I don’t want to disappoint my students. Part of me thinks I can get creative and find a solution and part of me wants to cry.”

As I facilitated my own play therapy session for a few minutes, something magical started to happen.  The energy in my system began to integrate, and I found myself beginning to center and ground. I found that the oscillation of my perceptions started to slow down, and I found myself knowing that I could do something. I was ready to mobilize into action from a conscious and grounded place inside of me.

I picked up my phone and called one of my students who was going to be there to help me out. “Can you get there early and have everything ready for me?” I asked her. I explained the situation and said with confidence, “I’m going to sit here for the next 45 minutes and recreate my presentation from memory. I’ll need everything ready so I can walk in at the last minute.

Then I got to work.  I knew that in order for me to pull this off, I was going to have to stay steady and stay in my pre-frontal cortex. I knew that I needed everything to fire on all cylinders, which meant that I was going to have to take everything I knew about the brain and nervous system regulation and apply it. 

So for 45 intense minutes, I regulated my way through my stress responses doing everything to stay attached to myself.

When I couldn’t recall the slide in my mind and panic would start to say hello, I regulated

When I couldn’t remember exactly where I stored the photo that I used for a particular slide, I regulated

When I looked at the clock and saw that I had 10 minutes left and thought I wasn’t going to make it, I regulated

When I couldn’t remember the exact words I used or the order to put the slides in, I regulated. And each time, I remembered.

I did it.  I walked into the training center with 15 minutes to spare, leaving just enough time to test the microphone, set up my laptop, and orient myself to my students.

And the day was magical. 

I began the day sharing my story and I referenced it throughout the day to describe the power of knowing how to understand and regulate through our states of activation in the body. 

I facilitated my own play therapy session using Synergetic Play Therapy principles, and they helped me stay attached to myself so I could then show up for my students and help them learn how to attach to themselves. 

Have you ever faced a moment when everything seemed to fall apart, only to find strength in reconnecting with yourself? I’d love to hear how you’ve navigated similar experiences—feel free to share!

Much love on the journey 💜 

Lisa

Would you like to learn Synergetic Play Therapy? Join us for one of our level 1 Introduction to Synergetic Play Therapy programs, online or in person. Discover more about this program here