Summary
Contents
Subject index
`Anybody with the slightest interest in brief therapy should read this book. Now that the initial controversy over brief therapy has begun to subside it is great to see how brief therapy works in practice. Gaie Houston's book is part of a series published by SAGE which sets out to do this - and hers is particularly illuminating and accessible. As she points out Gestalt is better equipped than many mainstream therapies to be applied to situations with extreme time constraints because it is both flexible and it acknowledges the part that can be played by other therapies. But what propels Houston's book out of the hum drum - or indeed the defensive (or offensive) diatribes about short therapy which have appeared over the past few years - is her vivid accounts of real-life sessions, both one to one and group, which punctuate the text' - Amazon Review Brief Gestalt Therapy demonstrates how the Gestalt approach can be used effectively in brief interventions with clients. Gestalt's distinctively integrative nature and emphasis on a highly co-operative working alliance, make it particularly suited to brief work. The book sets out the basic theory and principles of Gestalt and looks at each phase of the therapeutic process from initial assessment through the beginning and middle stages to the ending of the work. It presents clear, practical strategies for therapists to follow and in particular examines: } aspects of Gestalt which are especially relevant to brief work -} the elements of successful therapy -} ways of improving skills. Brief Gestalt Therapy includes vignettes and detailed case studies which bring the theory alive. It will contribute much to both existing literature on Gestalt therapy and also brief therapy, and will be invaluable to trainee and practising Gestalt therapists.
A BGT Group Case Study
A BGT Group Case Study
This report of part of the life of a 10-week Gestalt Therapy group is meant to illustrate some of the ways the Gestalt therapist may work in such a gathering. It is a camouflaged account, and one that often highlights difficulties, rather than illustrating the preponderant ease of communication and goodheartedness generally experienced in such gatherings of distressed people who are being taken seriously and warmly. Laura Perls recommended a sensitivity of approach that amounted almost to the invention of a particular therapy for a particular person. So in a group, there needs to be a tuning of approach to each member, and to the unique whole, the group created by these members and this therapist.
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