Embodied Co-Regulation for Practitioners

A morning workshop for practitioners

Including First Aid for the Amygdala

Beth and Jamila

Friday, July 24th, 2026

9:30 AM – 12:30 PM ET

$55.00

A morning workshop full of useful co-regulation practices and theory

For: Teachers, Therapists, Physicians, Somatic Practitioners, Yoga Teachers, Coaches

Co-regulation is a profound human birthright — yet for many of us, the neurological pathways for mutual regulation never formed fully in early childhood. As practitioners, we can often help clients learn embodied relating skills and regulation at the nervous system level. Our capacity for co-regulation matters, for ourselves, for those we work with, and for all our relationships.     

We will work directly with four key skills for embodied relating and co-regulation. New to this workshop is First Aid for the Amygdala — a set of practices for interrupting the compulsive brain loops that kick in when we get triggered. Practical, teachable, and immediately useful in the room with clients and willing friends!

All of this work draws from interpersonal neurobiology and established somatic traditions including Somatic Experiencing and Bodynamics.

Beth Dennison is a master somatic psychotherapist who has spent decades at the intersection of body, relationship, and nervous system. She brings both clinical depth and genuine warmth to this work.

Space is limited to six participants — small enough for real practice and individual attention. Please register soon. Sessions are live on Zoom and are not recorded. No phones.

Beth Dennison

MA in MFT, MEd, LMT, SEP
Beth brings 50 years of teaching, psychotherapy, bodywork and study of neuroscience, including Polyvagal theory, to designing learning experiences that rewire our brains for connection and co-regulation. She models the embodiment she teaches. 

Her groundbreaking book on Body Up! Co-Regulation provides a much needed remedy to the disconnection and dysregulation that pervade modern culture. She developed Body Up! Co-Regulation to rewire our nervous systems for peer relationships. We need to trust peer relationships in order to cooperate better across differences, and to get off of the hierarchical ladder of oppression.

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