Flourishing Life Society
  • Flourishing Life Society
    • Flourishing Favorites
    • Articles by Year Published
    • Privacy Policy
    • About Us
  • Psychology Definitions
  • Psychology of Wellness
    • Psychology of Emotions >
      • Emotional Data Base
    • Psychology Article Archive
  • Personal Development
    • Health and Fitness
    • Personal Development >
      • Personal Development Archive N-Z
  • Flourishing Relationships
Home | Psychology of Wellness | Psychology Definitions | Accelerated Experiential-Dynamic Psychotherapy
Psychology Definitions
BY: T. Franklin Murphy | August 3,  2021 (edited February 5, 2022)
A lady in a therapy session. A Flourishing Life Society article on Accelerated Experiential-Dynamic Psychotherapy.
Adobe Stock Images

Accelerated experiential-dynamic psychotherapy:

Accelerated experiential-dynamic psychotherapy (AEDP) is a branch of psychotherapy focusing on developing client's skills for processing difficult emotional and relational experiences. Accelerated experiential-dynamic psychotherapy was developed by Dr. Diana Fosha, utilizing established theory from attachment theory, affective neuroscience, and body-focused treatments.

Emotions bring pleasure and pain. Accelerated experiential-dynamic psychotherapy provides guidance in the art of effectively dealing with one’s emotions, both good and bad., and harnessing them in our pursuit of a flourishing life.

Pain and Suffering

Life provides a constant source of wisdom if we only have the skill and desire to learn. Crisis and suffering can awaken extraordinary capacities that lie dormant, unknown and untapped. AEDP guides clients to make the most of these opportunities, guiding the client through healing and transformation.
"Crisis and suffering provide opportunities to awaken extraordinary capacities that otherwise might lie dormant, unknown and untapped."
AEDP Institute

Four Pillars of AEDP

Fosha warns that "assumptions about the fragility of patients often are rationalizations for ineffective technique" (2008). A core concept of AEDP is that humans possess the capacity to heal within themselves. A therapist must foster this capacity in the client, believe in them, while creating a place of emotional safety. 

This pillar of AEDP shares many qualities with Carl Rogers's concept of unconditional positive regard.  
The biological need to feel understood takes precedence over almost all other goals. When we feel alone in our journey of transformation, the work appears overwhelming. Fosha expands on this, explaining that through "positive receptive experiences (i.e., feeling held, loved, understood, supported) elicit facilitating affects. These include joy, relief, hope and trust, feelings of closeness, strength, and authenticity; they motivate further experience, expression, and communication" (2008).

Perhaps, much like Barbra Fredrickson's Broaden and Build Theory,  positive emotions facilitate growth.
Fosha wrote that defenses cut us off from pain that is increasingly intolerable, but they also cut us off from "access to all sources of liveliness" (2008).

These defenses must be dismantled and healthier avenues of emotional regulation employed, allowing clients to feel life.
"​Painful feelings, borne alone, can be unendurable; together with a trusted companion, they can be borne, which is the first and crucial step in their eventual transformation" (Fosha, 2008). Trust is developed in healthy childhoods where parents create a emotionally safe home for the child. Yet, many, unfortunately, grow up in emotionally harsh environments where trust hurts, routinely punished with disappointment.

In therapy, building a trusting relationship is paramount, exhibiting to a client the positive affects of trust. The next step is assisting a client in building trusting relationships outside of the therapeutic relationship. Ultimately, discovering emotional safety is foundational to continued growth. The client can curiously examine their emotions without fear or defense, gaining critical wisdom for flourishing in life.

Books on AEDP

A Few Words from Flourishing Life Society

Diana Fosha's concepts of emotion and feeling affect has had a profound influence on my own beliefs on wellness. You will find scattered throughout my articles many of Forsha's concepts of healing and transformation. Our emotions bless and curse depending on the narrative we build around them. Fosha provides a comprehensive understanding of the dynamics of the relationship and the experiential requirements to transform feeling affect into a healing journey to flourishing.
T. Franklin Murphy
T. Franklin Murphy
Wellness. Writer. Researcher.
​T. Franklin Murphy has a degree in psychology. He tirelessly researches scientific findings that contribute to wellness. In 2010, he began publishing his findings.

References:

Fosha, D. (2008). The Transforming Power Of Affect: A Model For Accelerated Change. ‎ Basic Books
Link to an alphabetical listing of Flourishing Life Society article topics
Psychology of Wellness Banner link to Flourishing Life Society articles
Emotion article database
Outside link. Accelerated Experiential-Dynamic Psychotherapy
Accelerated Experiential-Dynamic Psychotherapy. A Flourishing Life Society article link
Flourishing Life Society
  • Human Flourishing
  • Psychology of Wellness
  • Flourishing Relationships
  • Psychology Definitions​
  • Privacy Policy
​Other Links
  • About US
  • Companion Site​
  • Most Popular Articles
  • Psychology Topics A-z
Articles:
  • New Articles​
  • Last year's Publications​
  • External Psychology Links​
​Favorite Topics:
  • Mental Illness Archive
  • Personality Archive
  • Personal Development
  • Psychology of Emotions
News Letter

    New Article Updates

Subscribe to Newsletter