Jerome S. Gans
Addressing Challenging Moments in Psychotherapy
Clinical Wisdom for Working with Individuals, Groups and Couples
Jerome S. Gans
Addressing Challenging Moments in Psychotherapy
Clinical Wisdom for Working with Individuals, Groups and Couples
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This practical and helpful volume details how clinicians can work through various and common challenges in individual, couple or group psychotherapy.
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This practical and helpful volume details how clinicians can work through various and common challenges in individual, couple or group psychotherapy.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- The New International Library of Group Analysis
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 142
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. September 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 8mm
- Gewicht: 230g
- ISBN-13: 9781032005324
- ISBN-10: 1032005327
- Artikelnr.: 62149468
- The New International Library of Group Analysis
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 142
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. September 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 8mm
- Gewicht: 230g
- ISBN-13: 9781032005324
- ISBN-10: 1032005327
- Artikelnr.: 62149468
Jerome S. Gans, MD, is a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Group Psychotherapy Association and the American Psychiatric Association. Now retired, he previously worked in private practice and as Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School.
Part I: Introduction
Part II: Clinical Observations
1. There Is No Completely Objective Data in Interpersonal Relations. The Way I Am with You Partly Determines the Way You Are with Me
2. Many Natural Reactions Are Not Helpful and Many Helpful Reactions Do Not Come Naturally
3. With Some Patients There Is No Risk of Ever Establishing the Truth
4. In Most Cases, All Things Being Considered, People Are Doing the Best They Can. If You Don't Think So, You Probably Don't Have Enough Information, or You Do Not Fully Understand the Information You Do Have
5. It Is at the Boundaries That Meaningful Psychotherapeutic Work Takes Place
6. In Chronic Marital Discord, Each Is Contributing Approximately 50% of the Problem No Matter How Asymmetrically They Present or Seem During the Course of Therapy
7. Internal Conflict Can Masquerade as Dialogue
8. One of The Fringe Benefits of Being a Psychotherapist Is All That We Can Learn from Our Patients
9. Seemingly Innocuous Patient Comments Often Yield Valuable Information About the Patient, the Patient-Therapist Relationship and the Phase of the Therapy
10. Shame Is a Painful, Ubiquitous, Debilitating and Often Hidden Emotion
11. Ideas Are One of The Most Powerful Medications
Part III: Clinical Pearls
12. Shifting Focus from There-And-Then to Here-And-Now
13. Employing Irony and Paradox for Therapeutic Purposes
14. Using Countertransference for Therapeutic Purposes
15. Responding Therapeutically to Patients' Questions
16. Securing the Patient's Attention
17. Dealing with the Group's Resistance
18. Encouraging the use of imagination
19. Welcoming and Deepening the Negative Side of Ambivalence
20. Employing Methods of the Existential School of Psychiatry
21. Miscellaneous
Notes.
Part II: Clinical Observations
1. There Is No Completely Objective Data in Interpersonal Relations. The Way I Am with You Partly Determines the Way You Are with Me
2. Many Natural Reactions Are Not Helpful and Many Helpful Reactions Do Not Come Naturally
3. With Some Patients There Is No Risk of Ever Establishing the Truth
4. In Most Cases, All Things Being Considered, People Are Doing the Best They Can. If You Don't Think So, You Probably Don't Have Enough Information, or You Do Not Fully Understand the Information You Do Have
5. It Is at the Boundaries That Meaningful Psychotherapeutic Work Takes Place
6. In Chronic Marital Discord, Each Is Contributing Approximately 50% of the Problem No Matter How Asymmetrically They Present or Seem During the Course of Therapy
7. Internal Conflict Can Masquerade as Dialogue
8. One of The Fringe Benefits of Being a Psychotherapist Is All That We Can Learn from Our Patients
9. Seemingly Innocuous Patient Comments Often Yield Valuable Information About the Patient, the Patient-Therapist Relationship and the Phase of the Therapy
10. Shame Is a Painful, Ubiquitous, Debilitating and Often Hidden Emotion
11. Ideas Are One of The Most Powerful Medications
Part III: Clinical Pearls
12. Shifting Focus from There-And-Then to Here-And-Now
13. Employing Irony and Paradox for Therapeutic Purposes
14. Using Countertransference for Therapeutic Purposes
15. Responding Therapeutically to Patients' Questions
16. Securing the Patient's Attention
17. Dealing with the Group's Resistance
18. Encouraging the use of imagination
19. Welcoming and Deepening the Negative Side of Ambivalence
20. Employing Methods of the Existential School of Psychiatry
21. Miscellaneous
Notes.
