ReAttach as a Salutogenic Systemic Intervention for Adverse Childhood Events: Integrating M.I.S.T., ConFusion, and the Emotional Symptom Regulation Model (ESRM)
Gepubliceerd 2026-03-03
Trefwoorden
- Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs),
- ReAttach,
- W.A.R.A,
- Forgive and Forget Hood (FFH),
- Salutogenesis
- Transdiagnostic,
- Sensory Modulation,
- New Mind Creation ...##plugins.themes.classic.more##
Auteursrecht (c) 2026 Dr. Paula Zeestraten-Bartholomeus, Steven Painter, Dr. Mohadeseh Bita, Prof. Dr. Aida Mehrad (Author)

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Samenvatting
Early childhood trauma and Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) act as a profound disruption to both individual neurobiological development and the well-being of family members [1]. Blended insights from the Emotional Symptom Regulation Model (ESRM) and ReAttach Mapping the Individual State of Mind (M.I.S.T) encouraged the researchers to enhance the previously published ReAttach protocol for early childhood trauma and formulate further clinical guidelines for ReAttach Affect Coaches [2,3]. Recent findings suggest that the impact of ACEs is mediated by underlying autonomic states: specifically, the fight, flight, and freeze responses, which manifest as seven distinct emotional phenotypes: Distress, Shutdown, Activation, Anger, Social Isolation, Resilience, and Ambivalence [4,5]. Unlike traditional trauma treatments focused on pathology, ReAttach emphasizes self-regulating sensory modulation and hypervigilance through the Wiring Affect with ReAttach (W.A.R.A.) framework, along with the Forgive and Forget Hood (FFH) and ConFusion technique [6,7,8,9]. During ReAttach face-to-face sessions, cognitive restructuring helps patients move from a fixed mindset to adaptive schemas and a flexible growth mindset [3,10,11]. By aligning the M.I.S.T. questionnaire with the seven autonomic phenotypes [4,5], the ReAttach Affect Coach can tailor individual interventions to the “State of the Nervous System." This approach utilizes the Emotional Symptom Regulation Model (ESRM) to address the displaced regulatory setpoints that maintain pathology [5]. Through the stabilization of co-regulation within the family system [10] and the application of New Mind Creation (NMC), ReAttach fosters resilience and updates maladaptive predictive models [3,11]. This process changes the “displaced regulatory setpoint” of the autonomic nervous system, thereby interrupting the cycle of intergenerational trauma transmission [12,5]. Eventually, integrating the ReAttach New Mind Creation (NMC) reinforces adaptive schemas, supporting Positive Childhood Experiences (PCEs) that build resilience [3].