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Nathanson and his colleagues explore contemporary affect studies, focusing on the work of Silvan Tomkins, and examine their impact on the theory and practice of psychotherapy.
"A thorough and lucid exploration of what continues to be the therapist's main dilemma: how to facilitate insight and motivate the patient toward recovery in the face of ongoing resistance." --Joseph K. Nowinski, Ph.D.
This book explains this deeply ethical approach of contextual therapy in practical terms and demonstrates its practice in extensive cases.
This book focuses on the difficulties and rewards of postintegration work with multiples.
"An immense number of people are going to be helped by this book. It is one of those rare occurrences when high scholarship is informed and guided by immense clinical experience. The result is a learned and wonderfully readable book that is both accurate and commonsensical. This is a seminal work." --Andrew Malcolm, M.D.
Reference for psychotherapists on the applications of improvisational theater to psychotherapy for groups, couples, family, and individuals.
Using an ecological framework, this book examines violence in the lives of adolescents and proposes that violence can be stopped on any one of four levels - individual, family, community or social policy. Topics covered include suicide, delinquency, juvenile sexual offending and physical abuse.
"This is not another how-to book, although it is practical and applied. Instead, it is a book that addresses the tough situations and quandries facing therapists working with clients who differ from them in culture, ethnicity, lifestyle, or beliefs." --Contemporary Psychology
In a society that oscillates wildly between extremes of moralizing and corruption, how do we define, much less foster, "goodness"?
In this abridged and revised edition of their 1989 text, the authors focus on the what and how of effective community mental health. Following the guidelines outlined here will enable clinicians to provide services that are cost-effective, humane, and growth-promoting.
For family therapy students and practitioners, this book offers stories, exercises, self-assessments, and evaluative techniques.
Integrating neuropsychodynamic and biopsychosocial factors, this book provides a guide for psychotherapists whose practices may include patients with traumatic brain injury and related neurobehavioural syndromes, such as strokes and brain tumours.
Taking into account ambiguities in the relationship between childhood abuse experiences, formation of self- destructive personality styles, and subsequent psychotherapy, the author presents a working model that is useful without limiting the practitioner.
Imagine being able to consult with Jay Haley about difficult therapy cases.
With humor and compassion, Durrant shows how this competence framework can make everyone--from kids and parents to therapists and staff--a winner.
A "sink or swim" philosophy frequently prevails in mental health settings today.
Many commonly prescribed drugs cause sexual problems, while a smaller number have the potential to improve sexual functioning. Highlighting the interaction between biology and emotion in sexual chemistry, this book evaluates the drugs that can affect sexual functioning.
The author presents his subject with a breadth not found in other texts, reaching from those individuals with mildly annoying traits to incurable psychopaths.
Intended primarily for counsellors working with alcoholics, addicts and their families, this text describes three treatment approaches to anger - ventilation, reduction and management - along with their advantages and disadvantages for different types of patients.
Provides clinical advice on the evaluation and treatment of sexual abuse cases, particularly in a difficult situation where the extent or actual occurrence of sexual abuse must be determined.
This book offers a new conceptual approach to the problem of post-traumatic stress disorder, in which the response to trauma is seen as a reaction to injury rather than as an illness.
This workbook has been designed to be used in conjunction with a treatment programme for troubled adolescents, described in The Adolescent Self. It covers such techniques as self-assertiveness, active listening, peer pressure, cue therapy and self-talk.
This anthology of case studies collects unique and recurring issues addressed by therapists in support of their gay and lesbian patients.
Since earliest history, storytelling has been the primary vehicle for teaching and for exchanging human knowledge and experience. Here stories become a means of healing, of reparenting, and of conveying to the unconscious mind the peace and comfort of an idealized childhood-often with almost magical effects.
Demonstrates that a minor variation of Freud's trauma theory, known as brief therapy, can be seen as the core of all major modern therapies, from behaviour therapy to psychoanalysis.
A guide to the evaluation and treatment of sexually abused children.
This study focuses on the developmental and therapeutic needs of these traumatized children.
The first section covers Sibling Dynamics: General Issues: here contributors look at intense sibling relationships, effects of birth order and family structure, and ethnic issues.Section II, entitled When Siblings Are Close: The Early Years, covers such issues as the sibling dynamics in large families, divorcing and remarried families, and alcoholic families, as well as treatment of brother-sister incest and with siblings of disabled children.Moving into adolescence and young adulthood in Section III, Balancing Closeness and Separateness, clinicians share their experiences of working with symptoms as sibling messages, recognizing the special dynamics in families where the siblings are all of one gender, and supporting the sibling relationship in eating-disordered families and in families where one sibling has a chronic mental illness.In Section IV, Settling Old Scores: The Middle Years, we are reminded that childhood siblings conflicts can haunt adult relationships. In addition, chapters examine sibling dynamics in family businesses and :sibling" issues among cotherapists and coauthors.A sibling is often an individual's most enduring intimate contact, as the sibling relationship may last longer than those with parents, spouses, and children. Section V, Facing the Problems of Aging: The Late Years, explores relationships among adult siblings who care for their aged parents and among elderly siblings.
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