Skip to content

The Role of Fantasy in Complex Trauma: Video Course

Seminar 

Speaker: Kathy Steele

Product: Video Course
Price: $115

CPD Hours: 3

Video course packs, including all notes are available immediately on booking. The access links are part of your ticket. Online video access remains available for 1 year from the date you receive the video course.

For more information on ticket types and order processing times please click here

Our ability for imagination can be an important source of strength and comfort. If life is tough over a prolonged period of time, as is the case with Complex Trauma, our clients may at times, disengage from reality in favour of an internal fantasy world. Fantasies can provide wonderful, if fleeting escapes from reality, allowing for alternative explorations of secure attachment and healing. However, they may also become prisons, driving maladaptive expectations and behaviours, and avoiding reality.

All of our course times are shown for Melbourne / Sydney so check what time this course will be on in your time zone using the time zone checker.

Print or Share this page​

Full Course Information

Some of the fantasies for example that we come face-to-face with in our clinical settings include:

  • omnipotent and perfectionistic wishes that manifest in inner critical beliefs and avoidance of help and support
  • fantasies of care and rescue that drive dependency
  • fantasies of the perfect relationship; narcissistic fantasies of power, control, and exceptionalism
  • erotic fantasies
  • and fantasies involving rage, sadistic masochistic elements, and revenge

At this therapeutically oriented seminar, which would be especially pertinent for psychotherapists and counsellors, acclaimed Trauma expert Kathy Steele discusses the roles of both conscious and unconscious fantasies in clients with complex trauma, and their intersection with maladaptive daydreaming. Participants will learn how to recognize both conscious and unconscious fantasies and discuss these with their clients in a non-judgmental and curious way. We will then explore ways to resolve the central conflicts and avoidance of reality in these fantasies, including promotion of grieving and acceptance.

Our learning objectives at this seminar are:

  • Discuss the adaptive role of fantasy in trauma recovery
  • Identify maladaptive fantasies that prevent progress in therapy
  • Identify ways to uncover fantasies that are not conscious to the client
  • Delineate core issues involved in maladaptive fantasies in trauma survivors
  • Analyse different types of fantasies and therapeutic approaches for their resolution

About the speaker

Kathy Steele, MN, CS has been treating complex trauma, dissociation, and attachment issues since 1985. She is in private practice with Metropolitan Psychotherapy Services and is Adjunct Faculty at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, US.  Kathy is a Past President and Fellow of the International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation (ISSTD), and has also previously served on the Board of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (ISTSS). She has been involved with developing treatment guidelines for Dissociative Disorders and well as for Complex Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. Kathy has received a number of awards for her work, including the 2010 Lifetime Achievement Award from ISSTD, an Emory University Distinguished Alumni Award in 2006, and the 2011 Cornelia B. Wilbur Award for Outstanding Clinical Contributions.  She is known for her humour, compassion, respect, and depth of knowledge as a clinician and a teacher, and for her capacity to present complex issues in easily understood and clear ways using an integrative psychotherapy model that draws from both traditional and somatic approaches. She is sought as a consultant and supervisor, and as an international lecturer.

She has co-authored three books as part of the acclaimed Norton Series on Interpersonal Neurobiology: The Haunted Self: Structural dissociation of the personality and chronic traumatization (2006, Van der Hart, Nijenhuis, & Steele – W. W. Norton); Coping with trauma-related dissociation: Skills training for patients and therapists (2011, Boon, Steele, & Van der Hart – W. W. Norton); and most recently, Treating trauma-related dissociation: A practical, integrative approach (2017, Steele, Boon, & Van der Hart – W. W. Norton). She has also (co)authored numerous book chapters and journal articles.

© nscience 2021 / 22

What Our Customers Say

We are excited to announce the launch of our brand new e-learning platform for mental health practitioners.

Gift Vouchers

Digital gift vouchers are redeemable against any nscience course.

Speak to an Expert

Calls from AUS

Get up to 20% off on our new programmes

Be the first to receive ‘early-bird’ offers!

View our Privacy Policy