Summary
Contents
Subject index
`It is well written and well organised and I'm sure it will be of help and interest to researchers and practitioners concerned with the therapeutic action of psychodynamic treatment' - Penelope Waite, Nurturing Potential Change is the central purpose of all counselling and psychotherapy, but how it is conceptualized and worked with varies according to the theoretical approach being used. The Psychodynamic Approach to Therapeutic Change explores the nature of psychological change from the psychodynamic perspective and describes the process through which clients can be helped to come to terms with painful experiences and develop new ways of relating.In the first part of the book, Rob Leiper and Michael Maltby look at therapeutic change in relation to psychological health and maturity. They explore what motivates people to change and also why resistance occurs. The main part of the book outlines the collaborative process that clients and therapist work through to bring about change and highlights the role of the therapist in:] creating the conditions for clients to express their thoughts, feelings and memories] developing clients' awareness and understanding of their psychological processes, and] providing `containment' for the client's psychological projections.The final part of the book sets personal therapeutic change in a wider social context, linking individual change with community and organisational development. Combining core psychodynamic concepts with contemporary thinking, The Psychodynamic Approach to Therapeutic Change provides a lively and up-to-date integration of ideas on the change process which will be of great value to trainees and practicing counsellors and psychotherapists.
Creation: Constructing New Forms of Experience
Creation: Constructing New Forms of Experience
Psychotherapy always implicitly contains an idea of forward momentum. The developmental slant of the psychodynamic perspective tends to emphasise the past, its repetition in the present and the active resistance to change at the heart of so much personal distress. The ‘analytic’ stance seeks to understand and so clear away these obstructions. But there is also a commitment to promote therapeutic change that leads to the construction of something different from the past: fresh experience, improved quality of relationship, increased depth of feeling, a clearer sense of self. This leaves open an important question: what is it that enables something genuinely new to come into being? Is the removal of pathological disorder, distortion or ...
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