Play & Emotion

Sessions: 8 

Lecture: 8h 56m

Certificate: 16+ hrs

200 CAD

Neufeld puts the puzzle pieces together to reveal true play as Nature's way of taking care of emotion. This realization makes sense of the trouble we are now in as the culture that was meant to take care of play has largely been lost. These insights are distinct to this approach and key to supporting healthy development and emotional well-being in our children and ourselves.

As is the case with all our courses, this course features lectures by Dr. Neufeld, carefully curated support for enriched study, study aides, the opportunity to ask questions of trained faculty or course facilitators, a year's access to the campus to enable study at one's own pace, and a certificate of attendance upon completion. For more information, consult the 'about our courses' page.

COURSE SUMMARY

We now know there is good reason that play appears at the same time as emotion in our evolutionary history. Without the emotional playgrounds that culture has traditionally provided, our emotions soon become a troublesome and disturbing mess. This course takes these previously discarded elements of human nature and elevates them to their rightful place as essential to the unfolding of human potential, including healing and maturing. These revolutionary insights are at the cutting edge of developmental science and couldn't be more crucial at a time when the prevailing paradigms of the day still discount these vital elements as frivolous and irrelevant. Finding our own playfulness and matchmaking our children to the emotional playgrounds they need is absolutely imperative in today's society. Nothing could be more important to the unfolding of human potential, in children as well as adults.

We believe this course to be so important and timely that we removed its previous prerequisites to make it more accessible, instead providing a written Neufeld Play Primer that can be read beforehand to set the stage for this course.

SUITABILITY/APPLICABILITY

These are universal themes with universal applications. One can come for oneself, or as a parent, teacher, or therapist. One can use this course to re-find one's own playfulness or to match-make children to the emotional playgrounds they need. No previous knowledge of the current psychological literature on play and emotion is required. What is helpful however is some previous exposure to Neufeld's attachment-based developmental approach. This course is not about becoming a play therapist but rather about putting ourselves and our children back into the therapeutic hands of true play.

SAMPLE TOPICS

  • how to differentiate between 'false play' and 'true play'
  • playfulness as a key indicator of emotional health and well-being
  • how to recognize the kind of emotional play a child needs
  • how troubling syndromes are rooted in unresolved emotion
  • the role of culture in giving emotions free play
  • the role of emotional replay in healing and recovery
  • how play can tame aggression
  • why emotional playgrounds are fast disappearing in today's society
  • how to re-find one's own emotional playfulness
  • how emotion requires play in order to optimize and fully develop
  • how screen play interferes with the kind of play required for optimal functioning
  • the various kinds of emotional playgrounds that can be accessed
  • emotional play as natural therapy

COURSE OUTLINE

The course is structured into 8 sessions with each session including approximately an hour of instructional video from Dr. Neufeld. Instead of requiring the prerequisite courses we did previously, a written Neufeld Play Primer is provided with this course that sets the stage for optimal learning.

  • Session 1 - HOW play serves emotion: an overview
    The course begins with an overview of the six ways play serves emotion. When emotion is deprived of the play it needs to function properly, emotional health and development suffer accordingly.
  • Session 2 - WHERE play serves emotion: the playgrounds
    The focus on physical play has blinded us to the emotional play our children need and the equipping that may be necessary to enter these playgrounds. We survey some of the traditional playgrounds of emotion in this context.
  • Session 3 - How play serves FRUSTRATION and problem solving
    Given how powerful and potentially destructive frustration can be, play is explored as both the personal and societal solution, from toddlers to teens to old-timers. Play is also presented as the catalyst for developing patience, constructive skills and even creativity in problem solving.
  • Session 4 - How play serves the ALARM system
    The alarm system is one of the most complicated of all the emotional systems and as such, requires the help of play to optimize and develop. Play is explored as a way of preventing and treating anxiety and other alarm-based problems.
  • Session 5 - How play serves SEEKING and identity formation
    Some of the most common forms of spontaneous childhood play involve closing-the-gap play and altering-the-self play. The purpose of such forms of play is explored, both for how it serves well-being, development and the formation of identity in particular.
  • Session 6 - How play serves RESILIENCE and adaptation
    Play serves a profound role in our human capacities to bounce back from adversity and to be transformed for the better by that which we cannot change. Both resilience and adaptation are explored as the handiwork of emotion, and as such, require the service of play to be fully realized.
  • Session 7 - How play helps to FACE SEPARATION
    Some of the most difficult realities to adapt to include our limitations, our finiteness, and our mortality. We explore how play provides an avenue for facing these realities and why this is important as preparation for real life. We look specifically at the role of fairy-tales, stories, theatre, tragedy, poetry, and song.
  • Session 8 - How play serves SELF-REALIZATION
    The prevailing views regarding self-improvement and transformation are basically all variations on the work motif. Play is presented as a natural alternative path to self-realization, in which we allow Nature to have its gentle yet transforming way with us and with our children.

Inquiries

If you have questions or require additional information that you cannot find on our website or FAQ page, you may contact our office on our Inquiries page.

Charity & Non-Profit Status

The Neufeld Institute is a registered Canadian charitable organization under the name Neufeld Institute Foundation and is also registered as a NPO in British Columbia. If you would like to make a contribution to us, please go to our donation page.

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