🌟 Welcome to a space of holistic healing, wellness, and growth! 🌟

I'm Dr. Darlene Viggiano, and my practice is dedicated to guiding those who have experienced trauma towards a journey of post-traumatic growth. This isn't just about bouncing back; it's about emerging stronger, wiser, and more self-empowered. If you've ever felt the deep moral injury that trauma can bring, know that you're not alone. Together, we'll work to repair your sense of trust in the goodness of people and the safety of the world.

I believe that the path to healing from moral injury involves specific treatments that promote flourishing, self-actualization, and self-transcendence. My bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach is tailored to meet your unique needs at every level – body, mind, relationships, and soul.

Are you ready to transform your trauma into growth? Let's connect and explore how therapy or consultation can lead you towards a life of fulfillment and peace. Share your thoughts or questions below, or send me a private message to start your journey. Your story matters, and I'm here to listen. 💫 #PostTraumaticGrowth #HealingJourney #SelfEmpowerment #MentalHealthAwareness

My mission is to help those who have felt injured or traumatized to achieve and experience post-traumatic growth. Post-traumatic growth is a type of resilience that goes beyond simply bouncing back, into actual development of greater maturity and wisdom than before the injury, moral or otherwise. I help foster self-empowerment and holistic wellness, so that trauma survivors flourish into self-actualization and self-transcendence.

When we feel abused, oppressed or traumatized a challenging after-effect that can cause stress symptoms is moral injury. Moral injury damages our sense of people being good and the world being safe, such as when we're asked to go against our own principles by some authority. It is an affront our sense of conscience and humaneness that produces a great deal of anxiety and insecurity.

I contend that one of the most damaging parts of a trauma is the moral injury itself, especially in cases where victim-blaming and/or stigmatization adds further psychological insult to the original injury. I also contend that post-traumatic growth can be a healing goal of therapy for moral injury and that specific kinds of treatments can tend to lead to such outcomes.

What do I propose toward flourishing, self-actualization, and self-transcendence? I start with a bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach that accounts for the needs of survivors physiologically, mentally, inter-personally, and at a deep core or soulful level. Let me break this down a bit more.

Biologically, I consult with clients to develop specific nutritional, exercise and sleep regimens, at a bare minimum, that would contribute to optimal chances for feeling better physiologically. This also includes somatic coping skills such as grounding, engaging the senses, and healthy self-soothing.

Psychologically, I consult on approaches that offer new opportunities for insight and self-actualization toward self-transcendence, via positive experiences at the level of flow states. Particular methods to help in this regard can include bibliotherapy, reflective journal writing, dream-work, hypnosis, and creative expression.

Socially, I consult on adopting programs of connecting to others who are also interested in developing their potential, both in terms of support groups and activity groups. This can include participating in organizations that champion certain causes, especially those that are meant to remedy or prevent traumas in the first place. A good example would be a mom who lost her child in a DUI accident joining Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD).

Spiritually, I consult to work through those ways in which survivors might have felt they've had the religious "book thrown at them," and seek ways in which they can have an alternate "book opened unto" them—whether that be through studying comparative ideologies, using meditation and prayer, or communing with nature: whatever a survivor feels called toward as an ideal experience that would be emotionally corrective for them individually and uniquely.

Darlene