Written for therapists, Co-Creating Change shows what to do to help "stuck" patients (those who resist the therapy process) let go of their resistance and self-defeating behaviors and willingly co-create a relationship for change instead. Co-Creating Change includes clinical vignettes that illustrate hundreds of therapeutic impasses taken from actual sessions, showing how to understand patients and how to intervene effectively. The book provides clear, systematic steps for assessing patients' needs and intervening to develop an effective relationship for change. Co-Creating Change presents an integrative theory that uses elements of behavior therapy, cognitive therapy, emotion-focused therapy, psychoanalysis, and mindfulness. This empirically validated treatment is effective with a wide range of patients.
Some patients are crippled by fear and anxiety.
Psychodynamic Psychotherapy is the first book designed to teach therapists how to listen and intervene from multiple perspectives.
In A. Winston (Ed.), Clinical and research issues in intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press. Trujillo, M., & Winston, A. (1985). Termination. In A. Horner (Ed.), Treating the neurotic ...
Written for both undergraduate and graduate students, the book fills in an important piece of the applied communication puzzle as it relates to organizations.
Kandel, E. R. (1998). ... In G. Stricker & J. Gold (Eds.), Handbook of integrative psychotherapies (pp. 139– 150). ... In J. Carlson & L. Sperry (Eds.), Brief therapy strategies with individuals and couples (pp. 127–160).
Patient: An important memory came back to me about my parents¦an incident that happened when my father hit a dog with the ... Then you stay lonely. Patient: Yeah. Therapist: So is that what you want¦to stay detached, alone, isolated?
This book presents a step-by-step process for constructing an emotion-focused case formulation. The process focuses on the client's narrative content (the stories they tell) as well as emotional processing (how the client feels).
In response to the call for actionable and collaborative solutions-oriented research for sustainability, this collection of essays provides insights into the multi-layered challenges that underlie this fast-emerging field.
This text focuses on the discovery that with specific psychotherapeutic techniques based on psychoanalytic principles, the treatment of patients can be shortened, even for those usually considered the most difficult to treat.
How do you feel when people draw attention to themselves? Ct: They seem self-centered, full of themselves, and their importance. I know our sessions should be time for me, but I don't even think about our conversations between our ...