Part I: Introduction
Part II: Clinical Observations
1. There Is No Completely Objective Data in Interpersonal Relations. The Way I Am with You Partly Determines the Way You Are with Me
2. Many Natural Reactions Are Not Helpful and Many Helpful Reactions Do Not Come Naturally
3. With Some Patients There Is No Risk of Ever Establishing the Truth
4. In Most Cases, All Things Being Considered, People Are Doing the Best They Can. If You Don't Think So, You Probably Don't Have Enough Information, or You Do Not Fully Understand the Information You Do Have
5. It Is at the Boundaries That Meaningful Psychotherapeutic Work Takes Place
6. In Chronic Marital Discord, Each Is Contributing Approximately 50% of the Problem No Matter How Asymmetrically They Present or Seem During the Course of Therapy
7. Internal Conflict Can Masquerade as Dialogue
8. One of The Fringe Benefits of Being a Psychotherapist Is All That We Can Learn from Our Patients
9. Seemingly Innocuous Patient Comments Often Yield Valuable Information About the Patient, the Patient-Therapist Relationship and the Phase of the Therapy
10. Shame Is a Painful, Ubiquitous, Debilitating and Often Hidden Emotion
11. Ideas Are One of The Most Powerful Medications
Part III: Clinical Pearls
12. Shifting Focus from There-And-Then to Here-And-Now
13. Employing Irony and Paradox for Therapeutic Purposes
14. Using Countertransference for Therapeutic Purposes
15. Responding Therapeutically to Patients' Questions
16. Securing the Patient's Attention
17. Dealing with the Group's Resistance
18. Encouraging the use of imagination
19. Welcoming and Deepening the Negative Side of Ambivalence
20. Employing Methods of the Existential School of Psychiatry
21. Miscellaneous
Notes.
Part II: Clinical Observations
1. There Is No Completely Objective Data in Interpersonal Relations. The Way I Am with You Partly Determines the Way You Are with Me
2. Many Natural Reactions Are Not Helpful and Many Helpful Reactions Do Not Come Naturally
3. With Some Patients There Is No Risk of Ever Establishing the Truth
4. In Most Cases, All Things Being Considered, People Are Doing the Best They Can. If You Don't Think So, You Probably Don't Have Enough Information, or You Do Not Fully Understand the Information You Do Have
5. It Is at the Boundaries That Meaningful Psychotherapeutic Work Takes Place
6. In Chronic Marital Discord, Each Is Contributing Approximately 50% of the Problem No Matter How Asymmetrically They Present or Seem During the Course of Therapy
7. Internal Conflict Can Masquerade as Dialogue
8. One of The Fringe Benefits of Being a Psychotherapist Is All That We Can Learn from Our Patients
9. Seemingly Innocuous Patient Comments Often Yield Valuable Information About the Patient, the Patient-Therapist Relationship and the Phase of the Therapy
10. Shame Is a Painful, Ubiquitous, Debilitating and Often Hidden Emotion
11. Ideas Are One of The Most Powerful Medications
Part III: Clinical Pearls
12. Shifting Focus from There-And-Then to Here-And-Now
13. Employing Irony and Paradox for Therapeutic Purposes
14. Using Countertransference for Therapeutic Purposes
15. Responding Therapeutically to Patients' Questions
16. Securing the Patient's Attention
17. Dealing with the Group's Resistance
18. Encouraging the use of imagination
19. Welcoming and Deepening the Negative Side of Ambivalence
20. Employing Methods of the Existential School of Psychiatry
21. Miscellaneous
Notes.