Based on more than 30 years of clinical experience as a psychiatrist and a therapist, Dr. Breggin's book, now available in an affordable paperback, illustrates the importance of developing a therapeutic bond--or healing presence--between helping professionals and their clients. The author provides useful vignettes, case studies, and personal insights to help both beginning and experienced therapists develop more empathy in therapeutic relationships. He asserts that the first step toward effective treatment is empathic self-transformation in the therapist. It is empathy and self-transformation that lie at the heart of being helpful. Topics include vulnerability, nurturing, helplessness, forgiveness, and spirituality, as well as tips for working with clients in extreme emotional crises, children and families, and patients of culturally diverse backgrounds.
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Based on several years of the author's clinical experience as a psychiatrist and a therapist, this book illustrates the importance of developing a therapeutic bond - or healing presence - between helping professionals and their clients. It provides vignettes, case studies, and personal insights to help develop empathy in therapeutic relationships.
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Acknowledgements
Creation of Healing Presence
Being in Someone Else's Presence
Acceptance of Our Own Personal Inadequacy
Nurturing of Human Nature
Does Empathy Hurt Too Much?
Does Empathy Make Us Too Vulnerable?
Beyond the Quick and Easy Cure
From Fear and Helplessness to Love
How to Help in Extreme Emotional Crises
Creation of Healing Aura in Families
Helping People Who Seem Very Different from Us
Empathy and the Reform Spirit
Finding Ourselves Through Principled Living
Empathy and Forgiveness for Grievous Misdeeds
Empathy for Children and Childhood
Importance of Empathy for Ourselves
Grateful Healer
Is Love Enough?
Index
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"[A] pleasant, upbeat, well-written, and thought-provoking discussion of the importance of developing a therapeutic bond--what the author calls "healing presence"--between helping professionals and their clients. … Very client centered … I see two audiences benefiting from this brief but meaty book: One--salty, chronologically gifted practitioners like myself--with many years and clients behind us, and hopefully many more ahead--who can profit from the periodic review of the basics and the frequent self-evaluation we were taught to conduct. The essays in this book facilitate that. The second audience is therapists-in-training, those who may not have read On Becoming a Person (Rogers, 1961)."
-Alan Cheney, reviewed in PsychCRITIQUES, Volume 51, Issue 47
"After years of detailing the myths and abuses of biopsychiatry, Peter Breggin comes full circle. With this profound and often poignant work from his own heart, he puts soul back into psychotherapy."
-Kevin McCready, PhD, Clinical Director, San Joaquin Psychotherapy Center
"Dr. Breggin passionately captures the heart of psychotherapeutic healing. A prolific and provocative writer, his thoughts are powerful, imaginative, inspirational, and wise. Not only would I recommend this book to professional psychotherapists, but also to the lay reader who will learn the meaning and intricacies of living and loving."
-Clemmont E. Vontress, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Counseling, George Washington University,
Counselor of the Year, American Mental Health Counselor's Association
"Brings passion and spirit to the art of counseling and psychotherapy. His insights into 'induced suffering' are a major contribution to the psychology of self."
-Joseph Tarantolo, MD, Psychiatrist, Washington, DC
"Transcends scientific jargon to make a critical contribution to the helping professions."
-Fred Bemak, EdD, Chair, Department of Counseling, Johns Hopkins University
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780826102744
Publisert
2006-04-28
Utgiver
Springer Publishing Co Inc; Springer Publishing Co Inc
Vekt
286 gr
Høyde
226 mm
Bredde
163 mm
Dybde
10 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
200
Forfatter