Workshop Summary:
As neuroplastic approaches gain wider acceptance, many clinicians face a difficult question: Are
we sometimes too gentle? While validation and emotional safety are essential, excessive
accommodation and reassurance can inadvertently reinforce fragility, avoidance, and
symptom-related threat signaling. This presentation explores how behavioral boldness, graded
exposure, and accommodation reduction can help patients move beyond intellectual
acceptance of a neuroplastic diagnosis toward meaningful functional recovery. Attendees will
examine common therapist barriers to decisively expanding activity, including fears of causing
harm, symptom flare-ups, or alliance rupture. Practical clinical frameworks will be provided for
advancing exposure work, responding effectively to setbacks, and promoting resilience without
sacrificing compassion.
Learning Objectives:
At the conclusion of this session, attendees will be able to
- Identify common patient accommodations (behavioral, cognitive, and relational) that maintain symptom-related threat signaling despite intellectual acceptance of a neuroplastic diagnosis.
- Differentiate between supportive validation and therapist behaviors that inadvertently reinforce fragility or avoidance.
- Design graded exposure hierarchies that explicitly target accommodation reduction and functional expansion in chronic symptom presentations. 4) Formulate clinical responses to symptom flare-ups that reinforce resilience and neuroplastic learning rather than fear-based retreat.
- Recognize internal therapist barriers (e.g., fear of causing harm, alliance rupture, or symptom exacerbation) that may limit behavioral boldness in treatment.