"This book is reflexively systemic, embedding the contributors in the aesthetic ecology of the clinic and the many worlds in which the clinic operates. Their object of study is no mere 'environment', as if the clinic could then be slotted into place. They provide, instead, an authentically ecological engagement with the possibilities opened up by theoretically informed clinical practice."
Ian Parker, Discourse Unit, Manchester, UK
"The strength of this book is in its teasing out of relationships, processes and emotions in a way that helps to bring an understanding to complex systems. Its strength lies in how it examines connections between theory and practice, living and dreaming, thinking and reflecting. In the process, it brings fresh ways of understanding the worlds that professionals and family members are embedded in. I was intrigued and excited by the work. This book will be a great asset for the practitioner, the thinker, the manager, the organisational person looking for illumination. Presented in a readable style, older ideas are revisited, newer concepts are introduced and throughout the work, there is a focus on its application to real world situations while the person is encouraged to dream. Take time to enjoy the contributions, enjoy making connections previously unthought of, and I have no doubt, that as a result your work and practice will be hugely enhanced."
Dr Valerie O'Brien, Systemic Psychotherapy Programme, School of Medicine, University College Dublin, Ireland
"Systemic Practice and Family Therapy emerged as a rhizome - not from the conceptualization of one person. Over the years, many 'gardeners' were involved in its cultivation. Some plants evolved, others atrophied; the garden still exists today and continues sprouting. This book, a new 'sprout' - grown out of the collaboration of four longstanding systemic practitioners - opens up to new horizons in systemic practice, all connected with its ethics and aesthetics, and culminates in a chapter that illustrates the process of the authors' reflective dialogue on the practice of psychotherapy today. Readers may experience this book as a form of political activism in the field of systemic practice. French philosopher Simone Weil, honored as one of very few who inhabited her philosophy (Iris Murdoch) has said that 'pain is beyond ideologies'. Here the authors declare and sustain the need to live and experience the event of therapy as admiration and respect for the beauty of life. In this way, they too, are of the few who inhabit their approach."
Petros Polychronis, MD, Director, Athenian Institute of Anthropos (AIA), Greece and Kyriaki Polychroni, MA, MFT, Faculty AIA, P. President European Family Therapy Association (EFTA), Greece
Ian Parker, Discourse Unit, Manchester, UK
"The strength of this book is in its teasing out of relationships, processes and emotions in a way that helps to bring an understanding to complex systems. Its strength lies in how it examines connections between theory and practice, living and dreaming, thinking and reflecting. In the process, it brings fresh ways of understanding the worlds that professionals and family members are embedded in. I was intrigued and excited by the work. This book will be a great asset for the practitioner, the thinker, the manager, the organisational person looking for illumination. Presented in a readable style, older ideas are revisited, newer concepts are introduced and throughout the work, there is a focus on its application to real world situations while the person is encouraged to dream. Take time to enjoy the contributions, enjoy making connections previously unthought of, and I have no doubt, that as a result your work and practice will be hugely enhanced."
Dr Valerie O'Brien, Systemic Psychotherapy Programme, School of Medicine, University College Dublin, Ireland
"Systemic Practice and Family Therapy emerged as a rhizome - not from the conceptualization of one person. Over the years, many 'gardeners' were involved in its cultivation. Some plants evolved, others atrophied; the garden still exists today and continues sprouting. This book, a new 'sprout' - grown out of the collaboration of four longstanding systemic practitioners - opens up to new horizons in systemic practice, all connected with its ethics and aesthetics, and culminates in a chapter that illustrates the process of the authors' reflective dialogue on the practice of psychotherapy today. Readers may experience this book as a form of political activism in the field of systemic practice. French philosopher Simone Weil, honored as one of very few who inhabited her philosophy (Iris Murdoch) has said that 'pain is beyond ideologies'. Here the authors declare and sustain the need to live and experience the event of therapy as admiration and respect for the beauty of life. In this way, they too, are of the few who inhabit their approach."
Petros Polychronis, MD, Director, Athenian Institute of Anthropos (AIA), Greece and Kyriaki Polychroni, MA, MFT, Faculty AIA, P. President European Family Therapy Association (EFTA), Greece