Camp Sober Fest’s ‘crazy-fun fun’: The neuroscience of healing in connection and play

Authored by: Brandon Lutman, LCSW, CCTP-II, CET-II, SP, CAP, EMDR, SEP in Training

We thought it might be helpful for individuals and treatment facilities considering

attending Camp Sober Fest to see some supporting research and evidence on brain and nervous

system healing in sobriety while engaging in fun and play. In sober circles, meeting/club houses,

sober livings, 12-step meetings, and sponsor/sponsee relationships, it is often said that

connection is the opposite of addiction, and that we heal in community. In therapeutic spaces,

some say that we are wounded in relationships (even our relationship to our drugs/alcohol) and

that we heal in relationships. Camp Sober Fest highlights having joy and fun in sobriety, while

connecting with hundreds of other sober humans who can understand the pain and hurt that

addiction created for them and understand the joys and fun to be had while sober.

Jaak Panksepp (Panksepp & Biven, 2012) describes play as being a huge source of joy,

and it acts as a motivational system that we were born with! Brown (2009) defines play as

spontaneous, pleasurable activities that do not contain overpowering emotions and anxieties, that

may not even have a drawn-out goal other than simply being in the activity itself. Play even has

its own neural circuitry – and when we feel (kids and adults alike) safe and connected with

others (social engagement), that circuit is activated – the good kind of activation (not the trauma

response kind). Camp Sober Fest allows individuals to access and re-access this circuitry that

may have been inhibited due to trauma, addiction, and other adverse reasons. Here, we are

rewiring and wiring neurons to fire together that produce happy chemicals and pathways of joy

and happiness – without the use of drugs or alcohol.

Dr. Peter Levine, the founder of Somatic Experiencingand a leader in the field of the

nervous system and trauma, discusses the neuroscience of healing through fun and play. Dr.

Levine considers the ‘goodness’ and ‘spontaneous’ positive states in the brain and body through

his notion of ‘restoring goodness’ in our nervous systems and brain chemicals. Some examples

are spontaneous pleasure, aliveness, curiosity, playfulness, and connection. These are what we

might call ‘biological indicators of regulated physiology’ (Levine, 2010). Adult play can be a

way for the nervous system to have ‘completion’ behaviors that can help the nervous system heal

and regulate more. Examples of adult play are dance, play, improv, joking, playing music,

creating, and even soft sports. Many of which happen at Camp Sober Fest!

Dr. Dan Siegel, a scholarly author and leader in interpersonal neurobiology, emphasizes

that spontaneous, creative, and novel play helps build new connections in the brain and reduces

stress. Dr. Siegel’s ‘healthy brain platter’ includes sleep time, physical time, focus time, time-in,

downtime, playtime, and connecting time. Per Poelmans, Rock & Siegel (2011), playtime says

that “When we allow ourselves to be spontaneous or creative, playfully enjoying novel

experiences, we help make new connections in the brain (p.6-7).” The attachments and

connections that take place within the community at Camp Sober Fest, while also engaging in

play and fun, can support our autonomic nervous system in healing (think: more window of

tolerance, and less freeze, fight, and/or flight). Fun contains arousal, energy, excitement, and

social engagement; all of which are training the brain and body to tolerate sympathetic charge

without having a catastrophizing meaning and no need for chemical assistance. Put differently,

that is all anti-addiction material at a nervous-system level.

In the therapeutic modality of psychodrama, we say “show me, don’t tell me” alongside

this belief in spontaneity and creativity. Spontaneity is essentially having an adequate response to

a new situation or a new and adequate response to an old situation, and Jacob Moreno (the

creator of psychodrama) considered spontaneity to be the necessary intervening factor for

creativity to be released (Moreno, 1956). Spontaneity and play encourage adaptability, joy, and

emotional health, and lead the way for unstructured exploration (creative exploration!). All of

this for the addict or alcoholic in recovery can provide healing to the mind, body, and spirit; or

put differently, it all provides a ‘new way of life’. From archery, volleyball, pickleball, yoga, tugo-

war, arts and crafts, and even talent shows – all this co-created spontaneous fun and creative

play accesses neurotransmitters (and ‘good’ neurochemicals) that lay down new neural pathways

in our brains. These repeated connections of community and other sober friends (that often

become like your chosen family) are how we engage further into the social engagement of our

nervous system.

While addicts and alcoholics are in active use/addiction, the neurotransmitters and

chemicals such as dopamine, oxytocin, and endorphins become obsolete or at least are barely

produced by our own bodies, because the drugs/booze are blocking them and/or providing them

artificially. Here at Camp Sober Fest, those chemicals are produced through connection and play,

not only with others but also yourself (and perhaps your inner child as well). From the laughter

to the facial tones expressing safety, breathing being regulated, and diaphragms shaking from the

play and fun – it all encompasses regulating the nervous system and sending new healing

pathways and chemicals throughout the brain and body.

I thought I might include this infographic that demonstrates what happens when we

engage in fun/play neurobiologically – without the need for or use of drugs or alcohol – as we do

at Camp Sober Fest.

Play/Fun Activity & The Likely Neurobiological Effect

References & Author Bio:

References

Brown, S. L. (2009). Play: How it shapes the brain, opens the imagination, and invigorates the

soul. Avery.

Levine, P. A., & Frederick, A. (1997). Waking the tiger: Healing trauma: The innate capacity to

transform overwhelming experiences. North Atlantic Books.

Levine, P. A. (2010). In an unspoken voice: How the body releases trauma and restores

goodness. North Atlantic Books.

Moreno, J. L. (1956). Psychodrama: Vol. 1 (2nd ed.). Beacon House.

Panksepp, J., & Biven, L. (2012). The archaeology of mind: Neuroevolutionary origins of human

emotions. W. W. Norton & Company.

Poelmans, Steven & Rock, David & Siegel, Daniel & Payne, Jessica. (2012). The Healthy Mind

Platter. Neuroleadership Journal. 4. 1-23.

Siegel, D. J. (2012). The developing mind: How relationships and the brain interact to shape

who we are (2nd ed.). Guilford Press.

Author Bio:

Brandon Lutman, LCSW, CCTP-II, SP, CET-II, EMDR, CAP, SEP in Training, is an experienced

trauma-informed therapist and consultant based in Colorado and Florida. He specializes in

experiential, somatic, and in-action modalities – such as Psychodrama, Somatic Experiencing,

Expressive Arts, and EMDR – to support clients navigating complex trauma, codependency,

shame, and addiction. Through virtual sessions and immersive in-person experiential trauma

intensives, he supports individuals in reconnecting with their bodies, reshaping old narratives,

and fostering lasting change. Brandon also provides consulting and training services to mental

health professionals and treatment centers, with a focus on trauma-informed care, experiential

approaches, and strengthening clinical teams.

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