Nina Maron, M.S. Ed. holds several certifications and licenses in the field of education and personal development. She is a trauma informed coach, nationwide facilitator, inter and intra relationship specialist and somatic experiencing educator. She has a deep understanding of trauma, attachment theory and addiction and a full breath and scope of their intricate connection. Specializing in addiction and trauma she has had over 24 years of experience working with couples, individuals and families using inspiration from, Internal Family Systems Model (IFS) and Rosen Bodywork, somatic experiencing, The Gottman institute, Nonviolent communications organization and lifespace crisis intervention certified.
She has brought together her knowledge and plethora of practical strategies to increase calm, focus and connection intrapersonally and interpersonally. Nina has facilitated engaging workshops and group presentations to deepen an understanding of the impact of language on behavioral outcomes, and understands and teaches regularly on how language effects relational cohesion. She has both the experience and professional acumen to understand at a micro and macro-informed level how we best facilitate growth and change by understanding the personal subculture stemming from generations and generational trauma.. She is versed on all approaches of the current research on best practices in nurturing and parenting children of all ages.
Through countless interviews with parents, observations within the public and private school sectors, Nina has identified what people of all ages and circumstances what we need to thrive and is more than prepared to help people achieve their goals and transform their lives.
Nina has spent several decades becoming trauma informed and has gained a deep understanding of what this truly is amidst a rapidly changing climate in personal development stratas within a plethora of specific healing and so called transformational genres. In Linda A. Curran’s 101 trauma informed interventions she quotes Dr. Bessel Van Der Kolk, “What Id like to say is that good trauma work is like fine neurosurgery. It is extremely skilled work. And good intentions and warm feelings do not substitute for becoming really good at what you do”.
I invite each of you to look at the most current and up to date evidence-based literature, research and data whereby the robust findings are now not only compelling but undeniable, offering us something way more and way different than the sterile outdated paradigm of talk therapy. The current recommendations across the board. Specifically in books by the famous psychiatrist Dr Van Der Kolk, The Body Keeps the Score is to become more body centric more body-based in the realm of healing.
The once widely accepted talking cure is now being replaced by the somatic branches. And pioneers in the field like Dr. Gabor Mate, Peter Levine, Dr. Richard Schwartz are impacting the world by simply having us begin to orient and direct to the body where trauma is stored.
When we develop a body consciousness, body awareness and learn how to hear and communicate with our bodies, the deepest level of healing is possible. I hope you will join me and realize that you now have the power to heal yourself given a safe container and the skills to do so. Wishing each of you many blessings and a fruitful expansive journey whatever path you choose.